Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-22 Thread R.S.
Luo Johnny wrote: Sorry for the late feedback.I've tested all your suggestions in my sytem and really appreciate your kind help. Finally my personal conclusion is:For a data set named 'aaa.bbb', first issue LD ALL DA('aaa.bbb') If you got message like 'no racf definition found',then you must

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-22 Thread Luo Johnny
Yes.At this time I use 'setr protectall(warning)' to let system notify me when a data set is not-racf-protected. Perhaps another question which puzzles me for long is how to make an ordinary user can only create data sets which HLQ is his user-id? Say,on my system ,now user 'md0006' can create

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-22 Thread R.S.
Luo Johnny wrote: Yes.At this time I use 'setr protectall(warning)' to let system notify me when a data set is not-racf-protected. Perhaps another question which puzzles me for long is how to make an ordinary user can only create data sets which HLQ is his user-id? Say,on my system ,now user

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-22 Thread Johnny Luo
R.S. wrote: It is quite simple. Just create dataset profiles. You should create profiles for all datasets you have and switch to PROTECTALL(FAILURE). Now start with the following: (I assume, that MD0007 is existing user) AD 'MD0007.**' UACC(N) OW(MD0007) Now (after refresh) only (*) user

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-21 Thread Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], on 11/18/2005 at 09:37 PM, Johnny Luo [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: However,I don't know if this is just enough to draw the conclusion that this data set is not RACF-protected. No; it might[1] be protected by generic profiles. [1] It definitely is if the installation follows

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-21 Thread Luo Johnny
Sorry for the late feedback.I've tested all your suggestions in my sytem and really appreciate your kind help. Finally my personal conclusion is:For a data set named 'aaa.bbb', first issue LD ALL DA('aaa.bbb') If you got message like 'no racf definition found',then you must issue another command

To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-19 Thread Johnny Luo
New comer to this list,as well as mainframe..So I don't know whether it is appropriate to raise such a basic question for it seems to me that most people here are experienced sys programmers. Take a data set named 'md0006.tools.jcl' for example,I want to know all of its definition in

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-19 Thread Lizette Koehler
Johnny, First you may also wish to join the RACF-L list for racf questions RACF Discussion List: [EMAIL PROTECTED] You can search the archives and/or join. Second under TSO (READY prompt or ISPF OPT 6) issue the command - H LD This will provide the syntax of the Listdsd command. In it you

To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-19 Thread Terry Sambrooks
Hi Johnny, In a recent post you stated: I issued the command 'LISTDSD DA(md0006.tools.jcl) ALL' and received the message that there is no RACE definition for it. However,I don't know if this is just enough to draw the conclusion that this data set is not RACF-protected. I tried the command

Re: To know how a data set is protected by RACF

2005-11-19 Thread R.S.
Johnny Luo wrote: [...] Take a data set named 'md0006.tools.jcl' for example,I want to know all of its definition in RACF,that is: 1,Whether it is RACF-protected? 2,If true,how RACF protect it? I issued the command 'LISTDSD DA(md0006.tools.jcl) ALL' and received the message that there is no