Ah, Mark, quite possibly! Thanks. Yes. Looking at my system, I see, for
example
SUBSYS(STC,INTERVAL(SMF,SYNC)) -- SYS
SUBSYS(STC,DETAIL) -- SYS
SUBSYS(STC,EXITS(IEFUSO)) -- PARMLIB
SUBSYS(STC,EXITS(IEFUJP)) -- PARMLIB
Looking then at the member I see
SYS(NOTYPE(14:19,62:69),EXITS(IEFU83,IEFU84,IEFU85,IEFACTRT,
IEFUJV,IEFUSI,IEFUJP,IEFUSO,IEFUJI,IEFUTL,IEFU29,IEFUAV),
INTERVAL(SMF,SYNC),DETAIL)
SUBSYS(STC,EXITS(IEFU29,IEFU83,IEFU84,IEFU85,IEFUJP,IEFUSO))
So I am going to infer (paraphrasing what you said) that "SYS" means "this
is a SUBSYS parameter, but I got the value off of a SYS statement."
Thanks again.
Charles
-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Mark Zelden
Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2012 11:12 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: D SMF,O -- what do DEFAULT, PARMLIB and SYS mean?
What do you see for SYS on your output? I think SYS means it is subsystem
parms
that took their defaults from the SYS statement. IOW, if you code
something like
SYS(EXITS(IEFU83,IEFU84,IEFU85),DETAIL)
SUBSYS(OMVS,INTERVAL(003000))
all the exit parms for OMVS will come from the SYS statement and show SYS in
the D SMF,O output.
Does that match what you are seeing?
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