EntireX Version 9.7
 —  Software AG IDL Extractor for PL/I  —

Using the IDL Extractor for PL/I in Command-line Mode


Command-line Options

See Using the EntireX Workbench in Command-line Mode for the general command-line syntax.

Task Command Option Description
Extract the PL/I source objects from an RPC Extractor Service. -extract:pli -brokerpassword Password used for broker authentication.
-brokeruser User used for broker authentication.
-environment Name of the environment or an RPC server description.
-filter Filter the PL/I source objects. Show those objects which match the pattern.
-help Display this usage message.
-ims Name of the file with the names of the IMS psb parameters.
-project Name of the project or subfolder where the IDL file is stored.
-rpcpassword Password used for RPC server authentication.
-rpcuser User used for RPC server authentication.
-source A PL/I source object in the environment.
List the PL/I source objects on an RPC Extractor Service. -list:pli -brokerpassword Password used for broker authentication.
-brokeruser User used for broker authentication.
-environment Name of the environment or an RPC server description.
-filter Filter the PL/I source objects. Show those objects which match the pattern.
-help Display this usage message.
-rpcpassword Password used for RPC server authentication.
-rpcuser User used for RPC server authentication.
-source A PL/I source object in the environment.

Top of page

Example

<workbench> -extract:pli -environment pliBroker:2006@RPC/PLISRV1/EXTRACTOR -project /Demo -source PLI.DATA.SET -filter PLISRC1

where <workbench> is a placeholder for the actual Workbench starter as described under Using the EntireX Workbench in Command-line Mode.

The extracted Software AG IDL file will be stored in the project Demo.

If the environment name is not a defined RPC environment in the current workspace, the name will be interpreted as a Broker ID and RPC server address (brokerID@serverAddress).

The source specifies a data set name and the optional filter defines the member name. Simple wildcard notation with an asterisk (*) can be used at the end of these names.

Status and processing messages are written to standard output (stdout), which is normally set to the executing shell window.

Top of page