Completely legal.  

One caveat: there is one more step before a COBOL program may be
executed under Z/os.e. Look for CEEPIPI in the LE manuals. Note: using
the CEEPIPI interface works under both z/os as well as z/os.e so you
don't have to have two different sets of programs. 

See also PIPICALL on the CBT.   

HTH and good luck.  

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Tim Hare
Sent: Wednesday, May 03, 2006 1:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Dumb question?

Suppose we licensed a COBOL compiler for one system; would we be
violating 
license restrictions to run the compiles on that one system but ship the

resulting object code out to other systems? 

Specifically thinking of a situation where developers submit their 
compiles using NJE, and the compile proc's JCL uses DEST=(node,userid)
to 
send the results back to the submitter? 

I'm sure this is technologically feasible, my question is now that most
of 
us have LE enabled as part of our systems, we no longer license the
COBOL 
run-times, therefore is it legal to do it this way?


Tim Hare
Senior Systems Programmer
Florida Department of Transportation
(850) 414-4209

 
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