Hey Ben

Yes, I have used an rmd file to called a stored procedure. What I
need to avoid here is having to use the rmd at all though, and
here's why.

One: If I replace the RMD in any way I have to go through and figure
out who all uses this and restore their rights to the file because
we are using a Netware 5.1 server and when the file is replaced,
deleted and so on it also removes the rights so now no user that
had access to it before can access it now.. This is a pain with
APX files that we use and I don't want to carry this into this realm
as well. Since I like to be sure things go through certain process
I have code that I run to replace procedures, apps, apx's and so
on that always deletes the ??? that I am about to update. I work
locally and then replace the files on the network when I am satisfied
with my local testing.

Two: Why have to call one file to run another, sounds a bit redundant

I know I didn't explain this very well, but forgive me... I have a lot
going on right now.

Thanks
Jim Limburg


--- Ben Petersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jim,
> 
> What if you called an rmd file that only had one line to call your 
> procedure?
> 
> Ben Petersen
> 
> 
> 
> On 25 Jul 2002, at 7:52, Jim Limburg wrote:
> 
> > G-Day all
> > 
> > I submitted the following to the RDCC... would this be something
> > that you'all would like to see as well?
> > 
> > We have the capability to run a filespec from the Command line like:
> > C:RBTIRBDOS65RBASE65.EXE -oc:
bd65
base.cfg -r file2run.rmd
> > 
> > What I would like to see, and I have many purposes for this is to have
> another
> > switch like the -o above. Call it -p and it would run a stored procedure
> for
> > the name that follows it. 
> > Example: C:RBTIRBDOS65RBASE65.EXE -oc:
bd65
base.cfg -r
> -pstoredprocname
> > 
> > I'm not sure if you can get creative enough to let me pass parameters or
> not,
> > but that would a great feature as well. Maybe
> > C:RBTIRBDOS65RBASE65.EXE -oc:
bd65
base.cfg -r
> -pstoredprocname(par1,par2)
> > 
> > I would also like to see another switch -s for what I call silent mode...
> RBase
> > would not come up in a window.. It would just run silent on the task bar
> and
> > run the stored procedure and exit. I don't think - haven't tried - that I
> can
> > use EXIT from a stored procedure to exit RBase.
> > 
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