Re: What does the 8th character of Load parm mean

2015-12-03 Thread Peter Relson
Using the 8th character can be very useful for test environments. It lets you select which nucleus module duo to use, so that, for example, if you want to try a change that is normally in IEANUC01/IEANUC21, you can build into an alternate nucleus (e.g., IEANUC02/IEANUC22) and ask that the syste

Re: What does the 8th character of Load parm mean

2015-12-02 Thread Mark Jacobs - Listserv
Yes, I meant DAT-OFF. Sorry for the confusion. Mark Jacobs Jim Mulder December 2, 2015 at 1:29 AM It's less useful than it once was, and I don't see any need to use anything other than the default (1) any longer. IEANUC01, IEANUC11 and IEANUC21 are logically the sam

Re: What does the 8th character of Load parm mean

2015-12-01 Thread Jim Mulder
> It's less useful than it once was, and I don't see any need to use > anything other than the default (1) any longer. IEANUC01, IEANUC11 and > IEANUC21 are logically the same nucleus; > > IEANUC01, V=V Nucleus Modules > IEANUC11, V=R Nucleus Modules, 31 Bit, not used any longer (Look at the >

Re: What does the 8th character of Load parm mean

2015-12-01 Thread Mark Jacobs - Listserv
It's less useful than it once was, and I don't see any need to use anything other than the default (1) any longer. IEANUC01, IEANUC11 and IEANUC21 are logically the same nucleus; IEANUC01, V=V Nucleus Modules IEANUC11, V=R Nucleus Modules, 31 Bit, not used any longer (Look at the length of the

What does the 8th character of Load parm mean

2015-12-01 Thread John Mattson
According to zOS MVS System Commands manual 4. The last character (character 8 of the LOAD parameter) specifies the alternate nucleus identifier (0-9). Use this character at the system programmer's direction. If you do not specify an alternate nucleus identifier, the system loads the standard (