We also use SYS1.CEE instead of IBMs supplied CEE HLQ. (grrr).

I like the IBM ADCD method of DFHnnn for CICS as HLQ etc.

On Mon, Sep 25, 2017 at 4:18 PM, Edward Gould <[email protected]>
wrote:

> > On Sep 24, 2017, at 9:18 PM, Tony Thigpen <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > We have a staff z/OS systems programmer who claims that:
> > "Almost all shops use the SYS3. HLQ to indicate third party software."
> >
> > So new software installs *have* to follow that "rule". (Past installs
> did not follow such a rule.)
> >
> > I am thinking that this "rule" is really just *his* rule.
> >
> > Opinions?
> >
> > How many other sites follow such a rule?
> >
> > --
> > Tony Thigpen
>
> Tony:
>
> It depends on the oem product. If I  know the history of the product then
> its simple issue. Keep the sys3 datasets around for the life of the
> product. Some products I just do not trust and I play games with datasets.
> A *LONG* time ago I had a vendor that updated this one specific dataset
> everytime it ran. I did not want to get write authority to the users. I
> created a “test.product.update” and let the people update it. If it got
> clobbered which it invariable did I would copy over the sys3 dataset for
> that product “test.product.update” I won’t name the product as I had a
> loathing for them. I kept there midnight called to a minimum bu doing that.
>
> Ed
>
>
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-- 
Wayne V. Bickerdike

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