OSI/FTAM Responder
Manual
Abstract
This manual describes the operation of the Compaq Open Systems Interconnection/File
Transfer, Access and Management (OSI/FTAM) responder and its virtual filestore (VFS). It is
for programmers and users who are working with or writing remote FTAM applications that use
the services of the Compaq responder. It is also useful to those with access to the Compaq
system who are diagnosing and solving problems involving the Compaq FTAM responder.
Product Version
OSI/FTAM D43
OSI/APLMGR D43
Supported Releases
D48 and above
G06.01 and above
Part Number
Published
425199-001
February 2000
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Conformance 2-1
Interoperability 2-1
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Contents
3. Compaq FTAM Responder Operation
Interoperability 5-1
Troubleshooting 5-2
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Contents
6. Responder Manager
Figures
Tables
Responder 4-4
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Contents
Tables (continued)
Tables (continued)
Type 4-8
Responder 4-13
Attributes 4-16
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What’s New in This Manual
Manual Information
Abstract
This manual describes the operation of the Compaq Open Systems Interconnection/File
Transfer, Access and Management (OSI/FTAM) responder and its virtual filestore
(VFS). It is for programmers and users who are working with or writing remote FTAM
applications that use the services of the Compaq responder. It is also useful to those
with access to the Compaq system who are diagnosing and solving problems involving
the Compaq FTAM responder.
Product Version
OSI/FTAM D43
OSI/APLMGR D43
Supported Releases
D48 and above
G06.01 and above
Part Number
Published
425199-001
February 2000
Document History
Part Number
Product Version
Published
030246
OSI/FTAM C30,
OSI/APLMGR C30
August 1992
098329
OSI/FTAM D20,
September 1993
February 2000
OSI/APLMGR D20
425199-001
OSI/FTAM D43
OSI/APLMGR D43
New and Changed Information
This manual has been updated to support the G-series releases.
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What’s New in This Manual
New and Changed Information
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About This Manual
The OSI/FTAM Responder Manual provides instructions and reference information
needed to write application programs, or to use interactive applications, that use the
services of the Compaq OSI/File Transfer, Access and Management (FTAM) responder
process. This manual has the following objectives:
Introduce the Compaq FTAM responder and how it fits into the Compaq FTAM
architecture
•
Describe conformance and interoperability issues for the Compaq FTAM responder
•
•
Provide information about the Compaq FTAM responder needed by the programmer
writing FTAM applications (or the user using interactive FTAM applications) on a
remote system, which may or may not be a Compaq system
Provide information about the Compaq FTAM responder and its virtual
filestore (VFS) needed for problem solving on the Compaq system
•
The descriptions that follow provide you with an overview of the content of each section
and appendix in this manual.
Section 1, “Introduction to Compaq OSI/FTAM,” provides a general introduction to
the Compaq FTAM software from the point of view of programmers writing remote
FTAM applications that use the services of the Compaq FTAM responder.
•
Section 2, “Conformance and Interoperability,” presents information about
standards conformance and interoperability of the Compaq FTAM responder.
•
Section 3, “Compaq FTAM Responder Operation,” describes the architecture of the
Compaq FTAM responder and the way messages flow to and from the responder.
•
Section 4, “Compaq FTAM Responder Support of ISO FTAM Functions,” describes
the ISO FTAM functions supported by the Compaq FTAM responder.
•
Section 5, “Suggestions for Development of Remote Applications,” provides
suggestions for how to write your remote FTAM applications in order to take best
advantage of the features of the Compaq FTAM responder.
•
Section 6, “Responder Management,” discusses considerations that are related to the
•
configuration and management of the responder process and its VFS on the Compaq
system, but that you might need to know when writing or using FTAM applications
on the remote system.
Appendix A, “Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages,” provides cause,
effect, and recovery information for all diagnostic messages that originate in the
Compaq FTAM responder or VFS.
•
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About This Manual
Supported Standards
Supported Standards
This manual and the other Compaq FTAM manuals are written on the assumption that
you are familiar with the ISO standards and the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) FTAM Phase 2 agreements to which Compaq FTAM and the
underlying Compaq OSI products conform. These standards include the following:
Standard Number Standard Name
ISO 8326
ISO 8327
ISO 8571-1
Basic Connection Oriented Session Service Definition
Basic Connection Oriented Session Protocol Specification
File Transfer, Access and Management—Part 1: General
Introduction
ISO 8571-2
ISO 8571-3
ISO 8571-4
ISO 8571-5
File Transfer, Access and Management—Part 2: Virtual Filestore
Definition
File Transfer, Access and Management—Part 3: File Service
Definition
File Transfer, Access and Management—Part 4: File Protocol
Specification
File Transfer, Access and Management—Part 5: Protocol
Implementation Conformance Statement
ISO 8649
ISO 8650
ISO 8822
ISO 8823
ISO 8824
ISO 8825
Service Definition for the Association Control Service Element
Protocol Specification for the Association Control Service Element
Connection Oriented Presentation Service Definition
Connection Oriented Presentation Protocol Specification
Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)
Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax
Notation One (ASN.1)
ISO/IEC ISP 10607 Information Technology—International Standardized Profiles
AFTnn—File Transfer, Access and Management, Parts 1-6
NIST 500-162
Stable Implementation Agreements for Open Systems
Interconnection Protocols (Special Publication), Part 9—FTAM
Phase 2
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About This Manual
Related Manuals
Related Manuals
This manual is one in a set of Compaq FTAM manuals.
OSI/FTAM Programming Guide. This manual explains important programming
concepts pertaining to the Compaq FTAM application programmatic interface and
describes sequences of procedure calls to use to perform common FTAM
programming operations. This manual also provides an overview of FTAM
concepts for those who have not recently read the ISO 8571 specification.
•
OSI/FTAM Programming Reference Manual. This is the companion manual to the
Compaq OSI/FTAM Programming Guide and provides reference information on the
programmatic interface provided by Compaq FTAM for application programs that
run on a Compaq host using the FTAM initiator. It discusses product conformance
to standards and interoperability, provides information on the FTAM initiator, and
provides reference material for all procedure calls in the FTAM API (application
programmatic interface), including descriptions of diagnostic and error messages.
•
OSI/FTAM Responder Manual. This manual provides information for programmers
writing applications on remote systems using the services of the Compaq FTAM
responder. This manual discusses the Compaq FTAM responder’s conformance to
standards and interoperability, describes the operation of the responder, and
provides reference information on diagnostic messages.
•
•
•
•
OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual. This manual provides task-
oriented information necessary for the installation and management of the Compaq
FTAM responder and virtual filestore (VFS) and the associated APLMGR process.
This manual also includes information on monitoring and adjusting your subsystem
to optimize performance and on diagnosing and fixing problems.
SCF Reference Manual for FTAM and APLMGR. This manual describes the
interactive interface that allows operators to manage and monitor the configuration
and operation of FTAM responder and APLMGR processes, and to monitor FTAM
subdevices, using SCF commands. It also describes the formats of trace records
generated by responder and APLMGR processes.
Operator Messages Manual . This manual describes Compaq operator messages in
general and describes the operator messages that can be generated by various
Compaq subsystems, including their causes, effects, and recovery actions. The
“OSI/APLMGR Messages” and “OSI/FTAM Messages” sections describe the
operator messages generated by Compaq FTAM.
If you are writing applications using a remote initiator that interoperates with the
Compaq FTAM responder, your main source of information is the documentation for the
FTAM initiator you are using. If your initiator is running on a system other than a
Compaq system, you need whatever documentation is provided for the remote
implementation.
If your FTAM initiator is on a Compaq system, you need the following manuals in the
Compaq FTAM manual set: the OSI/FTAM Programming Guide and the OSI/FTAM
Programming Reference Manual.
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About This Manual
Your Comments Invited
If you are diagnosing and solving FTAM problems using tools on the Compaq system
where your responder resides, you also need to refer to the following manuals: the
OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual and the SCF Reference Manual for
FTAM and APLMGR.
If you need to understand the meaning of event messages and additional information on
displaying trace records for problem diagnosis, you need to refer to the following
manuals:
PTrace Reference Manual provides general information on how to select and
•
interpret information in trace files created using the SCF TRACE command. This
information serves as background for the trace-record information in the SCF
Reference Manual for FTAM and APLMGR.
Operator Messages Manual.
•
If you need to understand how files are stored in the Compaq responder’s VFS or if you
are diagnosing problems in the VFS, the following manuals are also likely to be of
interest:
Enscribe Programmer’s Guide describes the four types of Enscribe disk files on the
Compaq system (unstructured, key-sequenced, entry-sequenced, and relative).
•
NonStop SQL Installation and Management Manual explains how to install
•
NonStop SQL, the Compaq relational database management system, and how to
plan, create, and manage NonStop SQL databases. This manual is useful to you if
your applications access SQL tables as FTAM-2 files.
NonStop SQL Messages Manual describes messages produced by the NonStop SQL
•
relational database management system and file-system messages that pertain only
to NonStop SQL files. This manual is useful to you if your applications access SQL
tables as FTAM-2 files.
Your Comments Invited
After using this manual, please take a moment to send us your comments. You can do
this by returning a Reader Comment Card or by sending an Internet mail message.
A Reader Comment Card is located at the back of printed manuals and as a separate file
on the User Documentation disc. You can either fax or mail the card to us. The fax
number and mailing address are provided on the card.
Also provided on the Reader Comment Card is an Internet mail address. When you
send an Internet mail message to us, we immediately acknowledge receipt of your
message. A detailed response to your message is sent as soon as possible. Be sure to
include your name, company name, address, and phone number in your message. If
your comments are specific to a particular manual, also include the part number and title
of the manual.
Many of the improvements you see in manuals are a result of suggestions from our
customers. Please take this opportunity to help us improve future manuals.
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About This Manual
Notation Conventions
Notation Conventions
General Syntax Notation
The following list summarizes the notation conventions for syntax presentation in this
manual.
UPPERCASE LETTERS. Uppercase letters indicate keywords and reserved words; enter
these items exactly as shown. Items not enclosed in brackets are required. For example:
MAXATTACH
lowercase italic letters. Lowercase italic letters indicate variable items that you supply.
Items not enclosed in brackets are required. For example:
file-name
[ ] Brackets. Brackets enclose optional syntax items. For example:
TERM [\system-name.]$terminal-name
INT[ERRUPTS]
A group of items enclosed in brackets is a list from which you can choose one item or
none. The items in the list may be arranged either vertically, with aligned brackets on
each side of the list, or horizontally, enclosed in a pair of brackets and separated by
vertical lines. For example:
FC [ num ]
[ -num]
[ text]
K [ X | D ] address-1
{ } Braces. A group of items enclosed in braces is a list from which you are required to
choose one item. The items in the list may be arranged either vertically, with aligned
braces on each side of the list, or horizontally, enclosed in a pair of braces and separated
by vertical lines. For example:
LISTOPENS PROCESS { $appl-mgr-name }
{ $process-name }
ALLOWSU { ON | OFF }
| Vertical Line. A vertical line separates alternatives in a horizontal list that is enclosed in
brackets or braces. For example:
INSPECT { OFF | ON | SAVEABEND }
… Ellipsis. An ellipsis immediately following a pair of brackets or braces indicates that you
can repeat the enclosed sequence of syntax items any number of times. For example:
M address-1 [ , new-value ]...
[ - ] {0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9}...
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General Syntax Notation
An ellipsis immediately following a single syntax item indicates that you can repeat that
syntax item any number of times. For example:
"s-char..."
Punctuation. Parentheses, commas, semicolons, and other symbols not previously described
must be entered as shown. For example:
error := NEXTFILENAME ( file-name ) ;
LISTOPENS SU $process-name.#su-name
Quotation marks around a symbol such as a bracket or brace indicate the symbol is a
required character that you must enter as shown. For example:
"[" repetition-constant-list "]"
Item Spacing. Spaces shown between items are required unless one of the items is a
punctuation symbol such as a parenthesis or a comma. For example:
CALL STEPMOM ( process-id ) ;
If there is no space between two items, spaces are not permitted. In the following
example, there are no spaces permitted between the period and any other items:
$process-name.#su-name
Line Spacing. If the syntax of a command is too long to fit on a single line, each continuation
line is indented three spaces and is separated from the preceding line by a blank line.
This spacing distinguishes items in a continuation line from items in a vertical list of
selections. For example:
ALTER [ / OUT file-spec / ] CONTROLLER
[ , attribute-spec ]...
!i and !o. In procedure calls, the !i notation follows an input parameter (one that passes data
to the called procedure); the !o notation follows an output parameter (one that returns
data to the calling program). For example:
CALL CHECKRESIZESEGMENT ( segment-id
, error
!i
!o
) ;
!i,o. In procedure calls, the !i,o notation follows an input/output parameter (one that both
passes data to the called procedure and returns data to the calling program). For
example:
error := COMPRESSEDIT ( filenum ) ;
!i,o
!i:i. In procedure calls, the !i:i notation follows an input string parameter that has a
corresponding parameter specifying the length of the string in bytes. For example:
error := FILENAME_COMPARE_ ( filename1:length
, filename2:length ) ;
!i:i
!i:i
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About This Manual
Notation for Messages
!o:i. In procedure calls, the !o:i notation follows an output buffer parameter that has a
corresponding input parameter specifying the maximum length of the output buffer in
bytes. For example:
error := FILE_GETINFO_ ( filenum
, [ filename:maxlen ] ) ;
!i
!o:i
Notation for Messages
The following list summarizes the notation conventions for the presentation of displayed
messages in this manual.
Bold Text. Bold text in an example indicates user input entered at the terminal. For example:
ENTER RUN CODE
?123
CODE RECEIVED:
123.00
The user must press the Return key after typing the input.
Nonitalic text. Nonitalic letters, numbers, and punctuation indicate text that is displayed or
returned exactly as shown. For example:
Backup Up.
lowercase italic letters. Lowercase italic letters indicate variable items whose values are
displayed or returned. For example:
p-register
process-name
[ ] Brackets. Brackets enclose items that are sometimes, but not always, displayed. For
example:
Event number = number [ Subject = first-subject-value ]
A group of items enclosed in brackets is a list of all possible items that can be displayed,
of which one or none might actually be displayed. The items in the list might be
arranged either vertically, with aligned brackets on each side of the list, or horizontally,
enclosed in a pair of brackets and separated by vertical lines. For example:
proc-name trapped [ in SQL | in SQL file system ]
{ } Braces. A group of items enclosed in braces is a list of all possible items that can be
displayed, of which one is actually displayed. The items in the list might be arranged
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Notation for Management Programming Interfaces
either vertically, with aligned braces on each side of the list, or horizontally, enclosed in
a pair of braces and separated by vertical lines. For example:
obj-type obj-name state changed to state, caused by
{ Object | Operator | Service }
process-name State changed from old-objstate to objstate
{ Operator Request. }
{ Unknown.
}
| Vertical Line. A vertical line separates alternatives in a horizontal list that is enclosed in
brackets or braces. For example:
Transfer status: { OK | Failed }
% Percent Sign. A percent sign precedes a number that is not in decimal notation. The
%þnotation precedes an octal number. The %Bþnotation precedes a binary number.
The %Hþnotation precedes a hexadecimal number. For example:
%005400
P=%p-register E=%e-register
Notation for Management Programming Interfaces
The following list summarizes the notation conventions used in the boxed descriptions
of programmatic commands, event messages, and error lists in this manual.
UPPERCASE LETTERS. Uppercase letters indicate names from definition files; enter these
names exactly as shown. For example:
ZCOM-TKN-SUBJ-SERV
lowercase letters. Words in lowercase letters are words that are part of the notation,
including Data Definition Language (DDL) keywords. For example:
token-type
!r. The !r notation following a token or field name indicates that the token or field is
required. For example:
ZCOM-TKN-OBJNAME
token-type ZSPI-TYP-STRING.
!r
!o
!o. The !o notation following a token or field name indicates that the token or field is
optional. For example:
ZSPI-TKN-MANAGER
token-type ZSPI-TYP-FNAME32.
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1
Introduction to the Compaq FTAM
Responder
This manual describes the Compaq Open Systems Interconnection/File Transfer, Access
and Management (OSI/FTAM) responder and its virtual filestore (VFS). Compaq
OSI/FTAM is the Compaq implementation of the FTAM standard ISO 8571, developed
by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
File Transfer, Access and Management (FTAM) is a set of Application Layer services
and an Application Layer protocol to support file handling on Open Systems
Interconnection (OSI) networks. Using this standard FTAM protocol across an OSI
network, different computer systems can transmit and receive file contents and file-
management-related messages.
The information in this manual is useful to you if you are doing either of the following:
Developing FTAM applications, or using interactive FTAM applications, that run
on remote systems and use the services of the Compaq FTAM responder
•
Solving problems involving a Compaq FTAM responder or its virtual filestore
(VFS)
•
While this manual is designed to be as complete as possible with regard to the Compaq
FTAM implementation of the responder, it is not intended to duplicate or replace the
ISO standards and National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST) FTAM Phase 2
agreements. The preface to this manual, called “About This Manual,” lists the relevant
ISO and NIST documents that you may want to review.
In this manual, ISO FTAM refers to the FTAM specification as defined in ISO 8571,
and Compaq FTAM refers to the Compaq OSI/FTAM product.
Functional Overview
ISO FTAM provides the following file-handling functions across the network:
Creating files
•
•
Deleting files
Erasing part or all of the contents of files
•
•
•
•
Reading from files
Writing to files
Reading file attributes
Changing file attributes
•
1-1
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
Compaq FTAM Services
FTAM users communicate with the FTAM service provider by way of primitives, the
smallest units of interaction between the FTAM user and the FTAM service provider. An
operation like any of those mentioned above requires the exchange of multiple
primitives, which the FTAM software encodes as protocol data units (PDUs).
FTAM file handling is defined in terms of initiator and responder functions. The
initiator provides application programs with access to the FTAM protocol so that you
can request services to be performed by a responder across the network. The remote
responder acts as a file server and performs the requested services.
Compaq FTAM Services
Compaq FTAM provides most of the FTAM services specified in ISO 8571.
The Compaq FTAM implementation separates the initiator and responder functions into
two processes. The Compaq FTAM initiator process implements the initiator function,
while the Compaq FTAM responder process implements the responder function.
Note. The initiator and responder functions of remote FTAM implementations are not
necessarily performed by separate processes. In this manual, the term “remote initiator” refers
to the entity in the remote implementation that performs the initiator function.
The initiator and responder processes provide the FTAM functions required for your
applications. These processes manage the FTAM communications among your
application and other FTAM applications on the local or remote computer systems on an
OSI network.
Compaq FTAM can handle the following types of files, where the corresponding FTAM
document types are listed parenthetically:
Unstructured text files (FTAM-1)
•
•
•
•
Structured text files (FTAM-2)
Binary files (FTAM-3)
Directory files (NBS-9)
FTAM Applications
This manual focuses on the FTAM services available to remote ISO FTAM applications
through the Compaq FTAM responder. There is no programmatic interface to the
Compaq responder; you request the services of the responder by means of the FTAM
interface on your remote system, which may or may not be a Compaq system.
ISO FTAM protocol defines a common model of the file system (the virtual filestore,
described later in the manual), which allows all computer systems on an open network
to share the same file-handling conventions. Because the Compaq FTAM responder
manages its own local file system, you do not need to learn how to program file
handling for the Compaq NonStop Kernel (the operating system) or the Guardian
environment (the application program interface and the Compaq NonStop tools) when
using the Compaq responder. In writing FTAM applications that use the services of the
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
FTAM Applications
responder, you use the standard FTAM file-handling conventions to perform remote file-
handling tasks, by means of the FTAM interface on your remote system.
Each FTAM service, or file operation, requires that multiple FTAM protocol operations
be performed, in sequence, to complete the service. For example, to open a file, an
FTAM application must first send an initialize request, and then a file-select request and
a file-open request, to the responding system in the communication. The responding
FTAM node receives the requests as indications and sends responses back to the
requesting node. The requesting node receives these responses as confirms. Thus, four
primitives—request, indication, response, and confirm—are used to complete most
services, as shown in Figure 1-1. Section 4 identifies the FTAM services supported in
the Compaq FTAM implementation.
Figure 1-1. An FTAM Service Using Four Primitives
Initiating
Process
Responding
Process
F-XXX request
F-XXX indication
F-XXX response
F-XXX confirm
CDT 203.CDD
The ISO standard provides flexibility in the level of FTAM function that must be
implemented in an ISO-conformant system. This flexibility implies that, as you write
and test your application, you need to consider the specifications for the other FTAM
implementations with which your application will interoperate. Refer to Section 2 for
information about the factors to consider in assessing the interoperability of the
Compaq FTAM product with other FTAM implementations.
If your remote FTAM application also runs on a Compaq system, you use the Compaq
FTAM application program interface (API), a set of procedures that interact with the
Compaq FTAM initiator process, to request FTAM services. The initiator, in turn, sends
requests for file-handling services to remote responders. The FTAM API is described in
detail in the OSI/FTAM Programming Reference Manual and the OSI/FTAM
Programming Guide.
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
Management Interfaces
Management Interfaces
For those people with access to the Compaq system who are responsible for configuring
and managing FTAM responder processes and for solving FTAM problems, Compaq
FTAM supports the Distributed Systems Management (DSM) management interfaces,
which include the following:
Subsystem Control Facility (SCF)
•
•
PTrace utility
Operator message facility of the Event Management Service (EMS)
•
The use of these management utilities with Compaq FTAM is described in the
OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual.
In addition, system managers and problem solvers on the Compaq system use the File
Utility Program (FUP) to perform many functions on Compaq disk files, including
copying and resecuring files. This utility is described in the File Utility Program (FUP)
Reference Manual.
Architectural Overview
FTAM services facilitate communication between different computer systems in an OSI
network. The communication link (at the FTAM level) created between two systems is
called an association. Each system is further defined in terms of its function in the
association. The system that creates and controls the association is called the initiating
system. The system that responds to the initiating system is called the responding
system. In Compaq FTAM, the initiating and responding functions are performed by
separate processes.
The Compaq FTAM responder process services FTAM requests initiated from remote
systems on the network, such as a request to read a file. The responder acts as an FTAM
file server, mapping FTAM requests into file operations and providing a translation
between Guardian file structures and FTAM file structures.
The Responder and Underlying Subsystems
To communicate over OSI networks, Compaq FTAM uses the services of the Compaq
OSI/AS and OSI/TS subsystems, and either the Compaq LAN access method (TLAM)
(or PAM for G06 and above releases), or the X.25 access method (X25AM), or TCP/IP.
In turn, X25AM and TLAM depend on hardware controllers to provide the 802.3
communications protocol (for TLAM) and the X.25 communications protocol (for
X25AM).
Figure 1-2 provides an overview of the Compaq FTAM responder and these underlying
Compaq products. The figure illustrates how the Compaq FTAM responder and the
underlying Compaq OSI subsystems support the layers of the OSI Reference Model
for both LANs and WANs:
The Compaq FTAM responder provides FTAM responder functions at the
Application Layer.
•
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
The Responder and Underlying Subsystems
Compaq application, presentation, and session service provider (TAPS) processes
perform the services of the Association Control Service Element (ACSE) in the
Application Layer, plus the services of the Presentation Layer and the Session
Layer. TAPS processes are provided by the OSI/AS subsystem.
•
Transport service provider (TSP) processes perform the services of the Transport
Layer. These processes are provided by the OSI/TS subsystem.
•
•
Network service provider (NSP) processes perform the services of the Network
Layer and/or the Data Link Layer. These processes are provided by the X25AM
and TLAM (or PAM for G06 and above releases) and TCP/IP subsystems.
The figure also shows the hardware used to implement Data Link Layer and Physical
Layer OSI communications through TLAM (or PAM) or X25AM.
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
The Responder and Underlying Subsystems
Figure 1-2. Compaq FTAM Responder Architectural Overview
User Application
API
Application Layer
Tandem FTAM
TAPS
(OSI/AS)
Presentation Layer
Session Layer
Transport Layer
TSP
TSP
(OSI/TS)
(TCP/IP)
Network Layer
Data Link Layer
NSP
(X25AM)
NSP
(TLAM or PAM)
NSP
NSP
(X25AM)
(TLAM or PAM)
Controllers
Controllers
Controllers
Controllers
Physical Layer
RS-232C
RS-449
X.21, V.35
RS-232C,
RS-449,
X.21, V-35
50-ohm
Baseband
50-ohm
Baseband
LAN
WAN
WAN
LAN
CDT 204.CDD
PDUs from a remote FTAM initiator are received by the Compaq system at the Physical
Layer and are transmitted up through the appropriate communications controller (or
adapter), NSP process, TSP process, and TAPS process to the FTAM responder process.
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
The Responder and the File System
The Responder and the File System
Figure 1-2 also shows the file system used by the Compaq responder to access files.
When a remote FTAM initiator requests access to files, the Compaq FTAM responder
provides that service via its virtual filestore (VFS) component, which acts as an interface
to the file system. The set of files accessible via the VFS includes all files on the
Expand network to which the Compaq FTAM responder process’ system belongs.
The responder’s VFS maps the FTAM requests into file requests and translates between
FTAM and Guardian file structures and attributes. For more information on the VFS
and how it maps particular file structures and attributes, refer to Sections 3 and 4.
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Introduction to the Compaq FTAM Responder
The Responder and the File System
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2
Conformance and Interoperatility
This section presents information about the conformance to standards and the
interoperability of the Compaq FTAM responder.
Conformance is the satisfaction of the requirements of the applicable standards,
consistent with the capabilities stated in the protocol implementation conformance
statement (PICS) for the implementation. Interoperability is the ability of an
implementation of a standard to work with other implementations of the same standard
to deliver services.
A list of the supported standards and agreements that apply to Compaq FTAM is
provided in “About This Manual” at the beginning of this manual.
Conformance
To be ISO FTAM-conformant, an FTAM implementation must comply with the
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) FTAM standard for communication
between different FTAM implementations. Conformance to the ISO FTAM standard is
tested in the areas of the support of services, functional units, service classes, and file
attributes.
Conformance testing increases the probability that an implementation is able to
interwork with other implementations. Two or more implementations are more likely to
work together if they conform to the same set of standards.
The Compaq OSI/FTAM product has been tested to conform with ISO 8571, NIST
Special Publication 500-162 (Stable Implementation Agreements for Open Systems
Interconnection Protocols) Part 9—FTAM Phase 2, and US GOSIP version 1.0.
Interoperability
The interoperability, or interworking, of two FTAM implementations is the ability of
these implementations to communicate using FTAM primitives in a useful and
meaningful way. While conformance to ISO FTAM is necessary, it does not by itself
guarantee that two implementations will interwork. Even if the two implementations
conform to the same OSI protocol standard, they may be incapable of interworking with
each other for reasons outside the scope of that standard (see ISO IS 9646-1, section
5.7.2). In addition, the FTAM standard is very complex. Two implementations may
contain disjoint subsets of the standard that do not allow for interoperability but are fully
conformant to the ISO specification. For example, two systems cannot interoperate if
each supports only an initiator, or if a document type supported by an initiator is not
included among the document types supported by the responder.
The Compaq FTAM product has been tested to conform with the standards and profiles
mentioned in the above subsection, “Conformance.” It has also been tested to
interoperate with a number of other vendors according to the NISTIR 4435 document,
“FTAM Interoperability Tests,” which most vendors use as a basis for writing FTAM
interoperability tests.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Basic Characteristics of FTAM Implementations
When evaluating interoperability between Compaq FTAM and another FTAM
implementation, consider the following aspects in which FTAM implementations can
vary. Section 4 of this manual provides you with additional details about the Compaq
FTAM implementation that you need to determine whether another implementation can
interoperate with the Compaq FTAM product.
Basic Characteristics of FTAM Implementations
To determine whether another FTAM implementation can interoperate with Compaq
FTAM, you must first consider the following basic characteristics of the two
implementations.
Roles of Initiator and Responder
Initiator and responder roles must be compatible to interoperate successfully. For two
implementations to interoperate, there must be an initiator and a responder that can send
and receive data between the two. For more information, see Section 4.
Roles of Sender and Receiver
The sender is the entity that sends data. The receiver is the entity receiving data. In
Compaq FTAM, both the initiator and the responder have sender and receiver
capabilities. For example, an initiator sending a read request is the receiver, and an
initiator sending a write request is the sender.
Service Classes Supported
The service classes supported are defined in terms of combinations of functional units.
At least one common service class must be supported for two implementations to
interoperate. Compaq FTAM supports four service classes: file transfer, file
management, file transfer and management, and file access.
Underlying Services
Compaq FTAM uses Compaq OSI/AS, which is an implementation of version 1 of the
Association Control Service Element (ACSE), as stated in ISO IS 8649 and 8650;
version 1 of the Presentation Layer, as stated in ISO IS 8822 and 8823; and version 2
of the Session Layer, as stated in ISO IS 8326 and 8327. To interoperate with Compaq
FTAM, other FTAM implementations must support compatible versions of ACSE,
Presentation, and Session, as well as the services underlying the Session Layer.
Functional Units
Both implementations must support the functional units required for any services the
pair will perform together. Compaq FTAM supports seven functional units: kernel,
read, write, file access, limited file management, enhanced file management, and
grouping.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Limitations on Value of Future-Filesize Attribute
Attributes
Aspects of attributes that can affect interoperability include the optional groups of
attributes, the level of support for each individual attribute (see Table 4-4) and its
optional components, and the range of values supported for each attribute. The Compaq
FTAM implementation supports three attribute groups: kernel, storage, and security.
For more information on attributes and attribute support for the Compaq FTAM
responder, see Section 4.
FTAM Parameters
Aspects of FTAM parameters that can affect interoperability include the supported
optional parameters and the range of values for all parameters. If they are to
interoperate, both implementations must support all parameters and ranges required by
the services to be performed. For more information on the optional parameters and
parameter value ranges supported by the Compaq FTAM responder, see Section 4.
Limitations on Value of Future-Filesize Attribute
Because of file-size limitations imposed by the Guardian file system, the Compaq
FTAM responder cannot support all possible values of the future-filesize attribute sent
in create and change-attribute requests. The Compaq responder creates files with a
maximum future-filesize value of 1 GB. If a value greater than 1 GB is requested, the
responder returns an informative diagnostic message and creates the file with a future-
filesize value of 1 GB.
The smallest file the Compaq responder can create has a future-filesize value of 64 KB.
If a smaller future-filesize value is requested, the responder creates the file with a future-
filesize value of 64 KB. (Note, however, that the entire 64K is not necessarily allocated;
only as many extents as needed are allocated.)
In addition, the maximum size of files is limited by the physical storage capacity of the
Compaq disk device being used.
Document Types and Related Parameters
Both implementations must support one or more common document types to
interoperate. Compaq FTAM supports the following document types: FTAM-1, FTAM-
2, FTAM-3, and NBS-9. In addition, both implementations must be aware of how the
parameters associated with document type (the maximum-string-length, string-
significance, and universal-class parameters) are used in the FTAM software with
which they wish to interoperate.
The NBS-9 document type allows reading of directory information using an attribute bit
string.
For more information on Compaq FTAM document types and related parameters, see
Section 4.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Data-Transfer Considerations
Maximum-String-Length Parameter
Compaq FTAM supports unbounded strings. The limitations of the maximum-string-
length parameter are described in detail in Section 4.
String-Significance Parameter
The Compaq FTAM responder supports all three values (fixed, variable, and not-
significant) for the string-significance parameter in FTAM-1 documents. For the
FTAM-3 document type, it supports the values not-significant, fixed, and variable.
Universal-Class Parameter
The default universal-class parameter value used by the Compaq FTAM responder for
FTAM-1 and FTAM-2 files is GraphicString, as specified in ISO 8571.
Simplification and Relaxation
Simplification is the act of reading a file of a specific FTAM document type as a
less structured, or simpler, FTAM document type. Compaq FTAM supports
the simplification of FTAM-2 Enscribe relative files to FTAM-1 files, but does not
support simplification of Structured Query Language (SQL) tables.
Relaxation, or the process of deriving one document from another by making the
parameters describing it less restrictive, is not supported at all by Compaq FTAM.
Mapping of Contents-Type Parameters
The Compaq FTAM virtual filestore (VFS) supports the Compaq FTAM responder by
providing an interface to the Guardian file system. It maps FTAM file structures and
attributes to Guardian file structures and attributes, and vice versa. Section 4 describes
the mappings of FTAM document types to Guardian file types.
Note that the Compaq responder does not keep a permanent record of the contents-type
parameter values used on creation of a file in the VFS. These values are directly
available only during the life of the FTAM association in which the file was created.
When a remote initiator makes a create request followed by an open request and the
open request specifies a contents type of unknown, the responder uses the contents-type
parameter values specified in the create request. However, this information is lost when
the association is terminated. On subsequent accesses to the file via a select request
followed by an open request with a contents type of unknown, the responder uses its
default values based on the file structure, as described in Section 4.
Data-Transfer Considerations
This subsection briefly describes the aspects of Compaq FTAM data handling that might
affect interoperability between the Compaq FTAM responder and another FTAM
implementation. For complete information, see Section 4.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Data-Transfer Considerations
Limits on Small String-Length Values With Large PDUs
When the Compaq FTAM responder receives data from a remote initiator, it decodes the
data and stores it, as a sequence of strings, in an internal buffer with a maximum size of
25 KB. According to the NIST FTAM Phase 2 agreements, P-DATA carrying encoded
FTAM PDUs or data elements cannot exceed 16 KB; however, string-header
information in the buffer can cause the data in the buffer to be much larger than the
maximum size of the encoded data. Because each string in the buffer includes a fixed
number of bytes of header information, packing small strings into a large PDU can cause
the 25 KB buffer size to be exceeded.
During data decoding, the responder checks the length of the data. If the decoded data
cannot be accommodated in the 25 KB buffer, the responder generates a provider
abort.
To avoid exceeding the buffer-size limit for writes to the Compaq responder, you can
either send a smaller number of strings per PDU or send larger strings, as described in
Section 4.
Handling of Escape Sequences
When writing data to the Guardian file system from a remote initiator, the responder
first removes any escape sequences contained in each string it receives before enforcing
the maximum-string-length limitation. When sending data to the remote initiator, it
does not check for escape sequences, but simply counts all bytes and packages them into
strings.
Use of Format Effectors
Format effectors are characters such as carriage returns and line feeds, which control
the formatting of information on character-imaging devices. To interoperate
successfully, application programmers must understand what an implementation expects
as an end-of-line symbol and how it interprets format effectors. For example, some
implementations use the FTAM-1 document type to transfer binary data as opposed to
text. Some implementations recognize carriage returns and line feeds as format
effectors and discard them if binary data, not text, is being transferred. Others see the
format effectors as data and transfer them as such.
In the Compaq FTAM responder’s virtual filestore (VFS), FTAM-1 files are treated as
documents and are implemented as Guardian EDIT files, which have a maximum record
length of 239 characters. The responder interprets carriage return-line feed
combinations (CR/LFs) as end-of-line indicators. If a file being written to the
responder’s VFS does not contain CR/LFs, the file is written in 239-character records.
Character Sets
The Compaq FTAM responder does no character-set verification. For FTAM-1 and
FTAM-2 files, to ensure that the file being transferred contains the correct character-
string type as specified in the universal-class parameter, your remote application should
verify characters as it sends or receives the data.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Presentation Encoding of FTAM PDUs and Data
For FTAM-3 files, keep in mind that the native character sets (ASCII, EBCDIC, and
so on) might be incompatible on the sending and receiving systems. For example,
Compaq systems use the 7-bit ASCII character set, whereas some other vendors’
systems use 8-bit EBCDIC. If you decide to send or receive text characters as FTAM-3
binary data, some conversion of the native character set might be necessary.
Some files might contain multiple character sets. The file system provides no means of
storing information on the location of character-set transitions within a file residing in it.
Because the Compaq responder removes escape sequences when enforcing maximum-
string-length limitations on data being written to the VFS, indications of transitions
between character sets are lost.
Writing of FTAM-2 Files
FTAM-2 files that are SQL tables must be written using the flat all data units (FA)
access context, since each incoming data element represents a single SQL field and node
descriptors are needed to delineate rows. Attempting to write to an SQL table using the
unstructured all data (UA) access context causes the responder to return a cancel request
that includes a diagnostic message indicating a poorly specified FADU. The file is left
in an unknown state.
FTAM-2 files that are not SQL tables may be written using either the FA or UA access
context. When FTAM-2 files are written using the FA access context, the responder
expects each text data element transferred to be preceded by a node-descriptor data
element. If the node descriptor element is omitted, the responder returns a cancel
request that includes a diagnostic message indicating an FTAM protocol error
Presentation Encoding of FTAM PDUs and Data
As described in ISO 8823, clause 8, there are several options for encoding FTAM PDUs
as presentation data. Presentation data is encoded as a SEQUENCE OF PDV-list. Each
PDV list contains one or more presentation data values (PDVs). PDV lists are encoded
as single-ASN1-type, octet-aligned, or arbitrary. If only a single Abstract Syntax
Notation-1 (ASN.1) data element (that is, a single PDV) is to be encoded, then a single
PDV list encoded as single-ASN1-type may be used. However, if multiple ASN.1 data
elements (that is, multiple PDVs) are to be encoded (as with grouped requests,
concatenated PDUs, and most F-DATA requests), there are several options:
Place the PDVs in a single PDV list encoded as octet-aligned.
•
•
Place the PDVs in multiple PDV lists, each containing one ASN.1 data element (one
PDV), encoded as single-ASN1-type.
Place the PDVs in multiple PDV lists, some containing multiple data elements
encoded as octet-aligned and others containing a single data element encoded as
single-ASN1-type.
•
Any of these three options is valid if all data elements have the same presentation
context. If different presentation contexts are needed (as would be the case, for
example, with FTAM-2 data using the FA access context), a separate PDV list must be
used for each different presentation context, and the third option applies.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Presentation Encoding of FTAM PDUs and Data
When receiving PDUs, Compaq FTAM supports all three options listed above. When
sending PDUs, Compaq FTAM follows these rules:
If single FTAM PDUs are to be sent, they are placed in a single PDV list encoded as
single-ASN1-type.
•
If multiple FTAM PDUs are to be sent (grouped requests or responses), they are sent
in a single PDV list encoded as single-ASN1-type.
•
When F-DATA requests are sent by the Compaq responder, the method of encoding
•
depends on the number of data elements to be encoded. If only a single data
element is to be sent, it is placed in a single PDV list encoded as single-ASN1-type.
If more than one data element is to be sent, the data elements are placed in a single
PDV list, encoded as octet-aligned.
For FTAM-2 files, node-descriptor data elements are placed in their own PDV lists as
single-ASN1-type. Consecutive file-contents data elements are placed in a single PDV
list as either single-ASN1-type or octet-aligned, depending on whether one or more
consecutive data elements exist.
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Conformance and Interoperatility
Presentation Encoding of FTAM PDUs and Data
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3
Compaq FTAM Responder Operation
The Compaq responder receives an FTAM request from an initiating system, processes
it, performs the appropriate action, and returns an FTAM response to the initiating
system. It performs file-handling operations through its virtual filestore (VFS), which
acts as an interface to the Guardian file system.
This section explains the major components of the Compaq responder process and
describes the flow of communication between an initiating system and the Compaq
responder.
Responder Structure
The Compaq responder process can be broken down into several components that
perform services for FTAM applications.
Figure 3-1 outlines the components of the responder that process FTAM requests,
perform the requested FTAM operations, and respond to the remote FTAM user. It
focuses on the responder components specific to performing FTAM services and does
not reflect the parts of the responder that format data or process management messages,
for example.
Figure 3-1 shows the following responder components:
The protocol state machine receives requests for new FTAM associations and for
•
FTAM services, in the form of indications, from the TAPS process in the OSI/AS
subsystem. It checks the FTAM requests for protocol errors, and if it finds none,
takes the action necessary to perform the requested service. This action may require
access to the file system through the responder VFS component.
Once any operations involving the file system are complete, the protocol state
machine updates the state information for the association and sends a response to
the remote FTAM initiator via the underlying OSI network.
The virtual filestore (VFS) acts as an interface to the file system. Files accessible
•
via the file system can also be accessed via the VFS component of the Compaq
responder. The VFS is responsible for translating file structures and attributes into
FTAM file structures and attributes, and vice versa. This translation is described
further in Section 4 under “File-Attribute Mappings.”
The responder communicates with underlying Compaq OSI/AS processes through
the OSI/AS API.
•
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Compaq FTAM Responder Operation
Responder Data Flow
Figure 3-1. Compaq FTAM Responder Process
FTAM Responder
5
Protocol
VFS
State Machine
7
6
4
OSI/AS API
4
7
Guardian
File System
TAPS
TSP
3
8
NSP
2
Communications Network
1
Remote
FTAM
Initiator
CDT 208.CDD
Responder Data Flow
Protocol and user data generally flows to and from the Compaq responder in the steps
described below. Note that the responder sends primarily responses, although cancel
and abort requests—and data indications during a data transfer—are also possible. For
the purposes of this subsection, assume that the remote initiator sends an FTAM request
and the responder returns a response to that request. This sequence of steps assumes
that you have already established an association.
The numbers shown in Figure 3-1 correspond to the sequence of steps outlined below.
1. An FTAM application, typically on a remote system, issues an FTAM request to the
FTAM initiator supporting it.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Operation
Responder Data Flow
2. The FTAM initiator follows the OSI protocol established on the initiating system to
send the outgoing FTAM protocol data unit (PDU) over the network to the Compaq
responding system, where it is received as an indication.
3. Once on the Compaq responding system, the incoming FTAM indication is sent
through the NSP, TSP, and TAPS processes, where it is formatted and processed as
required by each OSI layer.
4. After processing the indication, the TAPS process sends the PDU through the
OSI/AS API to the protocol state machine of the responder.
5. The protocol state machine decodes and checks the validity of the indication and, if
the indication is valid, performs the requested action, communicating with the VFS
where file-system access is required.
6. .The VFS accesses the file system via standard procedure calls and informs the
protocol state machine when the requested file-system actions are completed.
7. Based on the outcome of the file-system actions, the protocol state machine encodes
and sends a response PDU to the TAPS process for transmission to the FTAM
initiator. This response contains any diagnostic messages resulting from its
checking of FTAM protocol or from VFS communication with the file system.
8. .The TAPS process formats the PDU and forwards it to the TSP process. The TSP
process, in turn, formats the PDU and sends it to the NSP process. The NSP
process, depending on the network protocol that it supports, formats the PDU and
forwards it via the appropriate controller (or adapter) over the network to the
initiating system, where it is received as a confirm.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Operation
Responder Data Flow
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4
Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
This section provides detailed information on the Compaq FTAM responder’s support of
ISO FTAM functions. It includes the following information:
FTAM functions supported by the Compaq responder
•
Virtual filestore (VFS) mapping considerations for FTAM document types
•
•
•
•
VFS mapping considerations for FTAM file and activity attributes
Support for optional parameters in request and response PDUs
VFS file-access and security considerations
Supported Functions
The functional scope of an FTAM association depends on which FTAM functions are
supported both by the Compaq FTAM responder and the remote FTAM initiator with
which it is interoperating. The following four tables identify the FTAM service classes,
functional units, attribute groups, and attributes that the Compaq responder process
supports.
For a listing and explanation of these FTAM functions as specified by ISO, refer to
ISO 8571, parts 2 and 3.
Service Classes
Table 4-1 identifies the FTAM service classes that the Compaq responder process
supports. The Compaq responder supports all ISO-defined service classes except the
unconstrained class.
Table 4-1. Service Classes Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder
Compaq
Service Class
Support
File transfer
X
X
X
X
File access
File management
File transfer and
management
Unconstrained
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Functional Units
Functional Units
Table 4-2 identifies the FTAM functional units that the Compaq responder process
supports. The Compaq responder supports all ISO-defined functional units except the
FADU locking, recovery, and restart-data-transfer functional units.
Table 4-2. Functional Units Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder
Compaq
Functional Unit
Support
Kernel
X
X
X
X
X
Read
Write
File access
Limited file
management
Enhanced file
management
X
X
Grouping
FADU locking
Recovery
Restart data transfer
Attribute Groups
Table 4-3 identifies the FTAM attribute groups that the Compaq responder process
supports. The Compaq responder supports all ISO-defined attribute groups except the
private group.
Table 4-3. Attribute Groups Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder
Attribute
Group
Compaq
Support
Kernel
Storage
Security
Private
X
X
X
Attribute Support
Table 4-4 identifies the FTAM attributes that the Compaq responder supports and the
type of support given—full or partial. In the case of fully supported attributes, the
responder returns the current attribute value on a read-attribute request. When a
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Attribute Support
responder partially supports an attribute, it recognizes the attribute name as valid, but
provides no value for it. In this case, any reference to that attribute yields the result that
no value is available, and any attempt to change the attribute fails. For more
information on levels of attribute support, refer to ISO 8571-2, clause 9.4. Note that
Compaq files protected by the Compaq Safeguard system software security package
have fewer fully supported attributes than files protected by the Guardian environment.
Table 4-4. Attributes Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder
Attribute
Group
File Attribute
Level of Support
Kernel
Filename
Full
Permitted actions
Contents type
Storage account
Full
Full*
Partial
Storage
Date and time of
creation
Partial if protected by Safeguard security
software
Full if protected by Guardian enviornment
Date and time of last
modification
Partial if protected by Safeguard security
software
Full if protected by Guardian enviornment
Date and time of last
read access
Partial if protected by Safeguard security
software
Full if protected by Guardian environment
Partial
Date and time of last
attribute modification
Identity of creator
Partial if protected by Safeguard security
software
Full if protected by Guardian environment
Partial
Identity of last
modifier
Identity of last reader Partial
Identity of last
attribute modifier
Partial
File availability
Filesize
Full
Full
Full
Future filesize
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Document Types
Table 4-4. Attributes Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder (continued)
Attribute
Group
File Attribute
Level of Support
Security
Access control
Partial if protected by Safeguard security
software
Legal qualifications
Private use
Partial
Private
Not supported
* In this context, full support applies to the contents type as a whole; it does not imply the support of all document
types or all possible values of the parameters (maximum-string-length, universal-class, and string-significance) that
further define the contents type.
Document Types
Table 4-5 identifies the FTAM document types that the Compaq responder supports and
provides all supported values for associated contents-type parameters. The parameter
values listed here are those directly supported; for information on the default values of
these parameter values, see Table 4-7, later in this section.
Document types can be simplified to other document types with simpler structures.
Simplification is the process of reading a file of a specific document type as a simpler
document type. Relaxations—specifications that change the parameter values of a
document type—are not permitted by Compaq FTAM. For more information on
simplification and relaxation, see the subsection “Contents-Type Attribute,” later in this
section.
The NBS-9 parameter value < filename > shown in Table 4-5 is the syntax notation for
representing the value of a bit string. In this case, only the filename attribute bit is set.
Table 4-5. Document Types and Parameters Supported by the Compaq FTAM
Responder
FTAM
Document
Types
Parameters
Parameter Values
22, 25-27
FTAM-1
universal class
maximum-string-length
string-significance
1 - 7148 (in bytes)
not-significant or
Fixed or Variable
FTAM-2
FTAM-3
universal class
22, 25-27
maximum-string-length
string-significance
maximum-string-length
string-significance
1 - 4072* (in bytes)
not-significant
1 - 4096 (in bytes)
not-significant
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Mapping Between FTAM Contents Types and
Compaq File Structures
Table 4-5. Document Types and Parameters Supported by the Compaq FTAM
Responder (continued)
FTAM
Document
Types
Parameters
Parameter Values
1-4072 (in bytes)
fixed or variable**
<filename>***
maximum-string-length
string-significance
Not applicable
NBS-9
FTAM-2 files are relative (sequential) files, and each logical record of a relative file can be a maximum of 4072
bytes. Each string is stored as a logical record in a relative file. Therefore, the practical size limit of a string during
data transfer is 4072.
∗∗
If the string-significance parameter is set to fixed or variable, the file is an entry-sequenced file and is subject to the
maximum logical record length of 4072 bytes. However, if a DEFINE by the name
_ZOSF_FIXED_AS_UNSTRUCT exists when the FTAM processes are started then with the string-significance set
to FIXED, the file will be an unstructured file with a maximum-string-length of 4096 bytes.
∗∗∗
This value represents the Compaq FTAM responder default for NBS-9 files. If you open an NBS-9 file without
specifying the file attributes to return, the Compaq responder defaults the parameter setting to the filename attribute
only. If you do specify file attributes, the Compaq responder returns the specified file attributes.
Mapping Between FTAM Contents Types and
Compaq File Structures
The FTAM virtual filestore (VFS) supports the Compaq responder by providing an
interface to the Guardian file system. The Compaq implementation of the VFS maps
Compaq FTAM file structures and attributes to Guardian file structures and attributes,
and vice versa. Tables 4-6 and 4-7 show mappings of FTAM document types to file
types.
Create Mappings
Table 4-6 shows the Guardian file structures created when you use the F-CREATE
service to create FTAM files, provided either the file does not exist or the override
parameter is set to delete and create with new attributes. (If the file exists and the
override parameter is set either to select the old file or to create a new file with the old
attributes, the existing file attributes are not checked and are left unchanged.) The table
also shows the default parameter values for the FTAM-1, FTAM-2, and FTAM-3
document types. This table indicates the default parameter values for the document
types that Compaq supports, whereas Table 4-5, earlier in this section, indicates the full
range of parameter values for these document types.
For the create service to succeed, the maximum-string-length parameter is optional,
because the ISO FTAM default value for this parameter, unbounded, is supported by the
Compaq responder. Further, the value of the maximum-string-length parameter must
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Create Mappings
fall within the range supported by the Compaq responder for that document type and
string-significance value, as follows:
Document
Type
String-Significance
Value
Maximum-String-Length Value
FTAM-1
FTAM-1
FTAM-1
FTAM-2
FTAM-3
FTAM-3
FTAM-3
not significant
fixed
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 7148
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 7148
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 7148
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 4072
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 4096
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 4072
1<= maximum-string-length <= 4072
variable
not significant
not significant
fixed
variable
If the maximum-string-length parameter is not specified or if the specified value does
not fall within the defined range, the responder returns a negative confirm containing
diagnostic message 1001, indicating unsupported parameter values.
Note that the Compaq responder does not keep a permanent record of the contents-type
parameter values used on creation of a file in the VFS. These values are directly
available only during the life of the FTAM association in which the file was created.
When a remote initiator makes a create request followed by an open request and the
open request specifies a contents type of unknown, the responder uses the contents-type
parameter values specified in the create request. However, this information is lost when
the association is terminated. On subsequent accesses to the file via a select request
followed by an open request with a contents type of unknown, the responder uses its
default values based on the Guardian file structure, as described in the next subsection,
“Select-Open Mappings.”
Although Compaq FTAM supports the NBS-9 document type, it does not appear in
Table 4-6 because Compaq FTAM cannot create NBS-9 files. The “NBS-9 Documents”
subsection, later in this section, describes NBS-9 files in more detail. The Compaq
responder also supports the NonStop Structured Query Language (NonStop SQL) table
files for reading and writing. Compaq FTAM provides no support for creating SQL
files.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Select-Open Mappings
Table 4-6. Create Mappings: FTAM Contents Type to Compaq File Structure
Contents Type
Compaq File Structure
FTAM
Document
Types
Default Parameter Values
Description
File
Type*
File
Code
Record
Length**
universal-class = 25 (Graphic String)
maximum-string-length = none***
string-significance = not-significant
FTAM-1
Standard edit
file
U
101**** Not
applicable
universal-class = 25 (GraphicString)
maximum-string-length = none***
string-significance = not-significant
FTAM-2
FTAM-3
Enscribe
R
E
0
maximum-
string-
relative file
length
maximum-string-length = none***
string-significance = fixed
Enscribe
891
maximum-
string-
length
entry-
sequenced file
maximum-string-length = none***
string-significance = variable
Enscribe
entry-
E
892
0
maximum-
string-
sequences file
length
Enscribe
unstructured
file
U
Not
applicable
maximum-string-length = none***
string-significance = not-significant
(defaults to not-significant if omitted)
∗
The following values are possible for file type:
U = Enscribe unstructured
R = Enscribe relative
E = Enscribe entry-sequenced
∗∗
This is the standard Guardian file attribute that stands for the maximum record length.
∗∗∗
The maximum-string-length parameter must be specified.
∗∗∗∗
is automatically increased (in increments, up to the system limit) and the lines renumbered.
Line numbers are not preserved. If the value specified for the max-extents attribute is exceeded, max-extents
The maximum number of lines allowed for file type 101 is 10,000,000. For more information, see the Guardian
Procedure Calls Reference Manual.
Note. If a DEFINE by the name of _ZOSF_FIXED_AS_UNSTRUCT exists when the FTAM
processes are started, and the string-significance parameter is set to FIXED in the request, the
file created or selected will be an unstructured file with maximum-string-length of 4096 bytes.
Note. Though a default value for each parameter is proposed, if there are any user-defined
default values available for particular combinations on a file type and file code, then that will
override the system-defined default parameter values.
Select-Open Mappings
Table 4-7 shows the FTAM document types that correspond to each Compaq file type
that can be selected, opened, and read. This table indicates the default parameter values
for the document types that Compaq supports, whereas Table 4-5, earlier in this section,
indicates the full range of parameter values for these document types.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Select-Open Mappings
When you issue a file-open request, you specify a contents-type parameter that provides
the document type of the file and, optionally, parameter values that further define the
document type. When a remote initiator sends a file-open request to the Compaq
responder and specifies a contents type of unknown on the open request, the contents
type returned by the responder yields the appropriate FTAM document type according to
the requirements of the file system and as outlined in Table 4-7. If the file-open request
indicates an FTAM document type (rather than unknown) for the contents type, the
document type must generally be consistent with the mapping of Guardian file types to
FTAM document types shown in Table 4-7. If the document type is not consistent with
the values shown in Table 4-7, the responder returns a negative confirm that includes
diagnostic message 5036, contents type inconsistent.
If the maximum-string-length parameter of the contents type is specified, the responder
checks the proposed value before performing the select or open service. For the select
or open to succeed, the value of the maximum-string-length parameter must fall within
the range supported by the Compaq responder for that document type and string-
significance value, as follows (where record length is the standard Guardian file attribute
that stands for the maximum record length):
Document
Type
String-Significance
Value
Valid Maximum-String-Length
Value(s)
FTAM-1
FTAM-2
FTAM-3
FTAM-3
FTAM-3
not-significant
not-significant
not-significant
fixed
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 7148
maximum-string-length <= record length
1 <= maximum-string-length <= 4096
maximum-string-length = record length
maximum-string-length <= record length
variable
If the proposed maximum-string-length value does not fall within the defined range, the
responder returns a negative confirm containing diagnostic message 5036.
In addition, the contents type is an FTAM file attribute. When a remote FTAM initiator
sends a read-attribute request, the value of the contents-type attribute that the Compaq
responder returns is one of the FTAM document types listed in Table 4-7.
Table 4-7. Select-Open Mappings: Compaq File Structure to FTAM Contents
Type
Compaq File Structure
Contents Type
Description
File
Type*
File
Code
FTAM
Document
Types
Default Parameter Values
universal-class = 25 (Graphic String)
maximum-string-length = 7148
Standard edit
file
U
R
R
101**** FTAM-1
string-significance = not-significant
universal-class = 25 (Graphic String)
maximum-string-length = record length**
string-significance = not-significant
universal-class = 25 (Graphic String)
maximum-string-length = record length**
string-significance = not significant
Enscribe
relative file
-
-
FTAM-2
FTAM-2
SQL table,
organization
relative
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Select-Open Mappings
Table 4-7. Select-Open Mappings: Compaq File Structure to FTAM Contents
Type (continued)
Compaq File Structure
Contents Type
maximum-string-length = record length**
string-significance = fixed
Fixed-length
binary file
E
891
FTAM-3
maximum-string-length = record length**
string-significance = variable
Variable-
length binary
file
E
892
FTAM-3
Description
File
Type*
File
Code
FTAM
Document
Types
Default Parameter Values
maximum-string-length =2048
string-significance = not significant
Unstructured
file
U
All file
codes
except
101
FTAM-3
maximum-string-length =2048
string-significance = not significant
Non-SQL key-
sequenced file
K
E
-
FTAM-3
FTAM-3
maximum-string-length =512
string-significance = not significant
Non-SQL
entry-
sequenced file
All file
codes
except
891, 892
Directory
-
-
NBS-9
<filename>***
(selected by
supplying a
file name of
“DIRLIS”)
SQL table, not K or E
organization
relative
-
Notsupported; Not applicable
returned
diagnostic =
3013
∗
The following values are possible for file type:
U = Enscribe unstructured
R = Relative
E = Entry-sequenced
K = Key-sequenced
∗∗
This is the standard Guardian file attribute that stands for the maximum record length.
∗∗∗
This value represents the Compaq responder default for NBS-9 files on an open. If you open an NBS-9 file without
specifying the file attributes to return for the files in the directory, the Compaq responder defaults the parameter setting to the
filename attribute only. If you do specify file attributes, the Compaq responder returns the specified file attributes for the files in
the directory.
∗∗∗∗
Line numbers are not preserved. If the value specified for the max-extents attribute is exceeded, max-extents is
automatically increased (in increments, up to the system limit) and the lines renumbered.
The maximum number of lines allowed for file type 101 is 10,000,000. For more information, see the Guardian Procedure
Calls Reference Manual.
Note. If a DEFINE by the name of _ZOSF_FIXED_AS_UNSTRUCT exists when the FTAM
processes are started, and the string-significance parameter is set to FIXED in the request, the
file created or selected will be an unstructured file with maximum-string-length of 4096 bytes.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Maximum-String-Length Checking of Data Values
Note. Though a default value for each parameter is proposed, if there is a user-defined default
value for a particular combination of a file type and file code, that user-defined value will over-
ride the system default.
Maximum-String-Length Checking of Data Values
The responder enforces strict rules on maximum-string-length checking. Every data
value received or sent by the responder is checked according to the rules described
below.
Write Operations
When writing data to the Guardian file system from the remote initiator, the responder
checks the length of each string against the maximum-string-length value established for
the file (the value proposed in the contents-type parameter of the open request or
returned in the open confirm). The responder first removes any escape sequences
contained in each string it receives before enforcing the maximum-string-length
limitation.
If the string length is greater than the proposed maximum-string-length value, or if the
string significance is fixed and the string length is less than the proposed value, the
responder returns a cancel request containing diagnostic message 1007, indicating an
unspecific FTAM protocol error.
Read Operations
The responder does no escape-sequence checking on the data it retrieves from the VFS
and sends to the remote initiator; it simply counts all bytes and packages them into
strings. For read operations on FTAM-3 files with a string-significance value of fixed,
the responder does check for strings whose length is smaller than the maximum-string-
length value. If any such strings are found, the responder returns a cancel request
containing diagnostic message 5027, indicating a bad read.
Limits on Small String-Length Values With Large PDUs
When the Compaq responder receives data from a remote initiator, it decodes the data
and stores it, as a sequence of strings, in an internal buffer with a maximum size of
25 KB. According to the NIST FTAM Phase 2 agreements, P-DATA carrying encoded
FTAM PDUs or data elements cannot exceed 16 KB; however, string-header
information in the buffer can cause the data in the buffer to be much larger than the
maximum size of the encoded data. Because each string in the buffer includes a fixed
number of bytes of header information, packing small strings into a large PDU can cause
the 25 KB buffer size to be exceeded.
During data decoding, the responder checks the length of the data. If the decoded data
cannot be accommodated in the 25 KB buffer, the responder generates a provider abort.
To avoid exceeding the buffer-size limit for writes to the Compaq responder, you can
either send a smaller number of strings per PDU or send larger strings. Sending larger
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
File-Attribute Mappings
strings may require you to increase the value of the maximum-string-length parameter in
your requests. The following formula defines the conditions under which decoded data
will fit into the buffer:
NS-1
Σ ((ZLEN) )+ ((26 + PAD) * NS) <= 25600 bytes
i
i=0
where
NS = number of character strings
ZLEN = length in bytes of a given character string
PAD = pad byte following string; if string length is even,
PAD = 0; otherwise, PAD = 1
26 = maximum data-header overhead per character string
When the responder retrieves data from the VFS in response to a read request, it
automatically packages it into PDUs small enough to fit into its buffer. Therefore, no
similar adjustments are necessary on read requests.
The formula for calculating the size of the encoded data is given below. This formula
applies only to PDUs that contain primitive strings; PDUs containing constructed strings
have additional overhead. As mentioned above, the encoded data limit is 16 KB.
NE-1
SIGMA((ZLEN) )+ ((TAG + LEN) * NS) <= 16384 bytes (16 KB)
i
i=0
where
NS = number of character strings
ZLEN = length in bytes of a given character string
TAG = number of bytes used to encode the data tag
LEN = number of bytes used to encode length of string
Note. When the Compaq responder encodes data, the maximum encoded-data header
overhead (TAG + LEN) is always 4 bytes per string. (The same is true for data encoded by the
Compaq initiator.) An FTAM configurable file cannot be opened by the responder.
File-Attribute Mappings
The following subsection maps FTAM virtual filestore file attributes to specific
Guardian and NonStop SQL file attributes. File attributes provide information for
various aspects of a file, such as file name, file size, date and time of file creation, and
so on.
Kernel Group File Attributes
Every FTAM implementation must fully support kernel file attributes. The kernel group
includes the filename, permitted-actions, and contents-type attributes.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Kernel Group File Attributes
Filename Attribute
The filename attribute maps directly from the Compaq external file name to the FTAM
VFS, with the exception of specifying NBS-9 files. For an explanation of the
relationship between the filename attribute and NBS-9 files, see “NBS-9 Documents”
later in this subsection.
Permitted-Actions Attribute
The permitted-actions attribute is a fixed list that specifies the actions that can be
performed on an FTAM file. No Compaq file attribute corresponds to permitted-actions.
When a remote initiator creates an FTAM file in the Compaq VFS, the Compaq
responder always sets permitted-actions to fixed values. The fixed values selected
depend on document type, as listed in Table 4-8. Although the remote application can
specify permitted-actions in its file-create request, the values in Table 4-8 always
override these values.
Table 4-8. Actions Permitted for FTAM Document Type
FTAM
Document
Types
Permitted Actions
FTAM-1
Read, replace, extend, erase, read-attribute, change-
attribute, delete-file
FTAM-2
Read, insert, erase, read-attribute, change-attribute,
delete-file, traversal, reverse-traversal, random-
order
FTAM-3
NBS-9
Read, replace, extend, erase, read-attribute, change-
attribute, delete-file
Read, read-attribute
Contents-Type Attribute
The contents-type attribute maps directly to Compaq file structures. Table 4-6, earlier in
this section, lists the Compaq file structures (including file type and file code) created
when you use the file-open service with any supported contents type except NBS-9.
Table 4-7 shows how the responder maps Compaq files to the FTAM contents type
when you open them with a contents-type value of unknown, or when you read the file
attributes of the Compaq file.
When you open an existing file to read it, you can specify as part of the contents-type
parameter a document type that is a simplification of the FTAM document type normally
expected for that file. Document types can be simplified to other document types with
simpler structures.
You can simplify document types only on read operations. This means that you must
issue a read request immediately after your open request. If you issue a write request
after an open request that requires a simplification, the responder returns a diagnostic
message.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Kernel Group File Attributes
The responder allows for the simplification of FTAM-2 document types to FTAM-1
document types only. In addition, FTAM-2 simplification is allowed only on Compaq
Enscribe relative files, not on SQL tables. Per the ISO 8571-2 provisions, the responder
allows no simplification of FTAM-1 or FTAM-3 files.
Compaq FTAM does not permit the relaxation of document type parameters to less
restrictive values. The VFS component of the responder keeps no record of the
universal-class value associated with files created on the Guardian file system. In the
case of the maximum-string-length parameter, the VFS records the maximum-string-
length value for all FTAM-2 documents, and for FTAM-3 documents with a string-
significance value of fixed or variable. For FTAM-1 documents, and for FTAM-3
documents with a string-significance value of not significant, the VFS has no memory of
the associated maximum-string-length value.
Table 4-9 shows the simplification of document types that the responder allows.
Table 4-9. Simplification of Document Types Supported by the Compaq FTAM
Responder
FTAM
Document
Type
Document Type Simplifications
Not applicable
FTAM-1
FTAM-2
FTAM-3
NBS-9
FTAM-1 (Enscribe relative files only)
Not applicable
Not applicable
NBS-9 Documents
NBS-9 documents are files that have been created by listing Guardian directories. If the
remote initiator sends an F-SELECT primitive with a filename attribute of DIRLIS (all
in uppercase), the Compaq responder returns a file of directory entries (an NBS-9 file)
for the volume and subvolume specified in the filename attribute. The read and read-
attribute actions are the only file actions that you can perform on an NBS-9 file. If a
volume and subvolume are not specified, the responder uses the default volume and
subvolume of the user specified in the initiator-identity parameter of the F-INITIALIZE
request.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Kernel Group File Attributes
You can specify DIRLIS with volume or subvolume in any of the following ways:
$volume.subvol.DIRLIS
•
•
•
•
$volume.DIRLIS
subvol.DIRLIS
DIRLIS
Note. Because using ‘DIRLIS’ (uppercase) in the F-SELECT primitive returns the directory file,
and Guardian file names are not case-sensitive, you should use “dirlis” (lowercase) in the F-
SELECT primitive to select an actual file by this name rather than the directory file.
Each NBS-9 document has an attributes bit-string parameter. Each bit in this bit string
identifies an individual file attribute. Table 4-10 shows the attributes that correspond to
each bit.
Table 4-10. Bit String for NBS-9 File Attributes
Bit
Numbers
Attributes
0
Filename
1
Permitted actions
2
Contents type
3
Storage account
4
Date and time of creation
Date and time of last modification
Date and time of last read access
Date and time of last attribute modification
Identity of creator
5
6
7
8
9
Identity of last modifier
Identity of last reader
Identity of last attribute modifier
File availability
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Filesize
Future filesize
Access control
Legal qualifications
Private use
To control which attributes the responder returns when you read an NBS-9 file, set the
bit string in the file-attributes field of the contents-type parameter on the F-OPEN
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Storage Group File Attributes
request primitive. This allows you to specify all or a subset of the attributes listed
above. (Likewise, to control which attributes the responder returns when you read the
attributes of an NBS-9 file, you set the bit string in the attribute-names parameter of the
read-attribute request.) When you read the NBS-9 file, the responder returns only the
attributes you select. If you do not specify this parameter, the responder returns only the
filename attribute. For more information on the definition of the bit string in an NBS-9
directory file, refer to the NIST FTAM Phase 2 agreements, Part 9, Clause A.8.2.
Note. On Compaq systems, an NBS-9 file does not correspond to an actual physical Compaq
file; therefore, the read-attribute action does not provide much useful information for NBS-9
files. The Compaq responder provides this service for NBS-9 files for interoperability, to
support applications that perform a fixed sequence of services (for example, select, read-
attribute, open, read) on any document type.
Storage Group File Attributes
Storage attributes are negotiated between a remote initiator and the local responder. The
responder fully supports some storage attributes and partially supports others. If a
partially supported attribute is referenced, the Compaq responder indicates that no value
is available. You cannot change a partially supported attribute.
In the case of all four date-and-time attributes and the identity-of-creator attribute, if the
file under consideration is protected by the Safeguard security software, the attribute in
question is partially supported. The attribute is fully supported if the file is not protected
by the Safeguard security software. The date-and-time attributes are maintained by the
local file system.
The ISO 8571 standard defines two possible values for the file-availability attribute:
immediate or deferred availability. The Compaq responder supports only immediate
availability.
Filesize corresponds to the Guardian file attribute EOF (end-of-file), which returns the
number of bytes in the file. Filesize is a read-only attribute and cannot be set.
The future-filesize attribute corresponds to a Guardian calculation—max-filesize—
based on the Guardian file attributes primary extent size and secondary extent size. If
the remote application reads the future-filesize attribute, the Compaq responder returns
the max-filesize value. If the application writes the attribute, the responder changes the
Guardian file attribute max-extents.
The formula for calculating max-filesize from the Guardian file attributes is as follows:
max-filesize = [primary extent size + ((max-extents - 1) *
secondary extent size)] * 2048
where 2048 is the number of bytes in a page. (The primary and secondary extent sizes
are expressed in pages, whereas max-filesize is expressed in bytes.)
When a file is created through the FTAM create service, the Guardian max-extents
attribute is set to 16 if the future-filesize value is less than 1 MB, or to 512 if the future-
filesize value is greater than or equal to 1 MB. Then the primary and secondary extent
sizes are both set to the smallest integral multiple of 2 pages (4096 bytes) that will make
the max-filesize value greater than or equal to the future-filesize value. If the future-
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Storage Group File Attributes
filesize parameter is not specified in a create request, the responder creates a file with a
future-filesize value of 8 MB.
Subsequent change-attribute requests can change the value of max-extents. In all cases,
the minimum value of max-extents is 16, and the maximum value is 978. The extent
size cannot be changed.
Because of file-size limitations imposed by the Guardian file system, the Compaq
responder cannot support all possible values of the future-filesize attribute sent in create
and change-attribute requests. The Compaq responder creates files with a maximum
future-filesize value of 1 GB. If a value greater than 1 GB is requested, the responder
returns an informative diagnostic message and creates the file with a future-filesize
value of 1 GB.
The smallest file the Compaq responder can create has a future-filesize value of 64 KB.
If a smaller future-filesize value is requested, the responder creates the file with a future-
filesize value of 64 KB. (Note, however, that the entire 64K is not necessarily allocated;
only as many extents as needed are allocated.) No diagnostic message is returned in this
case.
Note that the maximum size of files is limited by the physical storage capacity of the
Compaq disk device being used. If an application attempts to write to a Compaq
responder a file larger than 1 GB or larger than the disk device can hold, a file-system
error 43 (unable to obtain disk space for file extent) will eventually occur in a WRITE
call, and the Compaq responder will send a cancel to the application.
Table 4-11 summarizes the Compaq support for the storage attributes.
Table 4-11. FTAM Storage Attributes and Corresponding Compaq File
Attributes
Storage
Attributes
Level of Support
Partial
Compaq File Attributes
Storage account
Date and time of
creation
Partial if protected by
creation date-time for files other than
Safeguard security software; NBS-9; current time for NBS-9
Full if protected by Guardian
environment
Date and time of
last modification
Partial if protected by
last modification date-time for files other
Safeguard security software; than NBS-9; current time for NBS-9
Full if protected by Guardian
environment
Date and time of
last read access
Partial if protected by
last open date-time for files other than
Safeguard security software; NBS-9; current time for NBS-9
Full if protected by Guardian
environment
Date and time of
last attribute
modification
Partial
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Security Group File Attributes
Table 4-11. FTAM Storage Attributes and Corresponding Compaq File
Attributes (continued)
Storage
Attributes
Level of Support
Compaq File Attributes
Identity of creator Partial if protected by
Safeguard security software
or if document
owner
type is NBS-9;
Full if protected by Guardian
environment
Identity of last
modifier
Partial
Partial
Partial
Full
Identity of last
reader
Identity of last
attribute modifier
File availability
Filesize
always available
eof-pointer
Full for files other than
NBS-9;
Partial for NBS-9
Future filesize
Full for files other than
NBS-9;
Partial for NBS-9
max-filesize (read attribute)
max-extents (change attribute)
Security Group File Attributes
The remote responder and local initiator negotiate security attributes. The responder
fully supports some security attributes while only partially supporting others. If a
partially supported attribute is referenced, the Compaq responder indicates that no value
is available. You cannot change a partially supported attribute. Table 4-12 shows
Compaq support for security attributes.
Table 4-12. Security Attributes Supported by the Compaq FTAM Responder
Security Attributes
Level of Support
Access control
Partial if protected by Safeguard security software;
∗
Full if protected by Guardian environment
Legal qualifications
Partial
∗
In accordance with ISO 8571-2, clause 12.16, the Compaq responder supports only a single action list for the
access-control attribute.
Access-Control Attribute
The ISO FTAM access-control attribute is a set of access-control elements, with each
element consisting of an action-list field and, optionally, concurrency-access, identity,
passwords, and location fields. The access-control attribute defines the conditions under
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Security Group File Attributes
which access to a file is allowed. ISO 8571-2 provides a complete description of the
ISO FTAM access-control attribute.
Within the access-control attribute, the Compaq responder uses only the action-list field
of the first access-control element; the concurrency-access, identity, passwords, and
location fields are ignored, as are all access-control elements after the first.
Further, for Safeguard protected files, the access-control attribute is partially rather than
fully supported. For these files, no mapping to Guardian security is attempted, and the
responder indicates that no value is available when it reads the access-control attribute.
In this case, attempts to change the attribute fail.
The following subsections explain how the Compaq FTAM responder uses the access-
control attribute in three tasks requested by a remote initiating system: creating files,
changing file attributes, and reading file attributes.
Creating Files. For files created through FTAM, the access-control attribute provided
by the initiating system with the initial-attributes parameter in the F-CREATE request
maps to Compaq file security (R W E P—Read Write Execute Purge). This mapping is
as follows:
The Compaq responder uses only the first access-control element. If more than one
•
access-control element is present, the responder ignores all elements other than the
first. The responder uses only the action-list field of the access-control element and
returns a diagnostic message if the access-control element contains any other
information (such as concurrency-access and identity).
If the read access-control bit of the action list is set, the Compaq responder sets
•
READ access to N, indicating that any user on the Expand network can read the file.
Otherwise, the responder sets READ access to –, indicating that only the super ID
user can read the file.
If any of the insert, replace, extend, change-attribute, or erase access-control bits of
•
the action list are set, the responder sets WRITE access to N, indicating that any user
on the Expand network can write to the file. Otherwise, the responder sets WRITE
access to –, indicating that only the super ID user can write to the file.
EXECUTE access is set to –, indicating that only the super ID user can execute the
file.
•
If the delete-file access-control bit of the action list is set, the responder sets PURGE
•
access to N, indicating that any user on the Expand network can purge the file.
Otherwise, the responder sets PURGE access to –, indicating that only the super ID
user can purge the file.
The mapping of FTAM action-list settings to Guardian security is summarized in Table
4-13.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Security Group File Attributes
Table 4-13. Mapping From FTAM Action List to Guardian Security
If action list is set to…
Read
Guardian security is modified to…
Set READ access to N
Set WRITE access to N
Set WRITE access to N
Set WRITE access to N
Set WRITE access to N
(no change)
Insert
Replace
Extend
Erase
Read attributes
Change attributes
Delete file
Set WRITE access to N
Set PURGE access to N
If the access-control attribute is not present in the F-CREATE indication, the Compaq
responder sets Compaq file security to the default security allowed for the FTAM
association, as defined by the initiator-identity parameter sent in the F-INITIALIZE
request or by the default user (DEFUSER) attribute specified in the VFS profile
configured for this responder.
Changing File Attributes. The access-control attribute can be modified through FTAM
using the F-CHANGE-ATTRIB primitive. On the basis of the information a remote
initiator sends in the F-CHANGE-ATTRIB request, the Compaq responder modifies the
Guardian security of a file according to the functions it supports and returns a new value
for the access-control attribute in the F-CHANGE-ATTRIB response. The Compaq
responder access-control attribute is limited to a single access-control element.
In the F-CHANGE-ATTRIB request sent by the initiating system, the values for access
control consist of insert-values or delete-values (or both), each of which can be zero,
one, or more access-control elements. The Compaq responder, however, processes only
the first access-control element sent for insert-values and for delete-values.
The Compaq responder also ignores all but the first component of the insert-values or
delete-values information, using only the action-list information to modify Guardian
security (R W E P) for the file. If the initiating application attempts to change any other
components of access control (such as concurrency-access, location, or identity), the
Compaq responder returns a diagnostic message.
Insert-values and delete-values turn access to the actions in the action list on and off,
respectively. Because the access-control attribute can indicate both insert-values and
delete-values, you might unintentionally specify the same action in both values. If this
occurs, the delete-values action overrides the insert-values action.
The following rules apply to changing the access-control attribute:
For insert-values:
If the read access-control bit of the action list is set, the responder sets READ access
to N, indicating that any user on the Expand network can read the file.
•
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Security Group File Attributes
If any of the insert, replace, extend, change-attribute, or erase access-control bits of
the action list are set, the responder sets WRITE access to N, indicating that any user
on the Expand network can write to the file.
•
•
If the delete-file access-control bit of the action list is set, the responder sets PURGE
access to N, indicating that any user on the Expand network can purge the file.
For delete-values:
If the read access-control bit of the action list is set, the responder sets READ access
to –, indicating that only the super ID user can read the file.
•
If all of the insert, replace, extend, change-attribute, or erase access-control bits of
•
the action list are set, the responder sets WRITE access to –, indicating that only the
super ID user can write to the file. If only some of these access-control bits are set,
there is no change.
If the delete-file access-control bit of the action list is set, the responder sets PURGE
access to –, indicating that only the super ID user can purge the file.
•
Note. EXECUTE access is always set to –, indicating that only the super ID user can execute
the file.
Reading File Attributes. When the Compaq responder reads FTAM file attributes for
document types other than NBS-9, it maps the values for access control from Guardian
security based on the user ID for the association, as defined by the initiator-identity
parameter sent in the F-INITIALIZE request or by the DEFUSER attribute specified in
the VFS profile configured for this responder. This mapping shows which actions that
user can perform. (For NBS-9 files, the action list on a read-attribute action is always
[read, read-attribute]).
The user has specific access (READ, WRITE, EXECUTE, or PURGE) to a file if one of
the following applies:
User is super ID, and file is on the same Expand node as the responder.
•
•
•
•
Guardian security is N.
Guardian security is A, and file is on the same Expand node as the responder.
Guardian security is C, and user is in the same group as the owner of the file.
Guardian security is G, and user is in the same group as the owner of the file, and
file is on the same Expand node as the responder.
•
Guardian security is U, and user is the owner of the file.
•
Guardian security is O, user is the owner of the file, and file is on the same Expand
node as the responder.
•
The Compaq responder sets the individual bits of the action list according to the
Guardian access allowed for the user. Table 4-14 shows how Guardian security maps to
FTAM action-list settings.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
Private Group File Attributes
Table 4-14. Mapping From Guardian Security to FTAM Action List
Guardian Access
READ
Action-List Bits Set
Read
WRITE
Insert, Replace, Extend, Erase, Change-attribute
No effect on access control
Delete-file
EXECUTE
PURGE
The read-attribute bit is always set.
Legal-Qualifications Attribute
The legal-qualifications attribute conveys information about the legal status of the file
and its use. This attribute is partially supported.
Private Group File Attributes
Compaq FTAM does not support private group file attributes.Supported and
Unsupported Optional ParametersSupported and Unsupported Optional Parameters
Supported and Unsupported Optional Parameters
Table 4-15 indicates the level of support provided by the Compaq responder for the
optional parameters received in request PDUs. It shows what action the Compaq
responder performs on the optional parameters received from a remote initiator.
Table 4-15. Compaq Support of Optional Parameters Received
in Request PDUs
Parameters
Level of Compaq Support
Implementation
information
Decoded and ignored.
Shared ASE information
Contents type list
Decoded and ignored.
Supported. Only the following document types are accepted on
the response: FTAM-1, FTAM-2, FTAM-3, NBS-9. Only the
abstract syntaxes required for those document types are
accepted.
Initiator identity
Supported. Used to set the Compaq user. Either the user name
(group_name.user_name), or user ID (group_no, user_no) form
is allowed.
Account
Decoded and ignored.
Filestore password
Supported. Used in conjunction with initiator-identity parameter
to authenticate the Compaq user.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
File-Access and Security Considerations
Table 4-15. Compaq Support of Optional Parameters Received
in Request PDUs (continued)
Parameters
Level of Compaq Support
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Decoded and ignored.
Diagnostic
Access passwords
Concurrency control
Create password
Activity identifier
Remove contexts
Define contexts
FADU lock
Table 4-16 shows which optional parameters the Compaq responder can return in a
response PDU.
Table 4-16. Compaq Support of Optional Parameters Sent in Response PDUs
Parameters
Level of Compaq Support
Implementation information Not returned.
Shared ASE information
Contents type list
Not returned.
Returned with list reduced to document types supported by
responder.
Diagnostic
Always returned when action-result parameter is not equal to
zero. Sometimes returned (informative diagnostic messages)
when action-result parameter equals zero.
Charging
Attributes
Not returned.
See “File-Attribute Mappings,” earlier in this section, for
details of support.
FADU identity
Not returned.
File-Access and Security Considerations
The VFS controls access to files through normal Guardian security mechanisms. Each
FTAM association has a Compaq user ID associated with it. This user ID can assume
two values, depending on whether the initiator-identity parameter is supplied in the F-
INITIALIZE request primitive. If the initiator-identity parameter is supplied, this
parameter provides the user ID value. If the initiator-identity parameter is omitted, the
user ID becomes the default user configured via the DEFUSER attribute for the VFS
profile used by the responder. In either case, the password can be used. The filestore-
password parameter of the F-INITIALIZE request primitive supplies the password
used to authenticate the initiator identity. DEFUSER includes both the user ID and the
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
File-Access and Security Considerations
password. For details on configuring a default user, refer to the OSI/FTAM
Configuration and Management Manual.
The VFS actions allowed by the FTAM responder depend on the Guardian security (R
W E P) for a file and the user ID for the association. For example, if you have Compaq
purge access to a given file, the responder allows the FTAM delete-file action. Table
4-17 shows the Guardian access required for each FTAM VFS action.
Table 4-17. Guardian Access Required to Perform FTAM Actions
Guardian File Access
FTAM VFS Action Required
Guardian
Exclusion Mode
Read
READ
SHARED
Insert
WRITE
EXCLUSIVE
EXCLUSIVE
Replace
WRITE (READ also
required for EDIT files)
Extend
WRITE (READ also
required for EDIT files)
EXCLUSIVE
Erase
WRITE
None
EXCLUSIVE
SHARED
Read attributes
Change attributes
Delete file
WRITE
PURGE
EXCLUSIVE
EXCLUSIVE
Note. The Compaq EXECUTE access for a file has no bearing on FTAM access.
Refer to the Compaq File Utility Program (FUP) Reference Manual, the Compaq
Enscribe Programmer’s Guide, and, if your files are Safeguard protected, the Compaq
Safeguard Reference Manual for information about setting READ, WRITE, and PURGE
access to a file.
Because the Compaq responder runs under the user ID for an association, Guardian
security and Safeguard security are both enforced. The responder cannot translate
Safeguard security attributes into the FTAM access-control attribute. Therefore, when a
remote application reads the attributes of a file that the Safeguard software protects, the
access-control attribute indicates that no value is available. However, the Safeguard
software still protects FTAM access to the file. Note that for such a file, the read-
attribute action does not tell you which file-access actions you may perform.
If a file-access request is rejected because the user ID does not meet the Guardian
security requirements of the file, the responder sends a diagnostic message to the
application, and also generates an EMS event message indicating a security violation on
a file-access attempt.
Table 4-17 shows the exclusion mode that applies to each FTAM VFS action. Files
open for read actions are open for SHARED access, allowing more than one user to
open a file concurrently for reading. Files open for insert, replace, extend, and erase
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Compaq FTAM Responder Support of
ISO FTAM Functions
File-Access and Security Considerations
actions are open for EXCLUSIVE access; only one user at a time can open a file for
writing. Where a combination of VFS actions are performed on a file, that file’s
exclusion mode is EXCLUSIVE if any one of the actions qualify the file’s exclusion
mode as EXCLUSIVE. If a file access is attempted on a file already opened for
EXCLUSIVE access, the responder returns a diagnostic message to the remote
application in the F-OPEN confirm.
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5
Suggestions for Development of Remote
Applications
When you write an FTAM application that uses the services of the Compaq responder,
how you design, code, and debug it depends largely on the interface you are using on the
remote system. However, there are some general things you should consider to make
the most effective use of the Compaq FTAM responder. This section briefly discusses
application development considerations for the design and programming phases of your
project and for the troubleshooting phase.
Design and Programming
In designing your application, you should first consider interoperability with the other
FTAM implementation you are using. In the coding phase, build error handling into
your application, taking advantage of the information provided by the Compaq
responder in diagnostic messages.
Interoperability
Before writing your application, you should read Section 2 of this manual,
“Conformance and Interoperability,” which describes certain aspects of the Compaq
FTAM responder that can affect its ability to interoperate with other FTAM
implementations. Compare the information in Section 2 to the characteristics of the
remote FTAM implementation. Pay special attention to the following:
Service classes, functional units, and attributes supported
•
•
•
•
•
•
Future-filesize limitations
Maximum-string-length limitations
String-significance values supported
Use of format effectors, including carriage return/line feed pairs
Character sets
Existing applications being adapted to use the Compaq responder might need some
modifications in these areas.
Error Handling
To ensure that you receive as much information as possible about application problems
if they occur, your applications should follow a good error-handling strategy. In
general, you should check for status and error information after each FTAM operation
you request in your program, and then provide some means of reporting errors.
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Suggestions for Development of Remote
Applications
Troubleshooting
The Compaq FTAM responder returns diagnostic messages to your application as
specified by the ISO 8571 standard. In many cases, more information is returned than is
required by the standard. Appendix A, “Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic
Messages,” provides cause, effect, and recovery information about all diagnostic
messages returned by the responder.
Some responder diagnostic messages also contain text of up to 256 characters in the
Further Details field, providing additional information on the nature of the problem. For
example, if you attempt to create a file and receive diagnostic message 3006 (file cannot
be created), the Further Details text provides the file-system error number returned by
Guardian when the file creation attempt failed. A Compaq problem solver or someone
else with access to the Compaq system can look up this number in the Guardian
Procedure Errors and Messages Manual to obtain information on what occurred and
how to correct the problem.
As another example, if you attempt to open a file and receive diagnostic message 5036
(contents type inconsistent), the Further Details text “illegal MSL value” indicates that
you attempted to open a file with a maximum-string-length parameter value outside the
range supported by the Compaq FTAM responder, as described under “Mapping
Between FTAM Contents Types and Compaq File Structures” in Section 4.
It is recommended that you check Further Details whenever you receive a diagnostic
message. The Further Details text for many messages is self-explanatory and is not
described in Appendix A.
Troubleshooting
To detect and eliminate problems in your remote application, you need to use whatever
debugging tools are available on the remote system. However, there are also
troubleshooting tools available on the Compaq system where the responder runs that can
provide additional information about a problem. If you encounter interoperability
problems or other problems that appear to originate on the Compaq system, you should
work with a Compaq problem solver who has access to these tools.
The Compaq troubleshooting tools include the following:
The Event Management Service (EMS) log
•
•
•
Subystem Control Facility (SCF) interactive interface
The PTrace utility
The Event Management Service (EMS) on Compaq systems enables the Compaq
problem solver to monitor problems and other significant events that occur during the
operation of Compaq FTAM and other Compaq software. The FTAM responder and the
APLMGR process that manages it generate event messages when they detect
significant events, as do the processes in the underlying OSI/AS, OSI/TS, X25AM, and
TLAM (or PAM for G06 and above releases) and TCP/IP subsystems. Event messages
are logged to the console or displayed on a terminal as operator messages, which are
described in the Operator Messages Manual.
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Suggestions for Development of Remote
Applications
Troubleshooting
The Compaq problem solver can use SCF commands to display configuration, status,
and statistics information about the responder and APLMGR processes on the Compaq
system. This information can sometimes provide clues to the cause of a problem,
especially if an association is not yet established or if there are problems with system
capacity or performance. In addition the STATUS SU command, which provides
information about an FTAM association once it is established, can be especially useful
in troubleshooting.
The PTrace (print trace) utility allows the Compaq problem solver to look at trace data
generated with the SCF TRACE command. The TRACE command provides a log of
message traffic between the various processes running on the Compaq system; PTrace
displays the contents of these messages, including the types and contents of protocol
data units (PDUs). Problems that can be detected using TRACE and PTrace include
interoperability problems and various application protocol problems.
Additional guidance for the Compaq problem solver is provided in the troubleshooting
section of the OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual.
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Suggestions for Development of Remote
Applications
Troubleshooting
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6
Responder Manager
This section discusses considerations that are related to the configuration and
management of the responder process and its VFS on the Compaq system, but that you
might need to know when writing or using FTAM applications on the remote system. It
covers the following topics:
Notes on configuration
•
•
•
Fault tolerance
Event messages
Full details on FTAM configuration, management, and troubleshooting on the Compaq
system are provided in the OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual.
Notes on Configuration
Compaq FTAM (responder and APLMGR processes), the OSI/AS subsystem, the
OSI/TS subsystem, and TLAM (or PAM for G06 and above releases) or X25AM or
TCP/IP must be configured and running on the Compaq system before your application
can communicate with the Compaq responder.
Because of the flexibility, and resultant complexity, of the configuration of underlying
Compaq OSI layers, configuration errors are a common cause of problems in Compaq
FTAM applications. The Compaq problem solver should pay special attention to
checking the configuration of Compaq FTAM and the configuration of the underlying
OSI layers (via Compaq OSI/AS).
The following aspects of configuration are important to writers and users of remote
FTAM applications:
OSI address of responder
•
Initiator-identity and filestore-password parameters
•
•
•
•
Protocol error counter
Ways to increase responder capacity
Ways to increase responder performance
OSI Address of Responder
The assigned OSI address of each responder process is configured on the Compaq
system. Remote applications must refer to this address when requesting the services of
the responder. Several responders can be assigned to the same address.
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Responder Manager
Initiator-Identity and Filestore-Password Parameters
Initiator-Identity and Filestore-Password Parameters
The initiator-identity and filestore-password parameters in the F-INITIALIZE request
correspond, respectively, to the Guardian user ID and password on the Compaq system.
Optionally, a default user ID and password can be set up in the Compaq FTAM
configuration, allowing remote applications access to the responder and its VFS without
sending a user ID and password across the network.
If defaults are not configured, your application must specify a Guardian user ID that
allows access to the files in the VFS, along with its associated password.
Protocol-Error Counter
A protocol-error counter, whose value is configurable, specifies how many FTAM
protocol errors must occur before an event message is generated on the Compaq system.
These event messages can alert the Compaq problem solver to interoperability problems.
Increasing Responder Capacity
The Compaq system manager can increase responder capacity by doing one of the
following:
Increasing the maximum number of associations or attaches per responder process
•
•
Adding more responder processes
Increasing Responder Performance
The system manager can often increase system performance or throughput by doing one
or more of the following:
Configuring responder processes to run in different Compaq CPUs
•
•
•
•
Specifying a less fully occupied disk as the process swap volume
Adjusting the execution priority of various processes
Adjusting some of the parameters in the underlying OSI/AS configuration
Fault Tolerance
Compaq FTAM provides some fault tolerance if responder processes are configured to
run as NonStop process pairs, consisting of a primary process and a backup process.
When processes run as NonStop process pairs, the startup configuration information for
the primary process is checkpointed. If a hardware or software component fails, the
backup process takes over.
If the primary responder process fails, all outstanding Compaq FTAM associations, as
well as the associated OSI/AS connections, are aborted. The remote initiator receives
an F-P-ABORT indication. After a delay, the remote FTAM application can retry
establishing the association.
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Responder Manager
Event Messages
If the Compaq FTAM responder process is running as a NonStop process pair, the
backup Compaq FTAM responder process takes over, and your remote application must
reinitiate its Compaq FTAM associations. You or your application should then check
and verify all previous work performed using the Compaq responder, correct
inappropriate file states left from the component failure, and proceed as appropriate to
the needs of your application.
The process of verifying work performed before a hardware or software component
failure and recovering from unknown file states is different for every application. The
main recovery strategies depend on the type of activity in progress during component
failure:
Reading from a file
•
Writing to a file that your application created
•
•
Writing to a file that already existed
In the case of reading a file, no recovery is necessary. The Compaq responder does not
modify files opened for reading only.
In the case of writing to a file, you should probably consider the file unusable. If you
created the original file, the best recovery might be to delete the unusable file and
recreate it. If you were writing to a file that you did not create and whose contents you
cannot retrieve—from a file backup, for example—recovery might not be possible. You
should design your application (making backups where necessary) with this in mind.
FTAM configurable files cannot be opened by the responder.
Event Messages
The Event Management Service (EMS) on Compaq systems enables the Compaq
problem solver to monitor problems and other significant events that occur during the
operation of Compaq FTAM and other Compaq software.
Whenever a Compaq process such as the FTAM responder detects an event that might
affect its operation, it generates an event message describing the event. Such event
messages can be related to hardware or software malfunctions, or to important changes
in the state of a system component. Text (readable) versions of these event messages
can be displayed as operator messages: for example, in an operator console log or on a
terminal running the ViewPoint operations console application. For detailed
information on the event messages sent by Compaq FTAM processes, see the OSIFTAM
and OSIAPLMGR sections of the Operator Messages Manual.
Event messages generated by FTAM responder and APLMGR processes can alert the
Compaq problem solver to the following kinds of problems:
System problems such as CPU failures, process failures, and unavailability of
system resources such as LCBs
•
Interoperability problems that cause protocol-error thresholds to be exceeded
•
•
Configuration problems, such as mismatches between the common names and OSI
addresses configured in the APLMGR MIB and those in the OSI manager MIB
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Responder Manager
Event Messages
Failure to establish an association with a Compaq responder due to an invalid
•
•
initiator ID or password
Compaq responder virtual filestore (VFS) file-access failures due to file-system
errors or security violations
The responder also returns an event message whenever it starts or completes a file
transfer, indicating whether or not the transfer was successful. This event can be
monitored to verify completion of a transfer, so that your application can be notified
when it can proceed with the next operation.
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A
Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic
Messages
The Compaq FTAM responder diagnostic messages can be returned in indications and
confirms to an initiating FTAM implementation that requested the Compaq FTAM
responder to execute a service that it cannot perform. They can also be returned to
provide additional information on a successful action. Those troubleshooting FTAM
applications using the Compaq responder can use these diagnostic messages to
understand why a requested action has failed or to qualify a successful action. This
appendix gives a detailed explanation of each diagnostic message, including cause,
effect, and recovery information.
This appendix is intended for those who are writing, using, or troubleshooting an FTAM
application running over a remote initiator that interoperates with the Compaq FTAM
responder. In some cases, the problem lies on the initiating system; in other cases, the
problem is on the Compaq system (for example, in the responder configuration). The
recovery-action descriptions indicate whether an action is to be taken by the application
or interactive FTAM user on the initiating system, or by the Compaq problem solver on
the Compaq system. For problems that lie on the initiating system, it may be useful to
notify the remote initiator site when error conditions occur in case the remote
application does not check for returned diagnostics.
A table listing the diagnostic messages of a particular group precedes the detailed
explanations. Each table lists the messages numerically by error identifier and includes
information about the type, or severity of the error, and the observer and source of the
error. Table A-1 lists the diagnostic message types and indicates the severity of each;
Table A-2 lists valid error observer and error source values.
Table A-1. Diagnostic Message Types
Type
Description
0
Informative: requires no recovery, and the current state of the file service is not
affected. Message provides information to qualify a successful action.
1
2
Transient: can reoccur if the sequence of events is repeated and implies the failure
of the operation being performed.
Permanent: occurs every time the sequence of events is repeated and implies the
failure of at least the present operation being performed.
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
General FTAM Diagnostic Messages
Table A-2. Sources and Observers of Errors
Source/Observer
Identifier
Description
0
Source of the error cannot be identified. This identifier is not valid for
the observer.
1
2
3
Initiating file-service user (initiating application).
Initiating file protocol machine.
Service supporting the protocol machines. This identifier is not valid
for the observer.
4
5
Responding file protocol machine.
Responding file-service user (VFS or file system).
The detailed descriptions of the diagnostic messages that follow each summary table are
also listed numerically by the error identifier. In addition to the information provided in
this appendix, responder diagnostic messages might also contain text of up to 256
characters in the Further Details fields, providing additional information on the nature of
the problem.
General FTAM Diagnostic Messages
Table A-3 displays the general error identifiers returned by the Compaq FTAM
responder.
Table A-3. General FTAM Diagnostic Messages
Identifier
Type
Observer
Source
Reason
1
7
8
9
2
0
1
2
5
5
Unspecific responder error
Unspecific initiator error
Subsequent error
5
1
4
4
4,5
4,5
Temporal insufficiency of
resources
1
Unspecific responder error
Cause. Either the combination of a small maximum-string-length value and a large
PDU size caused the incoming data to exceed the responder’s data buffer capacity, or an
internal software error has occurred in the responder.
A-2
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
General FTAM Diagnostic Messages
Effect. The responder aborts the association. If the data buffer capacity was exceeded
for the reason given under “Cause,” the Further Details field contains the message
smaller PDU or larger MSL needed.
Recovery. If the Further Details field indicates that a smaller PDU or a larger MSL is
needed, the application or FTAM user should decrease the number of strings sent in one
PDU. This can be done either by sending a smaller number of strings per PDU or by
sending larger strings. Sending larger strings may require increasing the value of the
maximum-string-length parameter in the application’s requests. For further information,
refer to “Limits on Small String-Length Values With Large PDUs” in Section 4.
Otherwise, the application or FTAM user should retry the operation. This can be a
transient condition. If the condition persists, the Compaq problem solver should trace
the responder and follow the standard procedures at the Compaq site for contacting the
appropriate support personnel. These procedures might involve contacting the local
Compaq support analyst. For details on how to trace the responder, refer to the SCF
Reference Manual for FTAM and APLMGR and the Compaq PTrace Reference Manual.
7
Unspecific initiator error
Cause. The responder received a change-attribute indication containing a null proposed
change-attribute list.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The service is completed; no
attributes are changed.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
8
Subsequent error
Cause. In a grouped request, one of the requests after the one on which the responder
returns this diagnostic message has encountered an error condition.
Effect. The responder rejects the grouped request.
Recovery. The application programmer or FTAM user should determine which request
in the group failed and correct the problem.
9
Temporal insufficiency of resources
Cause. The responder has attempted to allocate memory for a data control block, but
the memory table does not have sufficient space to satisfy the request.
Effect. The responder aborts the association.
A-3
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Protocol and Supporting Service-Related Diagnostic
Messages
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry the operation. This can be a
transient condition. If the condition persists, the Compaq problem solver can start
another FTAM responder process to balance the load across multiple responder
processes. For details on how to configure and start additional responders, refer to the
SCF Reference Manual for FTAM and APLMGR and the OSI/FTAM Configuration and
Management Manual.
11
Access request violates local security
Cause. A file has been selected with requested access that violates the file system
security. A file-system security violation (48) was detected.
Effect. The responder rejects the select or create request and generates a security-fail
event (event number 21).
Recovery. The application or FTAM user can either retry with the correct select-request
or create-request parameters, or use initiator-ID and filestore-password values that
support the requested access; or the Compaq problem solver can change the local
Compaq security for the file.
Protocol and Supporting Service-Related Diagnostic
Messages
Table A-4 displays the diagnostic error identifiers caused by protocol errors or improper
requests for supporting services.
Table A-4. Protocol and Supporting Service-Related Diagnostic Messages
Identifier
1001
Type
Observer
Source
Reason
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
4
2
2
2
2
Unsupported parameter values
Mandatory parameter not set
Unspecific FTAM protocol error
1002
1007
1009
FTAM protocol error, functional
unit error
1011
1015
1016
1017
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
4
3
2
2
2
Lower-layer failure
Illegal grouping sequence
Grouping threshold violation
Specific PDU request
inconsistent with current
requested access
A-4
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Protocol and Supporting Service-Related Diagnostic
Messages
1001
Unsupported parameter values
Cause. A request contained a parameter value that the Compaq FTAM responder did
not support: for example, the override parameter did not equal one of the values
supported by the Compaq responder, the maximum-string-length value was not in the
range expected by the Compaq responder or was not specified (the ISO FTAM default,
unbounded, is not supported by the Compaq responder), or the protocol version
specified in the initialize request was not version 1.
Effect. The responder does not perform the requested operation.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry the request providing parameter
values that the responder supports. For information about parameters that the Compaq
FTAM responder supports, see Section 4.
1002
Mandatory parameter not set
Cause. The responder received a request PDU that did not contain all the required
parameters, or the request was malformed. Any request PDU that has mandatory
parameters can cause the responder to return this diagnostic message.
Effect. The responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry the request with all mandatory
parameters. To determine which parameters are mandatory, refer to the FTAM PDU
definitions for FTAM in ISO 8571-4.
1007
Unspecific FTAM protocol error
Cause. The responder detected a protocol error. One possible error on a write is a data
value that does not conform to the maximum-string-length value established for the file.
Effect. The responder aborts the association. If the protocol error threshold (a value set
via the THRESHOLD attribute during responder configuration) has been exceeded, the
responder generates a protocol-error-threshold event (event number 22). If the problem
was an attempt to write a data value that does not conform to the maximum-string-
length value for the file, the Further Details field contains the message string length
violates the MSL.
Recovery. This can be an interoperability problem. Verify that the initiator is issuing a
valid request to the responder. The Compaq problem solver can do this by tracing the
responder and verifying the protocol. For information on tracing, refer to the SCF
Reference Manual for FTAM and APLMGR and the OSI/FTAM Configuration and
Management Manual.
A-5
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Protocol and Supporting Service-Related Diagnostic
Messages
1009
FTAM protocol error, functional unit error
Cause. The responder received a service request that requires a functional unit that was
not negotiated when the association was established.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should establish a new association and
negotiate the required functional units.
1011
Lower-layer failure
Cause. The responder detected an error in communicating with a TAPS process.
Effect. The responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should discard the association context,
reestablish the association, and retry the operation. If the problem persists, the Compaq
problem solver should verify that the TAPS process is configured properly and trace the
responder. The Compaq problem solver should examine the status, error code, error
subcode, and original error information displayed in the trace record. This information
should help identify the problem being detected by the TAPS process.
For information on configuration and on tracing the responder, refer to the OSI/FTAM
Configuration and Management Manual and the SCF Reference Manual for FTAM and
APLMGR.
1015
Illegal grouping sequence
Cause. The grouped service contains an illegal primitive, or this particular grouping is
not allowed for the negotiated service class.
Effect. The responder does not perform the grouped service, no services are performed,
and the responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry using a valid group for the
negotiated service class.
1016
Grouping threshold violation
Cause. The threshold—the number of primitives that must be completed successfully
before the group can be considered successful—is greater than the number of services in
the group, or the threshold for a group associated with any service class other than file
A-6
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
access is less than the number of services in the group. (Only the file-access service
class allows a threshold of less than the number of services in the group, allowing a
group of primitives to provide some service even if one of the primitives fails.)
Effect. The responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should discard the association context,
reestablish the association, and retry the operation with a group having the proper value
for the threshold parameter.
1017
Specific PDU request inconsistent with the current requested access
Cause. A service has been attempted that is inconsistent with the current requested
access.
Effect. The responder does not perform the service.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should reselect the file with the required
requested access and retry. If the problem persists, the Compaq problem solver can use
the SCF TRACE command and the PTrace utility to troubleshoot the problem. For more
information on tracing and troubleshooting, refer to the OSI/FTAM Configuration and
Management Manual.Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-5 displays the diagnostic error identifiers related to managing associations.
Table A-5. Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
Identifier
2002
Type
Observer
Source
Reason
2
2
0
4
4
4
1
1
2
Unsupported service class
Unsupported functional unit
2003
2013
Checkpoint window error
(unsupported)
2014
0
3
2
Communications ftam-quality-
of-service not supported
2015
2016
2018
2
0
0
5
4
5
1
1
1
Initiator identity unacceptable
Context management refused
Contents type list cut by
responder
2020
2021
2
2
5
4
1
1
Invalid file store password
Incompatible service classes
A-7
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
2002
Unsupported service class
Cause. The responder received an initialize request for the unconstrained service class.
The Compaq FTAM implementation does not support the unconstrained service class.
Effect. The association is not established.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should specify a supported service class on
the initialize request. For a list of service classes that Compaq FTAM supports, see
Section 4.
2003
Unsupported functional unit
Cause. Requested functional units were inconsistent with the service class negotiated.
Effect. The association is not established.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should specify functional units that are
consistent with the proposed service class on the initialize request.
2013
Checkpoint window error (unsupported)
Cause. The checkpoint-window parameter of the initialize request was set to a value
that the responder does not support. The responder expects a value of 1.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message returned in the initialize
response. The association is established.
Recovery. No action is required.
2014
Communications ftam-quality-of-service not supported
Cause. The responder does not support the value of the FTAM quality-of-service
parameter on the initialize request. The responder supports only a value of
“no recovery” for this PDU parameter.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message returned in the initialize
response. The association is established.
Recovery. No action is required.
A-8
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Association-Related Diagnostic Messages
2015
Initiator identity unacceptable
Cause. The initiator-identity parameter in the initialize request was invalid, or it was
omitted and there was no default user ID/password configured for the responder.
Effect. The association is not established. The responder generates the password-
failure event (event number 20).
Recovery. Either the application or FTAM user should retry with a valid initiator
identity, or the Compaq problem solver should configure the responder to have a default
user ID/password. Change the VFS profile for the responder to define a DEFUSER
attribute. Refer to the ALTER PROFILE command description in the SCF Reference
Manual for FTAM and APLMGR.
2016
Context management refused
Cause. The remote initiator has set the presentation-context-management parameter to
true on the F-INITIALIZE service. The Compaq responder does not support the
presentation-context-management parameter.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The association is established.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
2018
Contents type list cut by responder
Cause. The responder detected one or more inconsistent or unsupported presentation
contexts in the contents-type-list on the initialize service.
Effect. This message is a warning. The responder disregards the contents types that it
does not support or are not valid and retains those that are. The association is
established with a partial contents-type-list.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should investigate the resulting list to
determine if needed contents types are still included. If not, interoperability of the two
FTAM implementations is limited and might prevent you from using FTAM to
accomplish your purpose. The responder supports only the FTAM-1, FTAM-2,
FTAM-3, and NBS-9 document types.
2020
Invalid filestore password
Cause. The password on the initialize request is invalid, or an invalid default password
is configured for the Compaq responder.
A-9
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
Effect. The association is not established. The responder generates the password-fail
event (event number 20).
Recovery. For the first cause, the application or FTAM user should retry the request
using a valid password; for the second cause, the Compaq problem solver should correct
the default password by reconfiguring the DEFUSER attribute in the responder’s VFS
profile on the Compaq system.
2021
Incompatible service classes
Cause. The responder can return this diagnostic message in two conditions:
In examining the initiate indication, the responder detected either a value of
unconstrained for the service class or no value at all for the service class.
•
The remote initiator requested services requiring the management service class, but
the management service class was not negotiated on the F-INITIALIZE request.
•
Effect. For the first cause, the association is not established. For the second cause, the
responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should reestablish the association negotiating
values for service class and functional units that are valid for the responder and that
support the requests being made.
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-6 displays the diagnostic error identifiers generated while selecting a file or
negotiating a service.
A-10
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-6. Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
Value
3000
3002
3004
3005
3006
3007
3012
3013
3016
3018
3020
3021
Type
Observer
Source
Meaning
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
0
0
0
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
1
5
5
File name not found
Initial attributes not possible
Non-existent file
File already exists
File cannot be created
File cannot be deleted
File busy
File not available
Access control inconsistent
Initial attributes altered
Override selected existing file
Override deleted and recreated
file with old attributes
3022
0
5
5
Create override deleted and
recreated file with new attributes
3027
3028
2
2
5
5
1
1
Bad attribute value
Requested access violates
permitted actions
3029
3030
2
0
5
5
1
5
Functional unit not available for
requested access
File created but not selected
3000
File name not found
Cause. The file requested on the select service could not be found. File-system error 11
was returned.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should try again using a correct file name or
the name of an existing, accessible file.
3002
Initial attributes not possible
Cause. The responder did not support an attribute specified on a create request.
A-11
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application programmer or FTAM user should check the attribute values
and determine which attribute the responder does not support, and then retry the request
without specifying the unsupported attribute in the create request. If the problem
persists, the Compaq problem solver can use the SCF TRACE command and the PTrace
utility to troubleshoot the problem. For more information on tracing and
troubleshooting, refer to the OSI/FTAM Configuration and Management Manual.
3004
Non-existent file
Cause. A file has ceased to exist after being selected. The VFS has received an
operating system error 11 in attempting to access a previously selected file.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should either retry the operation specifying a
file that exists, or try again after the Compaq problem solver has replaced the file.
3005
File already exists
Cause. A create request has been sent with the override parameter set so that file
creation fails if the file already exists, and the file already exists in the file system. The
CREATE procedure returns an error indicating that the file already exists and cannot be
created.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should purge the file before attempting to
create it, or change the override parameter in the create request to any valid value other
than the one specifying that file creation fails if the file already exists.
3006
File cannot be created
Cause. The application or FTAM user attempted to create a directory list (NBS-9), the
CREATE procedure has failed to create a file, or one or more of the contents-type
parameters specified in the create request is not supported on the responder (for
example, the application or FTAM user might have specified a string-significance value
that is invalid for the document type).
Effect. The file is not created. The Further Details field identifies the related file-
system error number.
Recovery. For an interpretation of the file-system error number, refer to the Compaq
Guardian Procedure Errors and Messages Manual.
A-12
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
3007
File cannot be deleted
Cause. The application or FTAM user attempted to delete a directory list (NBS-9), or
the PURGE procedure has failed.
Effect. The file is not deleted. The Further Details field identifies the related file-
system error number.
Recovery. For an interpretation of the file-system error number, refer to the Compaq
Guardian Procedure Errors and Messages Manual.
3012
File busy
Cause. An operating system file-in-use error (12) has occurred.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should wait until the file is accessible and
retry the operation.
3013
File not available
Cause. An unexpected operating system error has occurred, or the application or FTAM
user tried to access an SQL table that is not organization relative.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. There is no recovery. The specified file cannot be accessed.
3016
Access control inconsistent
Cause. The application or FTAM user specified an access-control element containing
more than an action list in the initial-attributes parameter of a create request. The
responder uses only the action-list field of an access-control element.
Effect. The service fails, and the responder aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should reestablish the association and retry
the create operation, specifying only an action list in the access-control element.
A-13
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
3018
Initial attributes altered
Cause. The application or FTAM user attempted to create a file with a future-filesize
value greater than one gigabyte. The Compaq FTAM responder does not support files
larger than one gigabyte.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The file is created with a
future-filesize value of one gigabyte.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
3020
Override selected existing file
Cause. The override parameter on the create request was set so that an existing file is to
be selected, and the responder received a create request for a file that already exists.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The service is completed, and
the old file is selected.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
3021
Override deleted and recreated file with old attributes
Cause. The responder received a create request naming a file that already exists, with
the override parameter set so that the existing file is to be deleted and a new file created
using the attributes of the deleted file.
Recovery. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The service is completed,
and the file is created with old attributes. The file creation date is updated.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
3022
Create override deleted and created file with new attributes
Cause. The responder received a create request for a file that already exists, with the
override parameter set so that the existing file is deleted and a new file created using the
attributes specified in the initial-attributes parameter.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The service is completed. The
old file is deleted and a new file is created with a new set of attributes.
Recovery. No action is necessary.
A-14
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Selection-Related Diagnostic Messages
3027
Bad attribute value
Cause. An invalid value was detected in an attribute on the create or select service.
This message is caused if the filename attribute cannot be decoded or is invalid for the
file system.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should correct the value for that attribute and
retry. For possible limitations on attribute values that the Compaq FTAM responder
supports, see Section 4.
3028
Requested access violates permitted actions
Cause. The requested access specified on a select request was inconsistent with the
contents-type attribute specified when the file was created. The responder can return
this error in two cases:
nAny file other than an FTAM-2 file was selected for insert access. Insert access is
allowed only on FTAM-2 files.
•
nAn FTAM-2 file was selected for replace or extend access, or both. Replace and
extend access is not allowed on FTAM-2 files.
•
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry with requested-access values that
are valid for the contents type.
3029
Functional unit not available for requested access
Cause. The negotiated functional units were inconsistent with the requested access type
specified on the select or create service.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should establish a new association providing
the required functional units.
3030
File created but not selected
Cause. The create request succeeded in creating a Guardian file, but the select regime
has not been established because the requested access was not correct.
A-15
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
File-Management-Related Diagnostic Messages
Effect. The file is created, but not selected. The state-result parameter of the create
confirm returns a failure indication.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a select request specifying the
correct requested access.
File-Management-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-7 displays the diagnostic error identifiers that result from either file system
errors or improper management of read-attribute or change-attribute requests.
Table A-7. File-Management-Related Diagnostic Message
Identifier
4001
Type
Observer
Source
Reason
2
2
2
2
0
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
1
5
Attribute cannot be read
Attribute cannot be changed
Attribute not supported
Bad attribute value
4002
4003
4005
4006
Attribute partially supported
4001
Attribute cannot be read
Cause. A file-system error occurred during an attempt to read the attributes of a file.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry the service.
4002
Attribute cannot be changed
Cause. A change-attribute request has been attempted on a directory file (NBS-9), the
application or FTAM user specified an access control element containing information
other than the action list (such as concurrency-access and identity) in the attributes
parameter of a change-attribute request, or a file-system error occurred while the
application or FTAM user attempted to change the attribute of a file.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. For the first cause, the application or FTAM user should not attempt to
change the attributes of a directory file (NBS-9). For the second cause, the application
or FTAM user should retry the change-attribute request specifying only the action list in
the access control element. For the third cause, the application or FTAM user should
retry the operation.
A-16
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
4003
Attribute not supported
Cause. Either a read-attribute request including the private attributes was issued, or an
attempt was made to change an attribute that cannot be changed. Compaq FTAM does
not support private attributes.
Effect. The service fails.
Recovery. No recovery is possible in the case of the read-attribute service. The
Compaq FTAM responder does not support private attributes.
In the case of the change-attribute service, the application or FTAM user should restrict
requests for change to the following attributes: filename, future-filesize, and access-
control.
4005
Bad attribute value
Cause. The responder has received a change-attribute request with an invalid attribute
value, or the file name was invalid for the Guardian 90 operating system.
Effect. The service fails.
Effect. The application or FTAM user should retry the service with a valid attribute
value.
4006
Attribute partially supported
Cause. The responder received a change-attribute request that includes the storage-
account attribute. The Compaq FTAM responder only partially supports this attribute.
Effect. This is an information-only diagnostic message. The request is completed.
Recovery. No action is required.
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-8 displays the diagnostic error identifiers that can occur during the execution of
file-type or processing-mode requests.
A-17
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-8. Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
Identifier
5000
5001
5003
5004
5005
5008
5011
5012
5015
5022
5023
5024
5026
5027
5028
5030
5032
5036
5040
Type
2
Observer
Source
Reason
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
1
1
1
1
5
5
5
5
5
5
1
5
5
5
5
5
5
1
5
Bad FADU (unspecific)
Bad FADU - size error
Bad FADU - poorly specified
Bad FADU - bad location
FADU does not exist
2
2
2
0
2
FADU not available for writing
FADU cannot be inserted
FADU cannot be replaced
Operation not available
Processing mode unsupported
Processing mode inconsistent
Access context not available
Bad write (unspecific)
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
Bad read (unspecific)
2
Local failure (unspecific)
Local failure - data corrupted
Future filesize exceeded
Contents type inconsistent
2
2
2
2
FADU locking not available on
file
5000
Bad FADU (unspecific)
Cause. The FADU-ID parameter on a read or write request is invalid.
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is left in a data-transfer
idle state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response, and then
reissue the read or write request with a valid FADU ID.
A-18
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
5001
Bad FADU - size error
Cause. The application or FTAM user tried to access a nonexistent column in an SQL
table.
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is left in a data-transfer
idle state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response and then
reissue the request, verifying that the number of data elements in the FADU sent is less
than or equal to the number of columns in the table.
5003
Bad FADU - poorly specified
Cause. The responder has received an erase request for an FTAM-2 document type and
the FADU-ID parameter was not begin, or in the case of an FTAM-1 or FTAM-3
document type, the FADU-ID parameter was not first. The responder can also return
this diagnostic message if an invalid data type was specified for the data to be written to
an SQL table, or if an attempt was made to write to an SQL table using the UA access
context instead of the FA access context.
Effect. The responder cancels the service, the association is left in the file-open regime,
and the file is left in an unknown state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response, close the file,
and reissue the erase request with the valid FADU ID.
5004
Bad FADU - bad location
Cause. The responder has received a read or write request with an invalid FADU-ID
parameter. The responder returns this diagnostic message when the application or
FTAM user attempts to access an empty file or locate a FADU corresponding to a record
before the beginning or after the end of the file; or when, while reading a file, the
responder receives an unexpected end-of-file message (specific to SQL tables and
Enscribe relative files). The responder can also generate this diagnostic message if it
receives an SQL error of -5 or if, while attempting to locate the current position in the
file, it receives a file-system error.
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is left in a data-transfer
idle state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response, and then
reissue the read or write request with a valid FADU ID.
A-19
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
5005
FADU does not exist
Cause. The responder received a read or erase request for an empty FTAM-2 relative
file.
Effect. In the case of a read, the responder cancels the service. In the case of an erase,
the responder issues a negative erase confirmation.
Recovery. This is an information-only diagnositic message. Nothing happened.
5008
FADU not available for writing
Cause. A write request has been sent to a directory file (NBS-9).
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is in a data-transfer idle
state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response. Do not retry;
you cannot write to an NBS-9 file.
5011
FADU cannot be inserted
Cause. The responder received an open request with a processing mode of insert, and
the requested access on the select service did not include insert, or the processing mode
of insert is not allowed for the document type selected.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should either open the file with a processing
mode compatible with the services selected, or reselect the file so that it will allow
FADU insertion.
5012
FADU cannot be replaced
Cause. The responder received an open request with a processing mode of replace, and
the requested access on the select service did not include replace; or the processing
mode of replace is not allowed for the document type selected.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should either open the file with a processing
mode compatible with the services selected, or reselect the file so that it will allow
FADUs to be replaced.
A-20
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
5015
Operation not available
Cause. Either the VFS has attempted to open a file, but the operating system OPEN
procedure has failed, or a write request has been issued without the FADU operation set
to insert, replace, or extend.
Effect. In the case of an open, the responder rejects the request. In the case of a write,
the responder cancels the service.
Recovery. If an open failed, the application or FTAM user should check the other
diagnostic messages returned to determine why the open failed. If a write failed, the
application or FTAM user should send a cancel response and retry the data transfer using
the correct FADU operation value.
5022
Processing mode unsupported
Cause. The responder received a write request after simplifying an FTAM-2 document
type to an FTAM-1 document type in response to an open request.
Effect. The responder rejects the request and aborts the association.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should discard the association context,
reinitialize an association, and proceed with the intended operation. The responder
simplifies document types only on read operations. Therefore, applications must issue
only a read request after an open request that simplifies the document type.
5023
Processing mode inconsistent
Cause. The responder received an open request specifying a processing mode that is
inconsistent with the requested access from the select request.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should either reissue the open request with a
processing mode consistent with the requested access specified on the select, or reselect
the file specifying a requested access that allows the requested processing mode.
5024
Access context not available
Cause. The responder received a read request specifying an access context that it does
not support. The responder supports only flat all data units (FA), for FTAM-2 files, and
unstructured all data units (UA), for FTAM-1 and FTAM-3 files.
A-21
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is left in a data-transfer
idle state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response and then
reissue the read request with the correct FADU operation. Make sure the document type
opened supports the access context. Refer to Table A-9 for valid access contexts.
Table A-9. Access Contexts by Document Typ
Document
Type
Access
Context
FTAM-2
FA, UA
UA
FTAM-1,
FTAM-3,
and NBS-9
5026
Bad write (unspecific)
Cause. A local file-system error other than an end-of-file message has occurred on the
write service.
Effect. The responder cancels the service, and the association is left in a data-transfer
idle state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response and then retry
the application. If the error persists, the file is probably corrupt and cannot be accessed.
In this case, the Compaq problem solver should perform the file recovery operations
normally used at the site; then the application or FTAM user can retry the application.
5027
Bad read (unspecific)
Cause. A local file-system error other than an end-of-file message has occurred on the
read service. One possible cause of this error is that one of the records in an FTAM-3
file with a string-significance value of fixed contained a string whose length was smaller
than the maximum-string-length value. This could occur because the file was created
outside FTAM, because it was corrupted in some way, or because the wrong file was
specified.
Effect. The responder cancels the service.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response. The
application or FTAM user should ensure that the correct file is specified; the file must
satisfy the string-length rules described under “Maximum-String-Length Checking of
Data Values” in Section 4. If the application specified the correct file, the application or
FTAM user should retry the application; if the error persists, the file is probably corrupt
and cannot be accessed. In this case, the Compaq problem solver should perform the
A-22
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
file recovery operations normally used at the site; then the application or FTAM user can
retry the application.
5028
Local failure (unspecific)
Cause. A local file-system error occurred as a result of one of the following actions:
F-ERASE error occurred while the responder was attempting to erase data from a
file.
•
F-LOCATE error occurred while the responder was attempting to locate a FADU.
•
•
•
F-CLOSE error occurred while the responder was attempting to close a file.
F-READ error occurred while the responder was attempting to locate the FADU to
be read in an FTAM-2 file.
F-WRITE error occurred while the responder was attempting to locate the FADU to
which to write in an FTAM-2 file, or while attempting to erase data from an FTAM-
1 or FTAM-3 file with a FADU operation of replace.
•
Effect. If the failure occurs during a read or write service, the responder cancels the
service, and the file is left in an unknown state. If the failure occurs during any other
action, the responder rejects the request.
Recovery. If a failure occurs during a read or write service, the application or FTAM
user should issue a cancel response and retry the operation. If the failure occurs during
any other action, the application or FTAM user should retry the operation.
5030
Local failure - data corrupted
Cause. The VFS attempted to open a corrupted EDIT file.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry the request using a different file,
delete the file and create a new one, or notify the Compaq problem solver of the file
condition and find out if an alternative file can be used to access the information. If an
alternative file is available, the application or FTAM user should retry the request using
that file.
5032
Future filesize exceeded
Cause. The VFS attempted to write data to a file and exceeded the maximum file size.
Effect. The responder issues a cancel request and cancels the data transfer.
A-23
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Access-Related Diagnostic Messages
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should send a cancel response, close the file,
and use the change-attribute service to increase the value of the future-filesize attribute
of the file.
5036
Contents type inconsistent
Cause. A service has been attempted without specifying a valid document type (for
example, if the application or FTAM user tries to perform an FTAM-2 simplification of
an SQL file); the contents type was inconsistent with the Guardian file structure,
specifically the file type value; the application or FTAM user attempted to open a file
specifying a maximum-string-length value outside the supported range; or the
application or FTAM user specified an unsupported value of the universal-class
parameter.
Effect. The responder rejects the request.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should retry specifying a valid document
type—one that is consistent with the file type of the Guardian file being accessed—and
a supported universal-class value.
For information about document types and contents types, refer to Section 4. Refer to
Table A-10 for FTAM contents type and Guardian file structure equivalents:
Table A-10. FTAM Contents Types and Equivalent Guardian File Structures
FTAM
Contents
Type
Guardian
∗
Guardian File Structure
File Type
FTAM-1
FTAM-2
Edit
U
Relative
SQL table
R
R
FTAM-3
NBS-9
Fixed-length binary
Variable-length binary
Unstructured
E
E
U
K
Non-SQL key-sequenced
Non-SQL entry-sequenced
K
-
∗ ∗
Directory ( . .DIRLIS)
∗
The following values are possible for file type:
U = Enscribe unstructured
R = Relative
E = Entry-sequenced
K = Key-sequenced
A-24
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Compaq FTAM Responder Diagnostic Messages
Recovery-Related Diagnostic Messages
5040
FADU locking not available on file
Cause. The Compaq FTAM responder received a request with a FADU-lock parameter
on a read or write service. The Compaq FTAM responder does not support the FADU-
lock parameter.
Effect. The responder cancels the request. The association is left in a data-transfer idle
state.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should issue a cancel response, and then
retry the read and write service omitting the FADU-lock parameter.
Recovery-Related Diagnostic Messages
Table A-11 displays the diagnostic error code that may be generated during recovery
operations
.
Table A-11. Recovery-Related Diagnostic Messages
Identifier
Type
Observer
Source
Meaning
6010
2
5
1
Recovery mode not available
6010
Recovery mode not available
Cause. Recovery has not been set to none (0) on the open request to the responder.
Effect. The responder rejects the open request because none (0) is the only recovery
value Compaq supports.
Recovery. The application or FTAM user should set recovery to none (0) and retry the
open operation.
A-25
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Recovery-Related Diagnostic Messages
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Glossary
The following glossary defines terms used both in this manual and in the other Compaq
FTAM manuals. Not all terms listed here are used in this particular manual.
abstract syntax. A standardized method of describing data structures that is
independent of the way they are represented in data transmission. An abstract syntax
uses a set of primitive elements defined by an abstract syntax notation such as ASN.1,
defines ranges of values for the primitive elements, and defines ways of combining these
elements. See also transfer syntax and ASN.1.
Abstract Syntax Notation-1. See ASN.1.
access-context parameter. A parameter used for read transfers within the data-transfer
regime to specify the file structure by which information in the file is accessed. Possible
structures for Compaq FTAM are flat all data units (for FTAM-2 files) and unstructured
all data units (for FTAM-1, FTAM-2, and FTAM-3 files). See UA and FA.
access-control attribute. A file attribute that contains the information to determine
whether file access is allowed or denied. The attribute value is set when the file is
created. You can alter the access-control attribute using the change-attribute action.
ACSE (Association Control Service Element). An application service element (ASE)
in the Application Layer of the OSI Reference Model. The ACSE exists within an
application entity and enables other ASEs to establish and release associations. It is
accessible to users of OSI/AS through the APS procedures. See also ASE or
Application Layer.
action-result parameter. In effect, a summary of the ISO FTAM diagnostic parameter.
The action-result value success (ZFTM-VAL-ACTION-SUCCESS for the FTAM API)
indicates that the requested service was performed successfully. The action-result value
failure (ZFTM-VAL-ACTION-FAILURE for the FTAM API) indicates that the service
was not performed successfully. If any one of the diagnostic messages returned
indicates a failure, the value of action-result must be failure. See also state-result
parameter.
activity attributes. Dynamic attributes specific to an individual FTAM association.
These attributes are both created and discarded during the life of an association and may
change as the status of the association changes. See also file attributes.
AE title. See application entity title.
APDU (application protocol data unit). See PDU.
API. See application program interface (API).
APLMGR (Compaq OSI/Application Manager). The Compaq subsystem that performs
management functions for Compaq FTAM. The APLMGR subsystem consists of two
entities: the APLMGR process and the management information base (MIB). There is
only one APLMGR per FTAM subsystem.
application. A user program that uses services provided by products such as Compaq
FTAM. The program accesses layers of the OSI Reference Model through the top layer
Glossary-1
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Glossary
(Application Layer) to manipulate files on remote computer systems. For Compaq
FTAM, applications can be written in C or TAL.
application entity. The part of an application process that interacts with its peer entity
in a remote application process. In an OSI application, the application entity is the part
that represents the communication functionality necessary for interoperation.
application entity title (AE title). The structured identifier that identifies an application
entity to the OSI network. The AE title is passed as a parameter in the ACSE
A-ASSOCIATE request and returned in the A-ASSOCIATE response. See application
entity.
Application Layer. Layer 7 of the OSI Reference Model. This layer provides the
interface between user programs (application processes) and the OSI network. Layer 7
includes the standards for services such as file transfer, electronic mail, and terminal
access.
Application Manager. See APLMGR.
application name. The Compaq OSI/AS term for a reference name used to look up an
OSI address in the local OSI/AS management information base (MIB). In Compaq
FTAM terminology, this name is called the common name. See common name.
application program interface (API). The set of functions or procedures that permits
user programs to communicate with the Compaq NonStop Kernel. For Compaq FTAM,
the API consists of FTM, APS, and MFM procedures used in FTAM programming. The
Compaq FTAM API also includes the data definitions provided in the ZFTMDDL file
and all language-specific files derived from ZFTMDDL. See also APS procedures,
FTM procedures, and MFM procedures.
application service element. See ASE.
APS (application, presentation, and session) procedures. A set of procedure calls,
provided by Compaq as part of the OSI/AS subsystem, providing application programs
with access to the services of ACSE (in the Application Layer), the Presentation Layer,
and the Session Layer. The names of the APS procedures all begin with the letters APS.
The APS procedures are defined in the EXTDECS0 and CEXTDECS files. The APS
procedures, together with the definitions in the ZAPSDDL file, constitute the OSI/AS
API. A subset of the APS procedures is accessible from, and must be used with, the
FTAM API. See also API.
arc. A directed link between two nodes in a hierarchical file.
arc length. The number of node levels in a file hierarchy from the root node to a given
node. For example, the arc length of an FTAM-2 document is always 1.
ASE (application service element). A set of functions to be performed—such as file
transfer, mail service, or transaction processing—along with all the elements necessary
to perform that kind of work, to support a particular application.
ASI (additional service information). An internal data format used by Compaq FTAM.
ASI format is displayed in some of the USER and ASN1 trace records. The Compaq
initiator and responder processes transform ASI into the transfer syntax negotiated for
the association, and vice versa.
Glossary-2
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ASN.1 (Abstract Syntax Notation-1). The type and value syntax or notation language
for representing semantics of protocol that is described in ISO 8824. The Basic
Encoding Rules (ISO 8825) standard defines a set of encoding rules that can be applied
to values of types defined using the notation specified in ISO 8824. See also abstract
syntax.
association. A connection between Application Layer entities. See connection.
Association Control Service Element. See ACSE.
attach. An operation performed by a Compaq OSI subsystem, on behalf of an
application, to wait for an incoming associate or connect indication from a remote entity.
attribute. An identifiable characteristic of an object. For example, two attributes of an
FTAM file are its name and its date and time of creation. In DSM, two attributes of a
process are the location of its code file and its execution priority. See also file attributes
and activity attributes.
attribute group. One of the four groups of file attributes defined by ISO FTAM. They
are the kernel group, which must be supported by all FTAM implementations; the
security group and the storage group, which are negotiated during association
establishment; and the private-use group, which is also negotiated but whose definition
is outside the scope of ISO FTAM.
backup CPU. The central processing unit (CPU) number of the Compaq processor on
which the backup process will run. See backup process.
backup opener. The backup process that has an open to an FTAM initiator or responder
process. See backup process.
backup process. In a Compaq NonStop system, a process that is identical to the primary
process and is created at the same time as the primary process. These two processes act
as a NonStop process pair. The backup process takes over if the primary process fails.
See primary process.
basic data types. First-level and second-level DDL data types, which can either stand
alone as data types or be used to create higher-level DDL structures.
called address. The OSI address of the responder called by the initiator that supports an
FTAM application. Contrast with calling address and responding address.
calling address. The OSI address of the initiator that calls a responder in an FTAM
application. Contrast with called address and responding address.
calling user. The initiator that calls a responder in an FTAM application. Contrast with
responding user.
CEPI (connection endpoint identifier). An internally generated identification code
used to track associations. In Compaq FTAM, an identifier of a connection endpoint for
a given FTAM association. Use of the CEPI for an association allows transfer of
information to a remote FTAM entity.
checkpoint. On a Compaq NonStop system, a snapshot of process activity that can be
used in the event of a takeover to allow a backup process to maintain fault-tolerant
operation. See backup process.
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Glossary
code file. A Guardian file containing the object code that you must run to create the
specified process.
collector An EMS process that accepts event messages from subsystems and logs them
in the event log. See EMS. Compare distributor.
command file. A text file containing a series of commands that you can run by issuing
the OBEY command in TACL or SCF, followed by the name of the text file.
common name. A reference name used to look up an OSI address in the local OSI/AS
management information base (MIB) when establishing an association. Using common
names simplifies addressing for applications and allows you to subsequently change the
addresses without changing your applications. In OSI/AS terminology, the common
name is called the application name.
Compaq FTAM (File Transfer, Access and Management). The Compaq
implementation of the ISO FTAM standard that provides the ability to manipulate files
between local and remote file stores on a network.
Compaq NonStop Kernel. The operating system, which consists of the core and system
services. The operating system does not include any application program interfaces.
Compaq NonStop Tools. The utility programs that perform everyday activities,
including editing, formatting, restoring, backing up, sorting, spooling, binding,
compiling, and installing.
Compaq OSI/AS. See OSI/AS.
Compaq OSI/FTAM. See Compaq FTAM.
Compaq OSI/TS. See OSI/TS.
compatibility distributor. An EMS distributor process that filters event messages
according to fixed (rather than user-specified) criteria, obtains text for these messages
and writes the text to the standard operating system destinations. See also distributor.
conditional parameter. (1) In a protocol data unit (PDU), a parameter that is present
under certain circumstances, for example, if another parameter has a given value. (2) In
the Compaq FTAM API, a procedure-call parameter that must be specified under certain
circumstances. Contrast with optional parameter and required parameter.
confirm primitive. A primitive issued when a service user (entity) is to be informed
about its request. This is one of four types of service primitives. See service primitive.
confirm procedure. A procedure called to retrieve the confirm data after a confirm
primitive has been received. See confirm primitive.
confirmed service. A service in which the initiating application sends a request, and the
responding application entity (for example, an FTAM responder) returns a response that
is received as a confirm primitive by the initiating application. The confirm primitive
acknowledges the success or failure of the requested action. Contrast with unconfirmed
service.
conformance. The satisfaction, by an implementation of an OSI standard, of both static
and dynamic conformance requirements, consistent with the capabilities stated in the
Glossary-4
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Glossary
protocol implementation conformance statement (PICS). Static conformance
requirements are constraints specified in the standards or related profiles to facilitate
interworking. Dynamic conformance requirements determine what observable behavior
is permitted by the standards or profiles in instances of communication. The PICS is a
statement, made by the supplier of an OSI implementation, describing the capabilities
and options that have been implemented for a given OSI protocol. See also profile.
connection. A link between a service access point (SAP) on one protocol stack and a
corresponding point on a different protocol stack (either in the same system or in
another local or remote system). See also association.
connection endpoint identifier. See CEPI.
constraint set. A specification placing restrictions and refinements on the FTAM
general file model. These restrictions and refinements define a more specific model that
reflects the needs of a particular class of applications.
contents-type attribute. A file attribute that indicates either the document type of a file
or its abstract syntax name and constraint-set name. The value of this attribute is set at
file creation and cannot be changed by the change-attribute action. See also contents-
type parameter.
contents-type parameter. A parameter that indicates the document type of a file and,
optionally, parameter values that further define the document type. The contents-type
must either match the document type of the file being opened or be an allowed
simplification of the document type. If you are using the Compaq FTAM initiator, and
you do not specify contents-type in a call to FTM_OPEN_REQ_ , it will default to
indicate that the contents type is unknown. You can then retrieve the valid file contents-
type by calling FTM_OPEN_CNF_ , which returns information from the confirm
received from the responder. This parameter must also be specified in calls to
FTM_CREATE_REQ_. Document types supported by Compaq FTAM are FTAM-1,
FTAM-2, FTAM-3, and NBS-9. See document type.
contents-type-list parameter. A parameter used for negotiating the document types and
abstract syntaxes that will be available on the association. For Compaq FTAM, the
default document types requested are FTAM-1, FTAM-2, FTAM-3, and NBS-9.
D-series system. A system running any Dxx version of the Compaq NonStop Kernel,
such as D10 or D20.
Data Definition Language. See DDL.
Data Link Layer. Layer 2 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer packages data for
transmission across the network and ensures that the data arrives at the next layer
without any errors.
data-transfer regime. The regime established after successfully gaining read or write
access to an FTAM file. In the data-transfer regime, you can send or receive data, and
you can abort the association. See also FTAM regime, file-selection regime, and
file-open regime.
DDL (Data Definition Language). A Compaq language for defining data. DDL builds
a dictionary from the definitions, translates the definitions into File Utility Program
Glossary-5
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Glossary
(FUP) commands, and generates object-definition source code in a variety of
programming languages.
default user (DEFUSER). An attribute of a Compaq virtual filestore (VFS) profile that
allows access to files in the Compaq responder’s VFS in cases where the initiator
identity and filestore password are not provided when an association is established. The
default user specifies the default Guardian user ID and password to be used.
diagnostic parameter. An optional parameter providing information that qualifies the
success or explains the failure of a requested FTM procedure call. For applications
using the FTAM API, this parameter primarily returns whatever diagnostic messages
have been received from the remote responder or the local initiator. In addition, you
can use this parameter to send diagnostic messages to a remote responder using the
FTM_CANCEL_REQ_ , FTM_DATA_END_REQ_ , and FTM_U_ABORT_REQ_
procedures. See also ISO FTAM diagnostic messages.
Distributed Systems Management. See DSM.
distributor. An EMS process that distributes event messages from event logs to
requesting management applications, to Compaq NonStop Kernel destinations, or to a
collector. Contrast collector.
document type. An FTAM definition, defining the structure of and method of access to
a file. Compaq FTAM supports four document types: FTAM-1, FTAM-2, FTAM-3, and
NBS-9. An FTAM-1 document is an unstructured text file that cannot be broken into
smaller segments by the protocol. An FTAM-2 document is a structured text file
divided into FADUs, which cannot be broken down. An FTAM-3 document is an
unstructured binary file. An NBS-9 document is a read-only directory as defined by the
NIST FTAM Phase 2 agreements.
DSM (Distributed Systems Management). A set of tools provided by Compaq to
manage NonStop systems, Expand networks, and Compaq communications products.
These tools include the ViewPoint console application, the Subsystem Control Facility
(SCF) for data communications subsystems, the Subsystem Programmatic Interface
(SPI), the Event Management Service (EMS), the PTrace (print trace) utility, token-
oriented programmatic interfaces to the management processes for various Compaq
subsystems, and other products.
EMS (Event Management Service). A facility provided by Compaq for event
collection, event logging, and event distribution on Compaq NonStop systems. It
includes different forms of event description for interactive and programmatic
interfaces, lets an operator or application select specific event-message data, and allows
for flexible distribution of event messages within a system or network. The FTAM and
APLMGR subsystems generate event messages that are displayed as operator messages;
however, the programmatic interface to FTAM and APLMGR event messages is not
available for customer use. See also event message.
end-of-file marker. See EOF.
enhanced-file-management functional unit. A functional unit that adds the
modification of file attributes to the capabilities of the limited-file-management
functional unit. See limited-file-management functional unit.
Glossary-6
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Glossary
Enscribe. The Compaq database file-management software provided as part of the
Guardian file system. The Enscribe software provides access to—and manipulation
of—records in a database on a Compaq system. Files on a Compaq NonStop system can
be either Enscribe files or NonStop SQL tables. See also NonStop SQL.
entry. A DSM object type representing a routing table or directory entry in the OSI
manager MIB. ENTRY objects are used to register local and remote OSI addresses and
locally defined application names (common names) with the OSI manager process.
ENTRY objects are of four types: application (APPL), TSEL, NSAP, and SNPA.
EOF (end of file). A marker placed at the end of a file to indicate that the file contains
no additional information.
error. (1) A condition that causes a command or other operation to fail. Contrast with
warning. (2) A code that indicates the outcome of a procedure call. For the procedures
in the FTAM API, this value can be either a negative error code defined by Compaq
FTAM or a positive Compaq file-system error number.
error code. A Compaq code returned on an APS_STATUS_ procedure call that
indicates the current error condition, if any, for the CEPI specified in the
APS_STATUS_ call. If a procedure-call error is indicated, you can call APS_STATUS_
to determine what occurred. APS_STATUS_ returns error-code and error-subcode
values that provide more detail about the nature of the problem. See error subcode.
error identifier. An ISO-defined code included in a diagnostic message that identifies a
diagnostic error.
error observer. An ISO-defined code included in a diagnostic message that identifies
the entity that detected the diagnostic error.
error source. An ISO-defined code included in a diagnostic message to identify the
presumed entity that caused the reported error.
error subcode. A Compaq subcode qualifying error-code returned on an
APS_STATUS_ procedure call. If a procedure call error is indicated, call
APS_STATUS_ to determine what occurred. APS_STATUS_ returns error-code and
error-subcode values that provide more detail about the nature of the problem. See error
code.
error type. An ISO-defined code included in a diagnostic message that indicates the
diagnostic error type: informative message, permanent error, or transient error.
See informative message, permanent error, and transient error.
event. (1) In Compaq OSI terms, an indication or confirm primitive that an application
using the FTAM or OSI/AS API retrieves by calling the APS_EVENT_RECEIVE_
procedure. See also indication primitive or confirm primitive. (2) In DSM terms, a
significant change in some condition in the system or network. Events can be
operational errors, notifications of limits exceeded, requests for action needed, and
so on. See also EMS and event message.
Event Management Service. See EMS.
event message. On Compaq NonStop systems, a message triggered when a subsystem
or system component using the Event Management Service (EMS) detects the
Glossary-7
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occurrence of a condition that might affect its operation. Event messages are collected
centrally and distributed to files, processes, and terminals that are programmed to
receive them. They are displayed in text form as operator messages.
execution priority. A numeric-valued attribute of a Compaq process that determines
whether the Compaq NonStop Kernel will preempt execution of the process in favor of
other processes running in the same CPU. The NonStop Kernel always executes the
highest-priority process that is ready to run. In SCF, the execution priority of an FTAM
initiator or responder process is determined using the PRIORITY attribute of the
PROCESS object.
Expand network. A network of up to 255 Compaq NonStop systems, interconnected
using the Expand network operating software. Compaq NonStop systems on an Expand
network are referred to as nodes.
extend (write action). To append the data being written to the end of a file.
external process name. See Guardian process name.
FA (flat all data units). An access context for which data is transferred as a sequence of
node-descriptor data elements and file-contents data elements. The transfer begins with
the node-descriptor data elements, which mark the beginning of data for each node in
the structure. This methodology preserves the structural semantics of the file. In
Compaq FTAM, the only document type that uses FA is FTAM-2. See access context;
contrast with UA.
FADU (file-access data unit). A unit of the file-access structure on which the transfer,
delete, extend, replace, and insert actions can be performed. A FADU contains zero or
more data units.
FADU-locking functional unit. A functional unit that allows concurrency control locks
to be invoked on FADUs.
fault tolerance. The ability of a computer system to continue performing its designated
functions when any part of the system fails.
file-access data unit. See FADU.
file-access functional unit. A functional unit that provides for access to an individual
FADU in the file-access structure and allows the FADU to be manipulated within the
file-access structure.
file-access service class. The service class that allows access to remote files, and
includes data manipulation and file management capabilities.
file-attribute group. See attribute group.
file attributes. Information about a file such as file name, storage account, and date and
time of (file) creation. File attributes are present from one file access to another,
although the actual values of a file attribute may change. See also activity attributes.
file-availability attribute. An attribute that indicates whether a file is available for
immediate or deferred access. For example, a file on a nondemountable device might be
classified as having immediate availability, whereas a file on a demountable device
might be classified as having deferred availability, because a significant delay could be
Glossary-8
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encountered in accessing the file on the demountable device. The attribute value is set
when a file is created.
file-management service class. A service class that permits control of the virtual
filestore through a series of independent confirmed service exchanges, but does not
include file-transfer mechanisms. The file-management service class permits the ability
to read and change file attributes, and create and delete files.
file number. A unique number generated by the Compaq NonStop Kernel to be used in
file-system calls. The number is assigned to a file when an application accesses that file,
and it is discarded when the application is finished with the file. You can display a file
number by issuing the SCF LISTOPENS command to the appropriate object.
file-open regime. The regime entered when you successfully open an FTAM file. In
this regime, you can locate a part of the file to be worked on, erase the file, or request
access to read or write information in the file. You can also close the file, and you can
abort the association. See also data-transfer regime, file-selection regime, and FTAM
regime.
file protocol machine. The protocol state machine for FTAM. See protocol state
machine.
file-selection regime. The regime entered after you successfully select or create an
FTAM file. In this regime you can read file attributes, change the attributes, or open the
file. You can also deselect the file or delete the file, and you can abort the association.
See also data-transfer regime, file-open regime, and FTAM regime.
filestore-password parameter. The password used by an FTAM responder to
authenticate the initiator identity. For Compaq FTAM applications, if this parameter is
not supplied by the application, no password is sent to the remote responder.
file-system request. A request to the file system by or on behalf of a process. Several
different file-system requests are monitored for a process. You can view the number of
these requests that have occurred by issuing the SCF STATS PROCESS command.
file storage system. An organized collection of files, including attributes and names,
residing on a computer system. On Compaq systems, the file storage system used is the
Guardian file system.
File Transfer, Access and Management. See FTAM.
file-transfer-and-management service class. A service class that combines the services
of the file-transfer and file-management service classes. See file-transfer service class
and file-management service class.
file-transfer service class. The service class that supports the movement of files or
partial files between independent computer systems on the network. The protocol for
the file-transfer class uses grouped operations that simplify data transfer.
File Utility Program. See FUP.
filter. A Compaq file containing a list of criteria against which incoming EMS event
messages can be compared so as to pass a given message (if it met all criteria) or not
pass it (if it failed one or more criteria). See event message.
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first-level data types. The lowest-level DDL structures, which serve as building blocks
on which DDL parameter structures are based.
format effectors. A class of control characters mainly intended for layout and
positioning of information on character-imaging devices, such as printers and video
display terminals.
FTAM (File Transfer, Access and Management). A set of Application Layer services
and protocols used for manipulating files across an OSI network, as defined by the
ISO-8571 specification.
FTAM API. See API.
FTAM initiator errors. Locally generated errors returned when the return value on a
Compaq FTAM procedure call (shown in the Compaq FTAM manuals as status or error,
depending on the procedure) indicates an error. The value of status or error indicates
what occurred and how to proceed.
FTAM regime. The regime entered when you successfully establish an FTAM
association. In the FTAM regime, you can attempt to select or create a file, and you can
terminate or abort an association. See also data-transfer regime, file-selection regime,
and file-open regime.
FTAM-1 file. An unstructured text file that can be accessed only as a single data unit.
See also document types.
FTAM-2 file. A sequential text file that can be accessed either as a single data unit or as
multiple data units. See also document types.
FTAM-3 file. An unstructured binary file that can be accessed only as a single data unit.
See also document types.
FTC profile. A Compaq FTAM profile used as a template to configure an alternate
event collector. See also VFS profile.
FTM procedures. The set of procedure calls whose names begin with “FTM”, provided
with Compaq FTAM to support the FTAM protocol. The FTM procedures are defined in
the EXTDECS0 and CEXTDECS files. The FTAM API consists of the FTM procedures
plus the MFM procedures, a subset of the APS procedures, and associated definition
files. See also API.
functional unit. In OSI terms, a collection of service primitives needed to provide one
of the major optional styles of working, such as file access or enhanced file
management. Functional units are negotiated at association establishment. Functional
units determine which sets of FTAM services are available for an association, depending
on which service class is negotiated.
FUP (File Utility Program). A Compaq utility program that can be used to perform
many functions on disk files and peripheral devices such as tape drives. For example,
you can use FUP to create and purge files, duplicate and display files, alter file
characteristics such as security attributes, and load data into files.
future-filesize attribute. A file attribute that specifies the size limit (in octets) for
modification or extension of the file. The future-filesize attribute is related to the
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Compaq max-extents attribute: modifying the future-filesize attribute changes the max-
extents attribute, and vice versa.
GeneralString. The character-string type of strings containing any of the characters for
all G sets and all C sets (as defined by ISO 2022), the space character, and the delete
character. These strings contain format effectors.
GraphicString. The character-string type of strings containing any of the characters for
all G sets (as defined by ISO 2022) and the space character. These strings do not
contain format effectors.
grouped procedure. An FTM procedure that allows an application to perform several
file operations as a grouped service. The grouped procedure FTM_FILE_OPEN_REQ_
allows you to create, select, and open an FTAM file as a grouped service. The grouped
procedure FTM_FILE_CLOSE_REQ_ allows you to close and either deselect or delete
an FTAM file as a grouped service. See grouped service.
grouped service. A sequence of confirmed services that are requested in one FTAM
event, and for which the responses are received as one event. The request primitives for
these services are bracketed with the F-BEGIN-GROUP and F-END-GROUP request
primitives. See also grouping control.
grouping control. A mode of operation that allows your application to perform a
sequence of confirmed services in one FTAM event. The request primitives for these
services are bracketed with the F-BEGIN-GROUP and F-END-GROUP request
primitives. The grouped request primitives are concatenated and sent in a single request
PDU. The responder analyzes and retains its response to each of these requests until the
group is complete or until a state failure occurs. The responder then returns its
responses as a group.
grouping functional unit. A functional unit that provides for the combination of several
independent primitives in order to establish several regimes in one exchange.
Guardian . The original application program interface (API) to the Compaq NonStop
Kernel.
Guardian environment. The Guardian API and the Compaq NonStop tools. Referred
to as “personality” in marketing literature.
Guardian process name. The external name by which the Compaq NonStop Kernel
identifies a process. This name is assigned when a process is created using the NAME
attribute. To operate on a Compaq Expand network, this name must be a maximum of
five ASCII characters, including the initial dollar sign ($).
hierarchical file model. A file structure with the following characteristics:
The file-access structure is an ordered tree.
•
Each node within the structure is assigned zero or one data unit.
•
•
•
Each node provides access to its subtree.
A node can, optionally, be named.
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There are no restrictions on the number of levels, on the arc lengths, or on the
number of arcs originating from each node.
•
The access unit, or subtree, of a node in this model is called a file-access data unit
(FADU). FTAM-2 files have a two-level hierarchy of one root node and many second-
level nodes. FTAM-1 and FTAM-3 files have only a single root FADU. See FADU and
root FADU.
IA5String. The character-string type of strings containing any of the 32 control
characters, 94 displayable characters, the space character, and the delete character, as
defined by CCITT Recommendation T.50. These strings contain format effectors.
indication primitive. A primitive issued when a service user (entity) is to be informed
about an event. This is one of four types of service primitives. See service primitive.
indication procedure. A procedure called to retrieve the indication data after an
indication primitive has been received. See indication primitive.
indirect-process-name. A variable that represents the name of a Compaq initiator or
responder process as it is known to APLMGR. It consists of three parts: $appl-mgr-
name, #proc-type, and internal-name, which are separated by periods (.). An SCF
command that uses this form of process name is sent to the APLMGR process, which
looks up the specified process in its MIB and then routes the command to the process.
Contrast with $process-name.
informative message. An ISO-defined type of diagnostic error code that does not
require recovery and does not affect the current state of the file service. An informative
message provides information to qualify a successful action. See also error type,
permanent error, and transient error.
initiator. The file-service user that requests the establishment of the FTAM regime.
In Compaq FTAM, the initiator is a process that allows FTAM applications on a
Compaq NonStop system to access FTAM protocol and to request services of a
responder on a remote computer system. It operates by establishing an association with
the remote responder over the OSI network. The initiator then sends and receives
FTAM protocol messages to and from the remote responder. The FTAM application
programmatic interface (API) is the application program’s interface to the initiator
process. See also FTAM API; contrast with responder.
initiator-identity parameter. A parameter that identifies the calling user on an FTAM
association. For Compaq FTAM applications, if this parameter is not sent by the
application, no initiator identity is supplied to the remote responder. See calling user.
Inspect. The Compaq interactive symbolic debugger, which enables you to isolate
errors in programs running on Compaq NonStop systems. Inspect features include
interactive control of program execution with breakpoints, distributed debugging across
a network, concurrent debugging of all parts of an application, saving and examining
process states, and local system and personal customization.
interactive interface. A set of rules by which a human operator is allowed to perform
functions at a terminal in response to system prompts. Contrast with programmatic
interface.
intermediate state. See state transition.
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internal process name. The name by which APLMGR recognizes a Compaq initiator or
responder process. This name is assigned when the process is created and can be a
maximum of eight ASCII characters.
International Organization for Standardization. See ISO.
International Standard. See IS.
interoperability. The ability of an FTAM implementation to work with other FTAM
implementations to deliver FTAM services.
IS (International Standard). A final specification standard issued by ISO.
ISO (International Organization for Standardization). A worldwide federation of
national standards bodies established to promote the development of standards to
facilitate the international exchange of goods and services, and to develop mutual
cooperation in areas of intellectual, scientific, technological, and economic activity.
ISO FTAM. Generic FTAM as specified in the ISO 8571 standard.
ISO FTAM diagnostic messages. Diagnostic messages typically returned from the
remote responder, although in certain cases they may be returned locally. ISO
diagnostic messages are defined in the ISO 8571 standard for FTAM, and apply
generically to any FTAM application. Diagnostic messages can be retrieved by some
indication and confirm procedures. In addition, programs using the FTAM API can send
diagnostic messages to the remote responder using the FTM_CANCEL_REQ_ ,
FTM_DATA_END_REQ_ , and FTM_U_ABORT_REQ_ procedures. See also
diagnostic parameter.
ISO Reference Model for Open Systems Interconnection. See OSI Reference Model.
ISO646String. See VisibleString.
kernel functional unit. A functional unit that is required of all service classes used in
the establishment and release of the FTAM and file-selection regimes. This is not to be
confused with the Compaq NonStop Kernel, which is the operating system.
kernel group. File attributes that must be supported by all FTAM implementations.
You do not negotiate attributes in the kernel group. This is not to be confused with the
Compaq NonStop Kernel, which is the operating system.
layer. There are seven layers in the OSI Reference Model. See Application Layer,
Presentation Layer, Session Layer, Transport Layer, Network Layer, Data Link Layer,
and Physical Layer.
leaf. A node in a hierarchical file structure that has no child nodes: that is, no nodes
that terminate outbound arcs of the node in question.
limited-file-management functional unit. The functional unit that supports the creation
and deletion of files and the reading of file attributes.
local application. An FTAM application that runs on a Compaq NonStop system and
uses the FTAM API.
Management Information Base. See MIB.
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management interface. An interface available to the system manager for use in
configuring, monitoring, and controlling subsystems and relationships between
subsystems.
Manager process. A Compaq subsystem process with which the Subsystem Control
Point (SCP) management process communicates to control a particular subsystem. The
APLMGR process is the manager process for Compaq FTAM; the OSI manager process
is the manager process for OSI/AS; and the TSP process is the manager process for
OSI/TS.
maximum-string-length parameter. An optional parameter of contents-type that
indicates the maximum number of octets (excluding escape-sequence octets) that can be
transmitted in a character string during the data-transfer regime. See also contents-type
parameter.
MFM (module file management) procedures. A set of procedure calls, used with
Compaq FTAM and Compaq OSI/AS, that allow you to complete I/O operations
performed in nowait mode and to cancel a nowait operation. The names of the MFM
procedures begin with the letters MFM. The MFM procedures are defined in the
EXTDECS0 and CEXTDECS files. These procedures are part of the FTAM API. See
also API.
MIB (Management Information Base). (1) A database used by the OSI manager
process to store and retrieve configuration information and information about
applications. (2) A database used by APLMGR to store and retrieve FTAM
configuration information.
module file management procedures. See MFM procedures.
named values. DDL variables that specify values or sets of values that can be assigned
to FTAM procedure parameters or parameter fields.
National Institute of Science and Technology. See NIST.
NBS (National Bureau of Standards). Former name of the National Institute of
Science and Technology (NIST). See NIST.
NBS-9. A file that is a read-only directory as defined by the NIST FTAM Phase 2
agreements. See also document types.
negotiation. The act of defining parameter values to be used on an FTAM association.
For example, in the initialize request (the FTM_INITIALIZE_REQ_ procedure call
when using the FTAM API), you propose a list of the attribute groups (storage and/or
security) that you want to be available for the association, using the attrib-groups
parameter. The responder inspects the attributes you propose and may reduce the list to
what it can support; it cannot add to the list you propose. When attribute groups have
been negotiated, you can use the attributes from those groups along with the associated
protocol.
Network Layer. Layer 3 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer routes data by
establishing, maintaining, and terminating communication between systems. It sets up a
path, both physical and logical, between communicating systems; routes messages
through intervening systems to their destination; and controls the flow of messages
between systems.
Glossary-14
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Network service access point. See NSAP.
network service provider. See NSP.
NIST (National Institute of Science and Technology). A U.S. government institution,
formerly known as the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), that sets standards and
promotes their acceptance.
node. (1) The basic building block of the FTAM hierarchical file structure.
(2) A Compaq NonStop system that is part of an Expand network.
node descriptor. The part of an FTAM-2 FADU that contains information identifying
the node within the FTAM hierarchical file structure.
node name. The part of a node descriptor that names the node. See node descriptor.
nonsensitive command. An SCF command that can be issued by any user or program
allowed access to the target subsystem—that is, a command on which the subsystem
imposes no further security restrictions. For Compaq data communications subsystems,
the nonsensitive commands are all those that cannot change the state or configuration of
objects (usually information commands). Contrast with sensitive command.
NonStop process pair. See process pair.
NonStop SQL (Structured Query Language). The Compaq product that provides
configuration and management of relational databases that conform to the SQL
(structured query language) standard. See SQL.
nowait mode. In Guardian file-system operations and in some APS operations, the
mode in which the called procedure initiates an I/O operation but does not wait for it to
complete before returning control to the caller. The application calls a separate
procedure (MFM_AWAITIOX_) to wait for the completion of the operation. Contrast
with wait mode.
NSAP (network service access point). The logical point at which Network Layer
services are provided by the Network Layer entity to the Transport Layer entity.
NSP (network service provider) process. A process in the Compaq OSI implementation
that performs service and protocol functions for the Network Layer and, for LANs, some
functions of the Data Link Layer. NSP processes are provided by the underlying
X25AM and TLAM subsystems. See also TSP process and TAPS process.
null object type. A Compaq term used to represent the absence of an object type in an
SCF command. If a command supports the null object type, you can issue it without
specifying an object type. For Compaq FTAM, the NAMES and VERSION commands
support the null object type. The NAMES null command refers to a collection of object
types; for the VERSION null command, the object type is irrelevant.
object. (1) A well-defined piece of information, definition, or specification that requires
a name. Also called information object. (2) In general Compaq terms, one or more of
the devices, lines, processes, and files in a Compaq subsystem: any entity subject to
independent reference or control by one or more subsystems. An object typically has a
name and a type known to the controlling subsystem.
Glossary-15
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object identifier. A value, distinguishable from all other such values, that is associated
with an ISO information object. A standard representation of an object identifier is a set
of numbers representing a directed path through a standards-based tree hierarchy, often
shown as a sequence of two or more values enclosed in braces ({}). Examples of
objects represented by object identifiers are document type names, constraint sets,
abstract syntaxes, transfer syntaxes, and AE titles.
object state. See state.
object state transition. See state transition.
octet. A byte of data; eight bits.
OctetString. The string type consisting of a string of octets. See octet.
open. An established line of communication between two processes. You can display
the number of opens a process has by issuing the SCF STATUS PROCESS command.
open network. A communications network that is able to communicate between
systems using standardized procedures and functions.
Open Systems Interconnection. See OSI.
operator message. A message, describing a significant event on a Compaq NonStop
system, that is intended to be seen by an operator. An operator message is the
displayed-text form of an EMS event message. See event message.
optional parameter. (1) In a protocol data unit (PDU), a parameter that is sometimes
but not always present. (2) In the Compaq FTAM API, a procedure-call parameter that
can be included in a given procedure call or command, but is not required for use with
the procedure or command. Contrast with conditional parameter and required
parameter.
original-error-info parameter. A parameter in the APS_STATUS_ procedure call that
provides a code identifying the first error detected in Compaq FTAM or an underlying
OSI layer. Using the service ID, which indicates the source of the error, and the value
returned by original-error-info, you can refer to Compaq manuals for further
information about the problem. See also service ID.
OSI (Open Systems Interconnection). A set of standards used for the interconnection
of heterogeneous computer systems designed for universal connectivity.
OSI address. The address of an object on an OSI network. An OSI address consists of
four components: the transport selector (TSEL), session selector (SSEL), presentation
selector (PSEL), and network service access point (NSAP).
OSI/AS (Application Services). The Compaq implementation of the Session Layer, the
Presentation Layer, and part (ACSE) of the Application Layer of the OSI Reference
Model. The OSI/AS subsystem manages the communication of messages between a
local Compaq system and a remote system on a network. This subsystem manages the
lower-layer services provided by Compaq OSI/TS, X25AM, and TLAM.
OSI manager process. A process in the OSI/AS subsystem that performs subsystem
management functions. There is one OSI manager process per OSI/AS subsystem.
Glossary-16
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OSI Reference Model. A communications architecture, adopted by the ISO in 1984,
that includes seven layers that define the functions involved in communications between
two systems, the services required to perform these functions, and the protocols
associated with these services. See also layer.
OSI subsystems. The Compaq subsystems that support the various layers and
application service elements of the OSI Reference Model, including the FTAM
subsystem, APLMGR, OSI/AS, OSI/TS, and TLAM or X25AM.
OSI/TS (Transport Services). The Compaq subsystem that manages the
communication of messages from the Transport Layer on a local Compaq system to the
Transport Layer on a remote system in an OSI network.
owner ID. The identity (Guardian user ID) of the owner of a process on a Compaq
NonStop system.
parallel associations. Multiple associations running concurrently within a Compaq
FTAM process.
parameter structures. DDL structures that define some of the reference parameters for
the FTM, APS, and MFM procedures.
partially supported file attribute. A virtual filestore (VFS) file attribute, in a supported
storage or security attribute group, for which any reference by the FTAM responder
yields the result that no value is available, and any attempt to change the attribute fails.
In summary, the VFS recognizes the attribute name but provides no value for it.
Contrast with supported file attribute.
PDU (protocol data unit). The encoded message transferred across the OSI network
between peer entities—for example, between an FTAM initiator and responder. Data,
such as a block of information being transferred or a protocol primitive, is encoded into
a PDU for transfer across the network. The PDU is decoded when it arrives at its
destination. Types of PDUs include the following:
APDU (application PDU): information exchanged between Application Layer
entities—this includes ACSE and presentation PDUs created to support the FTAM
protocol (FTAM PDUs, or FPDUs)
•
PPDU (presentation PDU): information exchanged between Presentation Layer
entities
•
SPDU (session PDU): information exchanged between Session Layer entities
•
•
TPDU (transport PDU): information exchanged between Transport Layer entities
permanent error. An ISO-defined type of diagnostic error that occurs every time the
sequence of events that caused the error is repeated, and implies the failure of at least the
present operation being performed. See also error type, informative message, and
transient error.
permitted-actions attribute. A file attribute that can be returned in an F-READ-
ATTRIB indication or confirm or set in an F-CREATE request. It specifies the actions
that can be performed on the file or the mode of access to FADUs in the file. During the
F-CREATE service, the initiator proposes a set of values. The responder can either
accept the proposed values or change them to any set of values it can handle: for
Glossary-17
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example, a default set of permitted actions that is always used for a specific document
type regardless of what is proposed. The responder implements the set of permitted
actions in some way that maps them onto the underlying real system.
Physical Layer. Layer 1 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer establishes the actual
physical connection between the network and the computer equipment. Protocols at the
Physical Layer include rules for the transmission of bits across the physical medium and
rules for connectors and wiring.
PID (process identifier). The combination of the central processing unit (CPU) number
and the process identification number (PIN) for a process running on the Compaq
NonStop Kernel.
port address. For X25AM lines, the logical port number used with the X.25 network;
for TLAM, the address used to communicate with a LAN controller.
PPDU (presentation PDU). See PDU.
presentation address. An unambiguous name used to identify a set of presentation
service access points (PSAPs) that are all located at a boundary between a Presentation
Layer implementation and an Application Layer implementation in the same open
system.
presentation context. The combination of an abstract syntax and a transfer syntax on a
Presentation Layer connection. In Compaq FTAM, you have programmatic control over
the choice of presentation context related to document types, but not over the required
abstract syntaxes associated with the protocol control information (PCI) for FTAM,
ACSE, and the Presentation Layer.
Presentation Layer. Layer 6 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer provides a means
to resolve the differences of varying data formats between systems of different vendors.
It transfers data in a system-independent manner, performing appropriate conversions at
each system as necessary.
presentation selector. See PSEL.
presentation service access point. See PSAP.
primary process. The currently operating process of a process pair on a Compaq
NonStop system. See backup process.
primitive. An abstract, implementation-dependent representation of an interaction
between a user of OSI services and a service provider. Examples of FTAM primitives
are an F-OPEN request, an F-P-ABORT indication, an F-CREATE response, and an
F-READ-ATTRIB confirm.
PrintableString. The character-string type of strings containing only printable
characters and the space character, as defined in ISO 8824. These strings do not contain
format effectors.
printing distributor. An EMS process that obtains formatted text for selected event
messages and distributes it to a file, a printer, or another display device.
priority. See execution priority.
Glossary-18
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Glossary
private group. A free-standing group of FTAM attributes that are outside the scope of
OSI standardization.
process. A running entity, managed by the Compaq NonStop Kernel, that is created by
taking a program from a file on a disk and running it in a processor.
process identification number (PIN). An unsigned integer that identifies a process in a
processor module. Internally, a PIN is used as an index into the process control block
(PCB) table. PIN numbers from 0 through 254 are low PINs and are supported on both
C-series and D-series systems. PIN numbers from 256 through 65535 are high PINs and
are supported only on D-series systems. PIN 255 is in neither subrange; it is called a
synthetic process ID and allows an unconverted D-series system server process to
communicate with a high-PIN requester process.
process pair. A primary process and its backup process, created as a pair to provide
fault tolerance on a Compaq NonStop system. The backup process takes over if the
primary process fails.
profile. (1) A complete set of self-consistent parameters specifying which options in
one or more OSI standards will be supported by a group of implementations for a
particular purpose. For example, the U.S. Government Open Systems Interconnection
Profile (GOSIP) is a profile to which implementations must conform to be eligible for
certain government contracts. (2) For Compaq FTAM, a type of object defining a
template that contains configuration parameters for Compaq FTAM responder processes.
When a profile is specified for a process, the configuration parameters in the profile take
precedence over any corresponding parameters specified for the process. (3) Also for
Compaq FTAM, a type of object defining a template that contains configuration
parameters for an alternate collector for event messages. (4) For Compaq OSI/AS, a
type of object defining a template that contains configuration parameters for OSI/AS
dynamic subdevices. When a profile is specified for a connection, the configuration
parameters in the profile take precedence over any corresponding parameters specified
for the service as a whole.
profile type. A particular type of Compaq FTAM or OSI/AS profile. The only valid
profile type for Compaq FTAM is the virtual filestore (VFS) profile.
programmatic interface. A set of procedures and accompanying definitions that enable
programs to request services or operations. Contrast with interactive interface.
protocol. The set of rules governing the format and meaning of the frames, packets, or
messages exchanged by the peer entities within an OSI layer. See also service.
protocol data unit. See PDU.
protocol state machine. The part of a data communications process, such as an FTAM
initiator or responder process, that acts upon occurrences according to the current state
of the protocol.
provider abort. An association abort initiated by the service provider (for example,
FTAM). An abort leaves the status of any interrupted operations undefined. Contrast
with user abort.
PSAP (presentation service access point). The point at which a Presentation Layer
implementation provides presentation services to an Application Layer implementation.
Glossary-19
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Glossary
The PSAP is highly system-dependent and generally refers to the way interlayer
communication is accomplished. See also SAP.
PSAP address. A presentation address that is used to identify a single PSAP.
PSEL (presentation selector). A logical address in the Presentation Layer through
which presentation services are made available to Application Layer implementations.
On a Compaq system, the PSEL is a number that uniquely links a TAPS process with a
process that implements Application Layer services—for example, an FTAM initiator or
responder.
PTrace (print trace). A Compaq utility that you can use to select, format, and display
unstructured trace data generated when you issue the SCF TRACE command.
read functional unit. A functional unit that allows the following activities on an
association:
Establishing the file-open regime
•
Transferring data from the responder to the initiator
•
•
Releasing the file-open regime
receiver. The entity that receives a communication from a remote sender. See sender.
recovery functional unit. An ISO FTAM functional unit that allows the initiator process
to recreate a previously destroyed regime.
regime. A protocol state that reflects the programming status in an FTAM program
sequence. Compaq FTAM and ISO FTAM have four regimes: FTAM regime, file-
selection regime, file-open regime, and data-transfer regime.
register request. (1) For Compaq FTAM, a request made by the FTAM API to the
APLMGR process, on behalf of an application, to establish an FTAM association.
Processing an FTAM register request includes selecting an available initiator process to
service the association. (2) For Compaq OSI/AS, a request made by the API to the OSI
manager process, on behalf of an application, either to establish an association
(or connection) or to wait for an incoming association (or connection).
relaxation. The process of deriving one document from another by making the
parameters describing it less restrictive. In particular, the legal modification of values
for the maximum-string-length, string-significance, or universal-class parameters for a
specific FTAM document type. String-length relaxation allows a document of with a
given maximum-string-length value to be opened and read using a larger maximum-
string-length value or no maximum-string-length value (unbounded string). Character-
set relaxation allows a document of a given universal-class number to be opened and
read using a different universal-class number as long as the new universal-class number
permits all characters from the original universal-class number.
request primitive. A primitive issued when a service user (entity) wants the service to
do some work. This is one of four types of service primitives. See service primitive.
request procedure. A procedure called to cause the initiating process to send a request
primitive to a responding process. See request primitive.
Glossary-20
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Glossary
required parameter. (1) In a protocol data unit (PDU), a parameter that is always
present. (2) In a Compaq programmatic or interactive interface, a parameter to a
procedure (for example, a procedure in the FTAM API) or to an interactive command
(such as an SCF command) that must be specified when the procedure is called or the
command is issued. Contrast with conditional parameter and optional parameter.
reset time. In SCF, the date and time that the statistical counters for an object were last
reset. The STATS command for the object displays the reset time.
responder. The file-service user that accepts an initiator’s request to establish an FTAM
regime. In Compaq FTAM, the responder is a process that services FTAM requests
initiated from remote systems on an OSI network. The Compaq responder acts as an
FTAM file server, mapping FTAM requests into Guardian file operations and providing
a translation between Guardian file structures and FTAM file structures. The Compaq
responder has no programmatic interface. Contrast with initiator.
responding address. The OSI address of the responder that responds to an association
request from an initiator in an FTAM application. Contrast with called address and
calling address.
responding user. The responder that responds to an association request from an initiator
in an FTAM application. Contrast with called address and calling address.
response primitive. A primitive issued when a service user (entity) wants to respond to
an event (for confirmed services only). This is one of four types of service primitives.
See service primitive.
response procedure. A procedure called by your application to send response primitives
to indications from the FTAM responder. See response primitive.
restart-data-transfer functional unit. An ISO FTAM functional unit that allows the
transfer of data to be interrupted and immediately restarted in a current transfer.
reverse traversal. Traversal through the nodes of an FTAM file in reverse order (last to
first).
root FADU. The first-level FADU in an FTAM file. In the case of FTAM-1 and
FTAM-3 files, the complete file is one FADU and so can be considered the root FADU.
FTAM-2 files consist of two levels of FADUs in a hierarchical structure. The root
FADU provides access to the complete file. See FADU.
root node. The first-level node in a hierarchical file. See root FADU.
Safeguard. The Compaq system-software security package that implements three
security features: user authentication, object-access authorization, and auditing.
sample time. In SCF, the date and time that the currently displayed statistics for an
object were gathered. The sample time is displayed by the STATS command along with
the statistics.
SAP (service access point). The point at which an implementation of a given OSI layer
provides its services to an implementation of the layer above it. The SAP is highly
system-dependent and generally refers to the way interlayer communication is
accomplished.
Glossary-21
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Glossary
SCF (Subsystem Control Facility). A utility that provides a common, interactive
management interface for configuring, controlling, and collecting information from
Compaq data communications products.
SCP (Subsystem Control Point). The process used to provide the focal point for all
Compaq data communications subsystems. There can be several instances of this
process. Applications using SPI send all commands for data communications
subsystems to an instance of this process, which in turn sends the commands on to the
manager processes of the target subsystems. SCP also processes a few commands itself.
It provides security features, version compatibility, support for tracing, and support for
applications implemented as NonStop process pairs.
second-level data types. DDL data types made up of one or more first-level data types.
See first-level data types.
security group. File attributes that pertain to security and access control. These
attributes are negotiated at association establishment. The security group attributes are
access control and legal qualifications.
sender. The entity that initiates and sends a communication to a remote receiver.
See receiver.
sensitive command. An SCF command that can be issued only by a restricted set of
Guardian users, such as process owners and super-group users. For Compaq data
communications subsystems, the sensitive commands are those that can change the state
or configuration of objects, start or stop tracing, or change the values of statistics
counters. Contrast with nonsensitive command.
sequential flat file. An unstructured file whose data must be accessed sequentially.
service. The functions and features provided by a given layer to the layer above it in the
OSI Reference Model. Also, the functions and features provided to the application
programmer by the Compaq FTAM process. See also protocol.
service class. A set of functional units negotiated at association establishment. ISO
FTAM specifies five levels of service classes.
service ID. A value identifying the Compaq OSI service that is the source of an error
condition being reported. The APS_STATUS_ procedure returns service ID values in
the service-id parameter and within the structure returned in the original-error-info
parameter. See also original-error-info parameter.
service primitive. An abstract, implementation-independent interaction between a
service user and a service provider. Service primitives describe the sequences of events
between adjacent layers that occur through the service access point (SAP). There are
four types of service primitives. See also request primitive, indication primitive,
response primitive, and confirm primitive.
service provider. An entity that provides services for a higher-layer entity. For
example, the FTAM initiator is a service provider, providing FTAM services to an
FTAM application program. Contrast service user.
Glossary-22
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Glossary
service user. An entity that uses services provided to it by a lower-layer entity. For
example, the FTAM initiator is a service user of ACSE and presentation services
provided by OSI/AS. Contrast service provider.
session address. See SSAP.
Session Layer. Layer 5 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer allows the setup and
termination of communication sessions between systems on the network.
session selector. See SSEL.
session service access point. See SSAP.
simplification. The process of deriving one document from another document of a
different type by discarding structural information. In particular, the act of reading a file
of a specific FTAM document type as a less structured, or simpler, FTAM document
type.
SPDU (session protocol data unit). See PDU.
SPI (Subsystem Programmatic Interface). A set of procedures and associated
definition files used on Compaq NonStop systems to define common message-based
interfaces for communication between requesters and servers—for example, in a
management application. The SPI interface to Compaq FTAM is not available for
customer use.
SQL (structured query language). A fourth-generation-language standard that provides
a means to access and associate data in a relational database.
SSAP (session service access point). A network-unique address in the Session Layer
through which connections are established and maintained; also called session address.
SSEL (session selector). A logical address in the Session Layer through which session
services are made available.
state. (1) The condition at a particular point in the OSI protocol. See also protocol
state machine. (2) In DSM, the current condition of an object that indicates its
readiness to do work. States for PROCESS objects include STARTED, STOPPED,
SUSPENDED, and UNKNOWN. The only state for SU objects is STARTED; the only
state for SUBSYS objects is DEFINED. See also state transition; also called summary
state.
state machine. See protocol state machine.
state-result parameter. A parameter, returned in indications and confirms for primitives
that establish a regime, that indicates whether or not the remote responder has
established the requested regime. The valid values are success (ZFTM-VAL-STATE-
SUCCESS in the FTAM API) and failure (ZFTM-VAL-STATE-FAILURE in the FTAM
API). Note that this parameter is not returned for primitives that cannot fail, such as F-
DELETE, F-CLOSE, and F-DESELECT. For such primitives, only action-result is
returned. See action-result parameter.
state transition. In DSM, a condition that exists when a process is in transition from
one state to another. State transitions for PROCESS objects include ABORTING,
STARTING, STOPPING, and SUSPENDING. Also called summary-state transition.
Glossary-23
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Glossary
status. A Compaq procedure completion code that indicates the outcome of a call.
This code can assume one of nine values.
storage group. File attributes that provide information about a file and the data stored in
it. These attributes are negotiated at association establishment. The storage-group
attributes include the following:
Storage account
•
Date and time of creation
•
Date and time of last modification
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Date and time of last read access
Date and time of last attribute modification
Identity of creator
Identity of last modifier
Identity of last reader
Identity of last attribute modifier
File availability
File size
•
•
Future file size
string-significance parameter. A parameter of contents-type. This parameter applies to
the semantics of the file transfer. The values of this parameter are fixed, variable, and
not-significant. See also maximum-string-length parameter, relaxation, and contents-
type parameter.
structured query language. See SQL.
subdevice. A logical entity maintained by a Compaq subsystem to provide access to a
physical connection—that is, to a communications line. There may be one or many
subdevices associated with a given line or process. Exactly what constitutes a subdevice
differs depending on the subsystem. In OSI subsystems, a subdevice allows
communication between a process at a particular OSI layer, such as an FTAM initiator
or responder, and the local Compaq OSI server process (TAPS, TSP, or NSP) that
provides the services of the next lower layer. Each initiator subdevice handles one
association or (at layers below ACSE) one connection. Each responder subdevice
handles one attach, which is used to establish an association requested by a remote
application.
A Compaq FTAM initiator subdevice is created dynamically when an association is
established and usually lasts only as long as the association exists. A Compaq FTAM
responder subdevice is created when the responder issues an attach.
subsystem. (1) A term that generally defines the Compaq software or hardware
facilities that provide users with access to a set of services and other resources.
(2) In the context of DSM, a program or set of processes that manages a cohesive set of
Glossary-24
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Glossary
objects. Each subsystem has a process through which applications can request services
by issuing commands defined by that subsystem; in some cases, this process is the entire
subsystem. Many subsystems also have interactive interfaces.
Subsystem Control Facility. See SCF.
Subsystem Control Point. See SCP.
Subsystem Programmatic Interface. See SPI.
subtree. A part of a tree comprising an arbitrary node as the subtree root node and all
the other nodes that can be reached by a path from this subtree root node. See tree.
summary state. A DSM state. See state (definition 2).
summary-state transition. See state transition.
super group. The set of Compaq NonStop Kernel users whose group ID is 255. User
IDs within the super group confer implicit authorizations not available to other users,
including the ability to execute sensitive SCF commands.
super ID. The Guardian user ID represented by the pair of numbers (255,255). The
local super ID is the group manager for the super group. By default, the super ID can
execute any command without restriction.
supported file attribute. A virtual filestore (VFS) file attribute that can be referenced or
modified. Contrast with partially supported file attribute.
swap disk. See swap volume.
swap volume. An optional disk volume used as an additional memory source during the
operation of any process under the Compaq NonStop Kernel.
TACL (Tandem Advanced Command Language). The standard command interpreter
and tool set for the Compaq NonStop Kernel.
tag parameter. An optional procedure-call parameter you can use in nowait applications
on Compaq NonStop systems to match nowait I/O requests with completions. If there
are multiple I/O requests outstanding in your application, the tag indicates which one
has completed.
TAL (Transaction Application Language). A high-level, block-structured language
used to write systems software and routines that support transaction-oriented
applications on Compaq NonStop systems. The TAL compiler translates source
programs written in TAL into executable object programs.
Tandem Advanced Command Language. See TACL.
Tandem application, presentation, and session process. See TAPS process.
Tandem LAN Access Method. See TLAM.
TAPS (Tandem application, presentation, and session) process. A process in the
OSI/AS subsystem that performs service and protocol functions for ACSE (in the
Application Layer), the Presentation Layer, and the Session Layer. The TAPS process
Glossary-25
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Glossary
also performs some management services in the DSM environment. See also NSP
process and TSP process.
TAPS subdevice. A subdevice, maintained by OSI/AS, that enables communication
between an FTAM initiator or responder and the TAPS process. See subdevice.
TeletexString. The character-string type of strings conforming to CCITT
Recommendation T.61. These strings do not contain format effectors.
TLAM (Tandem LAN access method). A Compaq product that implements, for LANs,
the services of the Data Link Layer and layers below.
TPDU (transport protocol data unit). See PDU.
trace file. The file in which the SCF trace facility collects trace information while a
trace is in progress.
Transaction Application Language. See TAL.
transfer syntax. In the Presentation Layer, the definition of the exact bit patterns to be
used to convey specified kinds of information in a communication. See also abstract
syntax.
transient error. An ISO-defined type of diagnostic error that may not recur if the
sequence is repeated but does indicate the failure of the operation being performed. See
also error type, informative message, and permanent error.
transition state. See state transition.
transport address. See TSAP.
Transport Layer. Layer 4 in the OSI Reference Model. This layer provides reliable
data transfer.
transport selector. See TSEL.
transport service access point. See TSAP.
transport service provider. See TSP.
traversal. An ordering of the nodes in a tree such that each node occurs only once, and
which is determined by an algorithm applicable to all possible trees.
tree. A connected hierarchical file structure in which each node is linked to other nodes
by directed arcs in such a way that one node has no inbound arcs, and all other nodes
have exactly one inbound arc. See also subtree.
TSAP (transport service access point). A network-unique address in the Transport
Layer through which connections are established and maintained. Also called transport
address.
TSEL (transport selector). A logical address in the Transport Layer through which
transport services are made available.
TSP (transport service provider) process. A process in the Compaq OSI end system
that performs service and protocol functions for the Transport Layer and for the internet
Glossary-26
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Glossary
protocol (IP) of the Network Layer. TSP processes are provided by the underlying
OSI/TS subsystem. See also NSP process and TAPS process.
UA (unstructured all data units). An access context for which data is transferred as
file-contents data elements; that is, only the data contents of the file are transferred.
See access context; contrast with FA.
unconfirmed service. A subsystem service in which the initiating application sends a
request to a responding application without a response being returned to the initiating
application. Contrast with confirmed service.
unconstrained class. An ISO FTAM service class consisting of the kernel functional
unit and (optionally) any other functional unit.
universal-class number. (1) The ASN.1-specified tag for the character-string type used
on a data transfer. (2) A parameter of contents-type that specifies a code for this tag.
See also relaxation and contents-type parameter.
unstructured file. The structure of FTAM-1 and FTAM-3 files, in which the complete
file is treated as one FADU.
user abort. An association abort initiated by the application. An abort leaves the
status of any interrupted operations undefined. FTAM provides the F-U-ABORT
service to allow applications to request a user abort. Contrast with provider abort.
VFS (virtual filestore). A virtual interface for FTAM requests to a file storage system.
The Compaq FTAM responder implements a VFS that translates requests into Guardian
file-system operations. Files accessible via the Guardian file system can also be
accessed via the VFS component of the Compaq FTAM responder. This includes all
files on the Expand network to which the responder process’ system belongs. The
Compaq FTAM responder uses the VFS to access the Guardian file system in servicing
requests from a remote FTAM initiator.
VFS profile. A Compaq FTAM profile used as a template to configure multiple
responder processes. See also FTC profile.
VideotexString. The character-string type of strings conforming to CCITT
Recommendation T.100. These strings contain format effectors.
ViewPoint operations console application. An extensible interactive application for
operators of Compaq NonStop systems. The ViewPoint application allows a system or
network to be controlled from a single terminal. It includes several block-mode display
screens for event messages, a block-mode display for system or network status, a
conversational TACL screen, and a facility called Define Process to maintain sessions
with multiple subsystems at the same time.
virtual filestore. See VFS.
VisibleString. The character-string type of strings containing any of the 94 graphic
characters and the space character, as defined in ISO 646. These strings do not contain
format effectors. Also called ISO646String.
wait mode. In Guardian file-system operations and some APS operations, the mode in
which the called procedure waits for the completion of an I/O operation and then returns
a condition code to the caller. Contrast with nowait mode.
Glossary-27
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Glossary
warning. An information-only message returned by the system, indicating a possible
problem. A warning can be significant, but does not cause the command or operation to
fail. A warning is less serious than an error. Contrast with error.
write functional unit. A functional unit that allows the following activities on an
association:
Establishing the file-open regime
•
Transferring data from the initiator to the responder
•
•
Releasing the file-open regime
X25AM (X.25 Access Method). A Compaq product that implements the services of the
Network Layer and the Physical Layer for WANs.
X.25 network. Any network or subnetwork linked using X.25 standards. X.25
standards are CCITT standards that define packet-switching carrier communication in
the Network Layer over wide area networks (WANs).
$process-name. A variable that represents the Guardian process name of a Compaq
initiator or responder process. An SCF command that uses this form of process name is
sent directly to the specified initiator or responder process, rather than to the APLMGR
process. Contrast with indirect-process-name.
Glossary-28
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Index
Attributes
A
Access context, not available (message
5024) A-21
initial, not possible (message
3002) A-11
Access contex, for writing FTAM-2
files 2-6
Access control inconsitent (message
3016) A-13
interoperability 2-1
Accessing files
Bad FADU - bad location (message
5004) A-19
diagnostic messages (5000 -
5040) A-18
Adapters, hardware to support OSI
layers 1-5
Bad FADU - poorly specified (message
5003) A-19
Addresses
Bad FUAD - size error (message
5001) A-19
Application Control Service Element
(ACSE) 1-5
Applications
troubleshooting 5-2
C
Architecture, Compaq FTAM
Attribute cannot be changed (message
4002) A-16
Attribute not supported (message
4003) A-17
Attribute partially supported (message
4006) A-17
Checkpoint window error (message
2013) A-8
Communications FTAM-quality-of-service
Compaq FTAM
definition 1-1
file attributes and Guardian file
attributes 4-11
Index-1
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Index
D
Compaq FTAM (continued)
management
Creation-attribute 4-16
applications 6-1
interfaces 1-4
responder
D
Data
Default user attribute
troubleshooting 5-2
Conformance
5036) A-24
2018) A-9
Diagnostic messages, responder
Distributed Systems Management (DSM)
components 1-4
Contents types
layers 1-5
Controlling Compaq FTAM
Document types
interoperability 2-3
Index-2
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Index
E
DSM
File (continued)
(4001-4006) A-16
size 4-15
types 4-5
E
File attributes
Errors
Event Management Service (EMS)
reading 4-20
Event messages
F
5011) A-20
3030) A-15
5012) A-20
3030) A-11
5040) A-25
File
access
File-transfer-and-management service
class 4-1
5040) A-18
Index-3
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Index
G
Functional units
interoperability 2-2
FPDUs
Functions supported by responder
FTAM
FTAM protocol data units
Future filesize exceeded (message
5032) A-23
FTAM-1 files
select-open mappings to Guardian
FTAM-2 files
G
select-open mappings to Guardian
GOSIP 2-1
1016) A-6
Guardian
actions 4-23
types A-24
simplification 4-13
FTAM-3
FTAM-3 files
3029) A-15
2003) A-8
H
layers 1-6
I
Illegal grouping sequence (message
1015) A-6
Incompatible service classes (message
2021) A-10
Index-4
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Index
K
Initial attributes altered (message
3018) A-14
Initial attributes not possible (message
3002) A-11
Initiator
L
5030) A-23
2015) A-9
Initiator, remote
Interfaces
M
Management
management 1-2
programmatic interface
International Organization for
Standardization (ISO)
Managing files, diagnostic messages
1002) A-5
Interoperability 5-1
Maximum-string-length parameter
interoperability 2-3
Messages
Interworking
2020) A-9
ISO FTAM
N
NBS-9 files
definition 1-1
interoperability 2-3
K
Index-5
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Index
O
Primitives
types 1-3
5023) A-21
5022) A-21
Process, initiator
Process, responder
Programmatic application interface
O
Operating system
5015) A-21
Operator messages
for 1-4
OSI/AS subsystem
API 3-1
interoperability 2-2
3021) A-14
3020) A-14
Programs
Protocol data units (PDUs)
P
Q
Parameters
interoperability 2-3
Passwords 4-22
R
Receiver 2-2
PDUs
6010) A-25
3028) A-15
Index-6
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Index
S
Remote initiator
S
supported 4-22
3028) A-15
Responder, Compaq FTAM
SCF
3030) A-10
Sender 2-2
2002) A-8
2021) A-10
action-list settings and Guardian
security 4-19
1017) A-4
Simplification 2-4
attributes 4-11
Specific PDU request inconsistent ...
SQL files
file-access and security
considerations 4-22
of 4-13
structure 3-1
troubleshooting 5-2
String length
responder, Compaq FTAM
interoperability 2-1
T
Troubleshooting 5-2
supported 4-22
Index-7
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