On 3/17/23 11:56, Alan Altmark wrote:
A = Action required
D = Decision (I think this is no longer used)
E = Error
I = Information
R = Response
S = Severe error
T = Terminating error
W (CP) = Disabled wait state (HELP HCP1010W)
W (other) = Warning
Some of these, especially of those which
On 3/17/23 7:36 AM, Rick Troth wrote:
This reply got longer than I expected.
That happens.
(Which 'vmcp' on my system gobbled up, returning the usual 1 for
shell norms.)
I feel like there should be a way to capture the 40 and pass it further out.
I said I was forced to use it because at
On 3/17/23 8:36 AM, Rob van der Heij wrote:
Just have someone come up with the idea to use a SHA1 rather than a
cryptic message identifier, and they will embrace it.
You'd better use SHA256 or something else newer than SHA1 lest you take
flack for and old SHA.
It will take them also a few
HCPxxxs
HCPxxx is the module (not subsystem) that caused the message to be issued.
It's just a locator beacon to make IBM developers' lives easier. means
the same thing, without regard to module name. It is true that each module is
part of a loosely-defined subsystem, but don't
On Fri, 17 Mar 2023 at 14:45, Neale Ferguson wrote:
> I believe in the early 2000s the Linux on 390 developers in Böblingen
> attempted to provide a similar mechanism for the kernel but it wasn't well
> received by the rest of the community. It's a pity but with so many hands
> involved with so
I believe in the early 2000s the Linux on 390 developers in Böblingen attempted
to provide a similar mechanism for the kernel but it wasn't well received by
the rest of the community. It's a pity but with so many hands involved with so
many device drivers it was going to be a hard sell.
On 3/17/23 00:55, Mark Post wrote:
On 3/16/2023 9:24 PM, Rick Troth wrote:
There's nothing like CMS APPLMSG and XMITMSG in Linux land.
Help a guy out and explain what those things are, and what they're
used for.
I've never been as hardcore a z/VM or CMS guy as some others,
so I've never
On 3/16/2023 9:24 PM, Rick Troth wrote:
There's nothing like CMS APPLMSG and XMITMSG in Linux land.
Help a guy out and explain what those things are, and what they're used
for. I've never been as hardcore a z/VM or CMS guy as some others, so
I've never used those and I'm not familiar with