Well, the 'easiest' way still seems to me: check the libraries against the 
output from 'D PROG,APF'.

Kees.

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Charles Mills
Sent: 18 November, 2016 12:27
To: [email protected]
Subject: Which STEPLIB concatenation is not authorized?

While we're discussing STEPLIB concatenations and APF authorization, is
there any fairly straightforward way for a running program to determine
"which STEPLIB concatenation[s] made me not APF-authorized?" (I suspect I
know the answer and it is No ...)

I totally get the reason APF-authorization and STEPLIB concatenation is the
way it is, and I am not arguing with that at all. Here's the problem.

As a software vendor, on new installs we often get customers saying "your
product puts out a message saying it is not authorized but we're sure we
authorized the library" and it is often a painful process taking them
through checking each concatenation. The dialog often turns argumentative
with the customer saying "WE TOLD YOU ALL THE LIBRARIES ARE AUTHORIZED" and
our support techs trying to explain that TESTAUTH says differently. Of
course it always turns out to be a typo or a bad volser or SMS versus not or
something like that. So far TESTAUTH has not been wrong once! <g>

So ... if our messages could readily say "not authorized -- check
STEPLIB(+2)" or "not authorized -- check SYS1.FOO.LOAD" it would be a big
help.

Even simpler question: is it possible for a program to check (only) its own
AC(1) bit?"

Again, I am looking for straightforward solutions. I'm not looking to
implement some huge library search process. I'm looking for something like a
bit in the DEB or something like that.

Charles 

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