Also: Base64-format certificates either cannot or must be F 80 (I always forget 
which, so get it wrong about half the time). Since that's a more commonly 
uploaded file scenario, I'd suggest that it's even more pervasive.

(Also something RACF could/should handle better.)

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU> On Behalf Of 
Mike Schwab
Sent: Sunday, January 19, 2025 2:02 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: File transfer question

HMC / I/O definition requires 80 bytes per line (Conner ran into thins in 
https://blog.share.org/Technology-Article/i-just-bought-an-ibm-z890-now-what
)

On Sun, Jan 19, 2025 at 7:03 AM Radoslaw Skorupka 
<00000471ebeac275-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote:
>
> IMHO it works as expected.
> When you want text you get text lines (not records). No remaining 
> spaces as it is not part of text. CRLF added during conversion from 
> record to line.
> When you want the content 1:1 you usually don't expect CRLF, however 
> you can convert records to lines ended with CRLF. Note, CRLF is for 
> *text*, not for any file format on PC.
>
> The question is how to transfer a dataset to file with EBCDIC->ASCII 
> conversion and spaces preservation. Very rare IMHO, however one may 
> want it. Why? Just to discuss the case on IBM-MAIN. ;-) OK, for that 
> case IND$FILE has no support, AFAIK. However you can translate dataset 
> from EBCDIC to ASCII. DatasetE -> DatasetA. Then transfer it using 
> CRLF and no translation. First step will translate X'40' to X'20' and 
> second step will transfer it with no changes except CRLF added at end 
> of record/line.
>
> BTW: I use IND$FILE, but not for regular transfers or big files. IMHO 
> it is "quick & dirty" way to transfer some script or XMITted PDS. Ad hoc.
> For production there is FTP or some MFT solution. With all the 
> features including CRLF, translation, translation tables, etc.
>
> --
> Radoslaw Skorupka
> Lodz, Poland
>
>
>
>
> W dniu 17.01.2025 o 23:12, Tom Brennan pisze:
> > On z/OS 3.1, I just created a 3 line member in my FB/80 CNTL PDS as:
> >
> > 000000000000000
> > 1111111111
> > 2222222222
> >
> > That's unnumbered, so there's nothing but spaces to the right.  I 
> > downloaded to my PC with ASCII turned off but CRLF turned on. 
> > IND$FILE (and the terminal emulator) gave me this:
> >
> > 0000000 f0f0 f0f0 f0f0 f0f0 f0f0 f0f0 f0f0 f040
> > 0000020 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000060 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000100 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000120 0d0a f1f1 f1f1 f1f1 f1f1 f1f1 4040 4040
> > 0000140 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000160 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000200 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000220 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000240 4040 0d0a f2f2 f2f2 f2f2 f2f2 f2f2 4040
> > 0000260 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000300 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000320 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000340 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040 4040
> > 0000360 4040 4040 0d0a 1a00
> >
> > So that's EBCDIC still, but with CRLF's at the end of each line.
> > Interestingly, the line ends come at the very end of each 80 byte 
> > record, not after the last non-space character like the ASCII option 
> > trimming does.
> >
> > Here's the same member downloaded with both ASCII and CRLF options:
> >
> > 0000000 3030 3030 3030 3030 3030 3030 3030 300d
> > 0000020 0a31 3131 3131 3131 3131 310d 0a32 3232
> > 0000040 3232 3232 3232 320d 0a1a
> >
> > So like Gil mentioned, CRLF without ASCII would allow text file 
> > conversion to be done on the PC side while still giving the record 
> > splits.  In other words, we might have a possible use for this :)
> >
> > This was using a particular terminal emulator I happen to have on my 
> > Windows PC.  Other emulators may have different results.
> >
> > ALCON!
> >
> > On 1/17/2025 1:16 PM, Phil Smith III wrote:
> >> "ALCON"?
> >>
> >> This is uploading TO z/OS. That's why the question: there's no 
> >> "records" per se in a bytestream, so there's no clear way to decide 
> >> where to put them.
> >>
> >> See the replies by Charles and Michael. Charles notes that it's not
> >> *adding* the CR/LF, it's *honoring* them, and Michael posited a 
> >> plausible (if exceedingly rare) use case.
> >>
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU> On 
> >> Behalf Of Harry Wahl
> >> Sent: Friday, January 17, 2025 3:38 PM
> >> To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
> >> Subject: Re: File transfer question
> >>
> >> ALCON:
> >>
> >> "My question is: Can you devise a scenario where a binary transfer 
> >> "with CR/LF" makes sense?"
> >>
> >> What if you are sending a file with a special purpose code page 
> >> that FTP does not (and possibly cannot) support to a Windows or 
> >> whatever file system? A file which is known not to contain any CR 
> >> or LF characters (not that unusual). The records could be of 
> >> undefined length and still need the CRLF from FTP on the other side 
> >> for the Windows file system to separate them.
> >>
> >> Or, for that matter, a file whose data isn't intended for display 
> >> or any intra-record parsing, such as engineering or scientific data 
> >> (e.g. CNC or the output of many types of lab equipment). Typically, 
> >> such data has a predefined set of possible values that doesn't 
> >> contain CRs or LFs. The CRLF is still necessary on the Windows (or
> >> whatever) side because a way to separate records is still necessary.
> >>
> >> I can think of a lot more examples.
> >>
> >> Harry
> >>
> >> ________________________________
> >> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU> on 
> >> behalf of Steve Horein 
> >> <000005b0b4f1358b-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu>
> >> Sent: Thursday, January 16, 2025 7:06 PM
> >> To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU>
> >> Subject: Re: File transfer question
> >>
> >> How's this?
> >> "No."
> >>
> >> On Thu, Jan 16, 2025 at 4:02 PM Bob Bridges < 
> >> 00000587168ababf-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote:
> >>
> >>> Ten replies not counting the OP's, and NOT A SINGLE responder 
> >>> actually addressed his question?!
> >>>
> >>> ---
> >>> Bob Bridges, robhbrid...@gmail.com, cell 336 382-7313
> >>>
> >>> /* Whoever gossips to you will gossip about you. */
> >>>
> >>> -----Original Message-----
> >>> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU> On 
> >>> Behalf Of Phil Smith III
> >>> Sent: Thursday, January 16, 2025 11:24
> >>>
> >>> A customer just had a problem uploading some service we'd 
> >>> released. It was an XMIT file, and they did transfer it as binary 
> >>> F 80, but TSO RECEIVE was failing. After some tinkering and 
> >>> comparing screenshots of the file, they eventually found that they had 
> >>> "the CR/LF option"
> >>> checked in their emulator, which they called "the Rocket emulator" 
> >>> (I suspect that is/was BlueZone).
> >>> They sent a screenshot that shows the file transfer options: Binary vs.
> >>> text, plus checkboxes for Append and CR/LF.
> >>>
> >>> My question is: Can you devise a scenario where a binary transfer 
> >>> "with CR/LF" makes sense? I can't even think how it would decide 
> >>> where to put them in--it's just a byte stream! The only linends 
> >>> are whatever the native platform uses, but if it's binary those 
> >>> wouldn't seem to me to be meaningful. And of course a binary file 
> >>> could well have those bytes in the data.
> >>>
> >>> Maybe I'm missing something obvious [as usual]?
> >>>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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--
Mike A Schwab, Springfield IL USA
Where do Forest Rangers go to get away from it all?

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