Apparently you are not running SAFESFS?  If not, this becomes labor
intensive.

-----Original Message-----
From: The IBM z/VM Operating System [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Gentry, Stephen
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2009 10:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: SFS question (was: Q LIMITS question)

Bruce, thanks for the reply. But not exactly what I wanted. I probably
didn't ask the question correctly.
I have a specific userid, for example MAINT, what SFS directories does
MAINT have read and/or write access to?
When I run  Query AUTHority  VMSYSU:xxxxxx. (or VMSYSU:xxxxx.yyyyy) I
get a list of users who can read and/or write to the specified
subdirectory.  I want to specify a userid and get a list of SFS
subdirectories that user has access to.  We heavily use SFS in our
production batch processing using different batch worker machines
(VM:Batch)  Some worker machines have access to common SFS
subdirectories.  I can write something using the brute force method but
I was hoping for something a little more elegant.
Steve

-----Original Message-----
From: The IBM z/VM Operating System [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Bruce Hayden
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2009 10:00 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: SFS question (was: Q LIMITS question)

I've had ALLDIRS XEDIT around for quite awhile.  You start DIRLIST
against your own space in the filepool and then enter ALLDIRS on the
command line.

/* ALLDIRS XEDIT */
'command top'
'command next'
'extract /curline'
parse var curline.3 10 filepool ':'
'command bot'
address command 'PIPE command QUERY LIMITS ALL' filepool':',
      '| drop 1',
      '| pick 52.2 /== " 0"',  /* Ignore unused directories */
      '| spec "LISTDIR' filepool':" 1 w1 next ". (XEDIT" next',
      '| command'
'SDIR'
Exit

On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Gentry, Stephen
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Is there a command of some kind or has anyone written an EXEC (or
PIPE,
> etc.) that will provide a list of SFS directories that a user has
access to?
>
>
>
> Steve


-- 
Bruce Hayden
Linux on System z Advanced Technical Support
IBM, Endicott, NY

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