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OS/2 Help File
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1993-10-23
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ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1. General Help for the Connection Profile Editor ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Use the connection profile editor to create, change, or delete information in a
connection profile.
A connection profile is a set of parameters that tell Distributed Application/2
how to connect to a particular destination. When a new connection is opened,
Distributed Application/2 checks the connection profile for the specified
destination to determine:
o Which protocol to use
o Where the destination program is located
o How to start it
The connection profile also contains protocol-specific information for the
protocol to be used. Connection profiles are gathered and stored in a
connection profile file.
The name of the connection profile file must be IBMDABB.CP if you want
Distributed Application/2 to use it at run time.
Note: The settings in the connection profiles for the client (initiator) and
server (acceptor) should match. One way to accomplish this is to use a
LAN server to share the same copy of the connection profile file. This
will ensure that both sides are using the correct information for each
connection.
You can copy a connection profile from one connection profile file to another
by doing the following:
1. Start two copies of the connection profile editor.
Use one copy of the connection profile editor to open the source file and
the other copy to open the target file.
2. Once you have both files open, use the right mouse button to drag the
profile you want to copy from the source file and then release the mouse
button to drop it on the target file.
Do this for each profile you want to copy.
Note: Dragging the connection profile from one connection profile file to
another copies the profile; it does not remove the profile from the
source file.
For more information about the supported protocols, refer to:
o Named pipes documentation
o NetBIOS documentation
o APPC documentation
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.1. Named Pipes Documentation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Refer to the following documentation for more information about named pipes:
IBM* OS/2* 2.0 Application Design Guide (S10G-6260)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 1 (S10G-6261)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 2 (S10G-6494)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 3 (S10G-6495)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Control Program Programming Reference (S10G-6263)
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.2. NetBIOS Documentation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
For more information about IBM* NetBIOS, refer to the IBM LAN Technical
Reference (SC30-3383).
For more information about Novell* NetWare* NetBIOS, refer to the Novell
NetBIOS Emulator Developer's Guide for NetWare Requester for OS/2 V.2.0.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.3. APPC Documentation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Refer to the IBM APPC Programming Reference (S04G-1025) for more information
about APPC.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2. Help for Duplicate Drag Attempt ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Each connection profile must have a unique symbolic name. You can do one of the
following:
o Enter a new symbolic name for the connection profile
o Replace the existing connection profile in the target file with the profile
from the source file
Then select one of the following push buttons:
o OK to continue copying the connection profile
o Cancel to cancel the drag attempt
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 3. Help for Enter New Symbolic Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button to rename the connection profile with a new symbolic
name because there is an existing connection profile in the target file using
that symbolic name.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 4. Help for Replace Existing Profile ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button to replace the existing connection profile in the
target file with the connection profile from the source file.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 5. Help for Common Page ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Use the Common page of the notebook to specify:
o Symbolic name of the connection profile
o Communication protocol to use
o Security
o Millisecond wait for open
To complete this page:
1. Specify a unique symbolic name.
2. Select one of the protocols.
3. Review the other fields and change them as necessary. All fields are
provided with defaults that you can use.
4. When you have completed defining the connection profile and you want to
keep your changes, select the OK push button on the bottom of the notebook.
If you do not want to keep your changes, select the CANCEL push button on the
bottom of the notebook.
For more information about the supported protocols, refer to the following
documents:
Named pipes
IBM OS/2 2.0 Application Design Guide (S10G-6260)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 1 (S10G-6261)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 2 (S10G-6494)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 3 (S10G-6495)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Control Program Programming Reference (S10G-6263)
NetBIOS
IBM LAN Technical Reference (SC30-3383)
Novell NetBIOS Emulator Developer's Guide for NetWare Requester for OS/2
V.2.0
APPC
IBM APPC Programming Reference (S04G-1025)
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 6. Help for Named Pipes/NetBIOS Page ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If your connection is using the NetBIOS protocol, use the Named Pipes/NetBIOS
page of the notebook to specify:
o NetBIOS server machine
o NetBIOS maximum sessions
o Program name
o Program parameters
o Program operating in foreground or background
o Program type is queued or non-queued
If your connection is using the named pipes protocol, use this page of the
notebook to specify the same fields.
Note: If your connection is using the named pipes protocol and you selected
the Named pipes radio button on the Common page of the notebook, the
NetBIOS server machine and the NetBIOS maximum sessions fields are not
available for you to enter information.
For more information about named pipes or NetBIOS, refer to the following
documents:
Named pipes
IBM OS/2 2.0 Application Design Guide (S10G-6260)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 1 (S10G-6261)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 2 (S10G-6494)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 3 (S10G-6495)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Control Program Programming Reference (S10G-6263)
NetBIOS
IBM LAN Technical Reference (SC30-3383)
Novell NetBIOS Emulator Developer's Guide for NetWare Requester for OS/2
V.2.0
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 7. Help for APPC Pages ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Use the APPC pages of the notebook to specify:
o TP Name
o SNA mode name
o Local LU identifier
o PLU identifier
o Partner type
o Data conversion
o Milliseconds in send state while in idle
Note: There are two pages of information for you to fill out for the APPC
protocol.
For more information about APPC, refer to the IBM APPC Programming Reference
(S04G-1025).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 8. Help for File ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu bar choice to:
o Create a new file
o Open a file that you saved with Save as
o Save information in a file you specify
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 9. Help for New ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to create a new connection profile file. When you
select New, the connection profile editor displays "Untitled" at the top of the
window. (You name the file when you save it.)
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 10. Help for Open ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to open and view a connection profile file you
previously saved with Save or Save as.
Note: The file you specify must be a connection profile file created with the
connection profile editor. The name of the connection profile file must
be IBMDABB.CP if you want Distributed Application/2 to use it at run
time.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 11. Help for Save ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to store the connection profile file you are editing.
After the file is saved, the text remains in the window so that you can
continue editing it.
If you are editing a new file, select the Save or Save as choice to display the
Save as window so that you can name the file you are editing.
Note: The name of the connection profile file must be IBMDABB.CP if you want
Distributed Application/2 to use it at run time.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 12. Help for Save As ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to name and save a new connection profile file, or to
save an existing connection profile file under a different name, in a different
directory, or on a different disk.
Note: The name of the connection profile file must be IBMDABB.CP if you want
Distributed Application/2 to use it at run time.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 13. Help for Open Dialog ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
1. Select the arrow to the right of the Drive list to display all of the
drives on your system.
2. Select a drive from the Drive list.
3. Select a directory from the Directory list.
4. Select a file name from the File list or type in a file name in the Open
filename field and then select the Open push button to display the file you
want to edit.
Note: You can only open a connection profile file with the connection profile
editor. The name of the connection profile file must be IBMDABB.CP if
you want Distributed Application/2 to use it at run time.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 14. Help for Save As Dialog ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
1. Select the arrow to the right of the Drive list to display all of the
drives on your system.
2. Select a drive from the Drive list.
3. Select a directory from the Directory list.
4. Type the name of the file you want to save in the Save as filename field
and select the Save push button.
Note: The name of the connection profile file must be IBMDABB.CP if you want
Distributed Application/2 to use it at run time.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 15. Help for Actions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu bar choice to:
o Display the settings of a connection profile
o Create another connection profile using the defaults provided
o Copy a selected connection profile
o Delete one or all connection profiles
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 16. Help for Settings ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to display the settings of a selected connection
profile.
You can display the settings of a connection profile by doing one of the
following:
o Selecting Settings... from the Actions menu bar choice.
o Pressing the second mouse button while the mouse is positioned over a
connection profile icon in the connection profile editor window, and then
selecting Settings from the pop-up menu.
o Double-clicking on the connection profile icon in the window.
o Pressing Enter after you have selected a connection profile icon in the
window.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 17. Help for Create Another ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to create a new connection profile using the default
values supplied by the connection profile editor.
You can create another connection profile by doing one of the following:
o Selecting Create another... from the Actions menu bar choice.
o Pressing the second mouse button while the mouse is positioned over a
connection profile icon in the connection profile editor window, and then
selecting Create another... from the pop-up menu.
Note: Selecting the Create another... pull-down choice does not use the same
settings as the connection profile you have selected. It uses the
default values as settings supplied by the connection profile editor. If
you want to create a new connection profile using the same settings as
the connection profile you have selected, use the Copy... pull-down
choice from the Actions menu bar choice.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 18. Help for Copy ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to create a new connection profile using the same
settings values as the connection profile you have selected.
You can copy a connection profile by doing one of the following:
o Selecting Copy... from the Actions menu bar choice.
o Pressing the second mouse button while the mouse is positioned over a
connection profile icon in the connection profile editor window, and then
selecting Copy... from the pop-up menu.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 19. Help for Delete All ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to delete all of the connection profiles in the file.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 20. Help for Delete ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to delete a selected connection profile.
You can delete a connection profile by doing one of the following:
o Selecting Delete from the Actions menu bar choice.
o Pressing the second mouse button while the mouse is positioned over a
connection profile icon in the connection profile editor window, and then
selecting Delete from the pop-up menu.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 21. Help for Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu bar choice to obtain the following types of help:
Help index
Displays an index of help topics
General help
Displays help on application windows
Keys help
Displays help on valid keys
Help is also available under the Using Help menu bar choice for using the
online help facility.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 22. Help for Help Index ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to use the help index. You can use the index in two
ways:
o To select a topic from a list of all help topics
o To search for a topic by selecting Search from the Services pull-down.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 23. Help for General Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to obtain an overview of the connection profile editor.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 24. Help for Keys Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to obtain help for the key definitions.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25. Keys Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select a topic to get keys help on:
o Help keys
o System keys
o Window keys
o Editing keys
o Application keys
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25.1. Help Keys ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
These are the help window key definitions:
F1
Displays help
Esc
Displays the previous window
Alt+F4
Exits help
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25.2. System Keys ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
These are the system key definitions:
F1
Displays help
F3
Closes the program window
F10
Goes to or from the menu bar
Arrow keys
Move among the choices on the menu bar, pull-down menus, radio buttons, push
buttons, and tabs on the notebook
End
Goes to the last choice in a pull-down menu
Esc
Cancels a pull-down menu or the system menu
Home
Goes to the first choice in a pull-down menu
PgUp
Scrolls the contents of the window up one screen
PgDn
Scrolls the contents of the window down one screen
Underlined letter (mnemonic)
Calls the associated action
Cursor left
Moves the cursor left in the viewing area
Cursor right
Moves the cursor right in the viewing area
Cursor up
Moves the cursor up in the viewing area
Cursor down
Moves the cursor down in the viewing area
Alt
Goes to or from the menu bar
Alt+Esc
Switches to the next program, including full-screen programs
Alt+Tab
Switches to the next program that runs in a window
Alt+F4
Closes the window
Alt+F5
Restores the window
Alt+F6
Changes the active window in an application
Alt+F7
Moves the window
Alt+F8
Sizes the window
Alt+F9
Minimizes the window
Alt+F10
Maximizes the window
Alt+Up Arrow
Moves from the tab to the page of the notebook
Alt+Down Arrow
Moves from the page to the tab of the notebook
Ctrl+Esc
Switches to the Task list
Ctrl+F6
Changes the active secondary window in an application
Shift+Esc or Alt+Spacebar
Goes to or from the system menu
Shift+Esc or Alt
Goes to or from the system menu of a text window.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25.3. Window Keys ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Enter
Completes the window
Esc
Cancels the window
Spacebar
Performs the task assigned to the selected push button
Tab
Moves to the next entry field, selection field, push button, tab on a
notebook, or hypertext phrase.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25.4. Editing Keys ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Backspace (left arrow delete)
Deletes the character to the left of the cursor
Del or Delete
Deletes the character to the right of the cursor
End or Ctrl+Right arrow key
Moves to the end of a field
Home or Ctrl+Left arrow key
Moves to the beginning of a field
Shift+Print Screen
Prints the information currently displayed.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 25.5. Application Keys ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
F1
Displays help
F3
Exits the connection profile editor
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 26. Help for Using Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this menu choice to see a description of the types of help provided for
this application and to learn how to get help.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 27. OK ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this push button to save the changes you made in the connection profile
and close the notebook.
To save the settings for the connection profile into a file, select Save from
the File menu bar choice.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 28. Cancel ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this push button to exit the window without keeping your changes.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 29. Help for Help ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Use the Connection Profile Settings notebook to specify, change, or delete the
settings of a connection profile.
For more information about the pages of the notebook, see:
o Help for Common Page
o Help for Named Pipes/NetBIOS Page
o Help for APPC Pages
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 30. Help for Symbolic Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify a symbolic name in the Symbolic name field to represent this
destination. This is the name that the client uses to identify the server.
The symbolic name must be:
o No more than 8 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z and 0-9
Each connection profile must have a unique symbolic name.
This is a required field. No default is provided.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 31. Help for Program Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the name and extension of the server program. Distributed Application/2
only uses this program name for NetBIOS and named pipes connections.
If you are using NetBIOS or named pipes, this field is required.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 32. Help for Program Parameters ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the parameters to pass to the server program.
This field is optional and is only used for NetBIOS and named pipes
connections.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 33. Help for Foreground ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button to have the server program run in the foreground.
Selecting Foreground will allow the server program to be able to accept user
input or display information to the user.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 34. Help for Background ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want the server program to run in the
background.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 35. Help for Queued ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if your server program is designed to accept
connections from multiple clients.
You would select the Queued radio button if you want only the first connection
from a client to cause the server program to start. Subsequent connections from
clients will be directed to this running server until the server terminates.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 36. Help for Non-queued ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if your server program is designed to accept
connections from only one client.
You would select the Non-queued radio button if you want each connection from a
client to start a new copy of the server program.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 37. Help for None ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you do not want Distributed Application/2 to
perform any security checking.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 38. Help for UPM ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want Distributed Application/2 to use User
Profile Management (UPM) to confirm that a user is logged on.
Security is performed differently for each of the protocols.
Named pipes
No security support is provided.
NetBIOS
Asks UPM for the remote logon userid and password for the remote machine
named in the NetBIOS server machine field. If no such remote logon is active,
the values for an active local or domain logon are used. A remote logon can
become active via a "LOGON userid /P=password /N=remote node" UPM command or
via a UPM User Logon Profile.
APPC
Similar to NetBIOS, but is implemented by APPC. See the APPC Programming
Reference for details for allocation with Security=SAME.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 39. Help for Named Pipes ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Named pipes is a form of OS/2 interprocess communication that uses file-system
calls to transfer data between processes running on the same workstation.
Select the Named pipes radio button if your connection uses the named pipes
protocol.
If your connection uses named pipes, when you have completed the fields on the
Common page of the notebook, select the Named Pipes/NetBIOS tab of the notebook
to complete the fields that apply to named pipes.
For more information about named pipes, refer to the following documents:
IBM OS/2 2.0 Application Design Guide (S10G-6260)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 1 (S10G-6261)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 2 (S10G-6494)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Programming Guide Volume 3 (S10G-6495)
IBM OS/2 2.0 Control Program Programming Reference (S10G-6263)
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 40. Help for NetBIOS ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
NetBIOS is a communication programming interface that supports peer-to-peer
connections between applications running on a Local Area Network (LAN).
Select the NetBIOS radio button if your connection uses the NetBIOS protocol.
If your connection uses NetBIOS, when you have completed the fields on the
Common page of the notebook, select the Named Pipes/NetBIOS tab of the notebook
to complete the fields that apply to NetBIOS.
For more information about IBM NetBIOS, refer to the IBM LAN Technical
Reference (SC30-3383).
For more information about Novell NetWare NetBIOS, refer to the Novell NetBIOS
Emulator Developer's Guide for NetWare Requester for OS/2 V.2.0.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 41. Help for APPC ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
APPC is Advanced Program-to-Program Communication. It is a protocol that
implements the IBM Systems Network Architecture (SNA) LU 6.2 protocol.
Select the APPC radio button if your connection uses the APPC protocol.
If your connection uses APPC, when you have completed the fields on the Common
page of the notebook, select the APPC tab of the notebook to complete the
fields on both APPC notebook pages.
For more information about APPC, refer to the APPC Programming Reference
(S04G-1025).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 42. Help for Millisecond Wait for Open ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select how long you want Distributed Application/2 to wait for the connection
to open before it returns an error.
The range is from -1 to 600,000 milliseconds.
If you set this timer to -1, it is the same as setting it indefinitely.
Note: If you are receiving many time-out errors, try increasing this value.
Warning: This time is approximate, and your program should not depend on it for
precision timing.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 43. Help for NetBIOS Server Machine ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the name of the NetBIOS server machine. This is the same name specified
when the NetBIOS daemon on the server machine was started.
The name of the NetBIOS server machine must be:
o Unique in the network
o No more than 8 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z and 0-9
This is a required field. No default is provided.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 44. Help for NetBIOS Maximum Sessions ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Distributed Application/2 supports the IBM* NetBIOS 3.0 interface (API) and the
IBM LAN Server NetBIOS API. You can designate the NetBIOS API that Distributed
Application/2 will use.
If you enter a 0 in the NetBIOS maximum sessions field, Distributed
Application/2 uses the IBM LAN Server NetBIOS API. (You must use this API if
you are using the Novell* NetWare* NetBIOS emulator.)
The maximum sessions value is systemwide for this type of NetBIOS. The number
of maximum sessions is set up during your system configuration, such as in your
CONFIG.SYS file. See IBM LAN Server NetBIOS API for more information about
specifying the NetBIOS maximum sessions value.
If you set NetBIOS maximum sessions to a value from 1 to 126, Distributed
Application/2 uses the IBM NetBIOS 3.0 API. See IBM NetBIOS 3.0 API for more
information about specifying the NetBIOS maximum sessions value.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 44.1. IBM NetBIOS 3.0 API ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the number of NetBIOS sessions Distributed Application/2 will use to
communicate. Distributed Application/2 reserves the sessions the first time its
services are called within a program. Any subsequent Distributed Application/2
connection that is opened within the program will use one of these reserved
sessions. The number of sessions affects the number of clients a server can
communicate with.
Based on the number of sessions you specify, Distributed Application/2 will
obtain the same number of NetBIOS names and twice the number of NetBIOS
commands.
The range is 1 to 126 sessions.
If a program only has one connection active at a time, set the number of
sessions to 1.
Note: You may want the value in this field to be different for client and
server machines. This is the only field that could be different for the
client or server machine, depending upon the design of your application
or network. For example, if your application has 1 server attached to 3
clients, you would set the number of sessions on the server side to 3
and the client side to 1.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 44.2. IBM LAN Server NetBIOS API ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If you are using the Novell* NetWare* NetBIOS emulator, it emulates the IBM LAN
Server NetBIOS API. Therefore, you must set the NetBIOS maximum sessions value
to 0.
The IBM LAN Server NetBIOS API, also called the NetBIOS Submit API or the IBM
LAN Manager NetBIOS API, is described in the IBM OS/2 LAN Server Version 2.0
Application Programmer's Reference (S04G-1046).
Note: Also, if you are using the Novell NetWare NetBIOS emulator, then both
the client and server must have it installed for Distributed
Application/2.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 45. Help for TP Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify a Transaction Program (TP) name. APPC uses the TP name to locate the TP
definition in Attach Manager. Use Communications Manager to configure the TP
definition for APPC.
The TP name must be:
o No more than 64 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9
The TP name can contain the @, #, and $ characters. It can also contain a slash
(/) in the first character position for IMS commands.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 46. Help for SNA Mode Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the Systems Network Architecture (SNA) mode name to describe the
properties of the session. Use Communications Manager to define the mode name.
The SNA mode name must be:
o No more than 8 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9
The SNA mode name can contain the @, #, and $ characters.
Note: The names SNASVCMG and CPSVCMG cannot be used as the SNA mode name.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 47. Help for Local LU Alias Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the local logical unit (LU) alias name.
This field is optional. If you don't specify a local LU alias name, Distributed
Application/2 will use the default defined in Communications Manager.
The local LU alias name must be:
o No more than 8 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9
The local LU alias name can contain the @, #, and $ characters.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 48. Help for Local LU Pool Identifier ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify a 3-character identifier if you want to use any local LU whose alias
starts with those 3 characters.
This is an optional field.
The local LU pool identifier must be:
o Exactly 3 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9
The local LU pool identifier can contain the @, #, and $ characters.
Warning: If the LUs in the pool are dependent LUs, make sure no other APPC
application running in your machine uses any of them by name.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 49. Help for Fully Qualified PLU Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the fully qualified Partner Logical Unit (PLU) name.
This is a required field if you selected the Name radio button.
The fully qualified PLU name must be:
o Unique in the network
o No more than 17 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z and 0-9
The fully qualified PLU name can contain the @, #, and $ characters. It can
also contain 1 imbedded period (.) to delimit the netid and LU name portions.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 50. Help for Local LU Alias ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want to specify a local logical unit (LU) alias
name rather than an LU pool ID.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 51. Help for Pool ID ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want to specify a local logical unit (LU) pool
ID.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 52. Help for Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button to if you want to specify a fully qualified Partner
Logical Unit (PLU) name.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 53. Help for PLU Alias ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want to specify a Partner Logical Unit (PLU)
alias name rather than a fully qualified PLU name.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 54. Help for PLU Alias Name ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Specify the Partner Logical Unit (PLU) alias name.
This field is required if you selected the Alias radio button.
The PLU alias name must be:
o No more than 8 characters long
o Contain characters A-Z, a-z, and 0-9
The PLU alias name can contain the @, #, and $ characters.
Note: This alias must also be configured in Communications Manager.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 55. Help for Partner Code Page ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
If you selected the Character data conversion radio button, you must specify
the code page of the server machine in the Partner code page field. This tells
Distributed Application/2 the type of character data conversion to perform.
Note: If you want to check the code pages that Distributed Application/2
supports as the active code page in the local machine, see Local Machine
Code Pages.
From the ASCII or EBCDIC table, do the following:
1. Find the language the server machine will use.
2. Select the code page that corresponds to that language from the following
ASCII or EBCDIC table.
3. Specify that code page in the Partner Code Page field.
The following table lists ASCII code pages supported by Distributed
Application/2.
ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
ΓöéLanguage ΓöéASCII Code PageΓöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéCanadian-French Γöé863 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéMultilingual Γöé850 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéNorwegian Γöé865 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéPortuguese Γöé860 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéUS English Γöé437 Γöé
ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
The following table lists EBCDIC code pages supported by Distributed
Application/2.
ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
ΓöéLanguage ΓöéEBCDIC Code Γöé
Γöé ΓöéPage Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéAustrian/German Γöé273 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéDanish/Norwegian Γöé277 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéEnglish and JapaneseΓöé931 Γöé
ΓöéExtended Γöé Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéFinnish/Swedish Γöé278 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéFrench Γöé297 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéItalian Γöé280 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéJapanese (Katakana) Γöé930 Γöé
ΓöéExtended Γöé Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéJapanese (Latin) Γöé939 Γöé
ΓöéExtended Γöé Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéKorean Extended Γöé933 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéMultilingual Γöé500 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéS-Chinese Extended Γöé935 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéSpanish Γöé284 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéT-Chinese Extended Γöé937 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéUK English Γöé285 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéUS English Γöé037 Γöé
ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 55.1. Local Machine Code Pages ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The following table lists code pages that can be the active code page of the
local machine. These are the code pages supported by Distributed Application/2.
ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
ΓöéLanguage ΓöéASCII Code Γöé
Γöé ΓöéPages Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéCanadian-French Γöé863 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéInternational Γöé850 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéJapanese Γöé932 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéJapanese Extended Γöé942 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéKorean Γöé934 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéKorean Extended Γöé944 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéNorwegian Γöé865 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéPortuguese Γöé860 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéT-Chinese Γöé938 Γöé
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ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 56. Help for Distributed Application/2 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if both client and server programs are written using
the Distributed Application/2 APIs.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 57. Help for Native APPC - No Confirmation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if the server program is written using direct APPC
calls and does not use confirmations.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 58. Help for Native APPC - Confirmation ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if the server program is written using direct APPC
calls and uses confirmations.
Refer to the online Distributed Application/2 Programming Guide and Reference
for more information about the types of supported confirmations.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 59. Help for No Character Data Conversion ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want Distributed Application/2 to treat all
data as binary data and perform no character conversions.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 60. Help for Character Data Conversion ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Select this radio button if you want Distributed Application/2 to perform
character conversions. If you select the Character data conversion radio
button, you must specify a code page in the Partner code page field.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 61. Help for Millisecond Wait ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Use this field to specify the time interval for Distributed Application/2 to
check if the partner needs to send data. This field applies only when the
partner type is Distributed Application/2. It does not apply to native APPC
partners.
The range is 50 to 1,000 milliseconds.
Note: The lower this time interval is set, the more responsive your
application will seem, but it will be using more system resources. The
higher this time interval is set, the less responsive your application
will seem, but it will be using less system resources. Therefore, if
responsiveness is more important to you than the amount of system
resources, set it low. Conversely, if responsiveness is less important
to you than the amount of system resources, set it high.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ <hidden> ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Trademark of International Business Machines Corporation
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ <hidden> ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Trademark of Novell,