242 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
242 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
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1 Overview
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The MUMPS LOCK Utility
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The GT.M LOCK Utility, LKE, provides a tool for examining and changing
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the GT.M LOCK environment. In MUMPS, the LOCK command reserves one or
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more resource names. Only one process at a time can reserve a resource
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name. No other process sharing the same environment can successfully
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LOCK that resource name at the same time. MUMPS code commonly uses
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LOCKs as flags controlling access to global data. Generally a LOCK
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specifies the same as the name of the global variable that requires
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protected access. However, this is only a convention. A LOCK argument
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may contain any subscripted or unsubscripted MUMPS name including a
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name with no preceding caret (^). Because they have the appearance of
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local variable names, resource names with no preceding caret (^) are
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commonly referred to as "local LOCKs."
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The ZALLOCATE and ZDEALLOCATE commands provide an alternative,
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non-standard, mechanism for managing LOCKs.
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2 Functions
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Functions
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The two primary functions of the MUMPS LOCK Utility (LKE) are:
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o SHOW all or specified LOCKs currently active on the system
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o CLEAR all or specified LOCKs currently active on the system
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When debugging a MUMPS application, you may use LKE to identify and
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clear a possible deadlock situation, i.e., two or more processes
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have LOCKs and are waiting to add resource names LOCKed by the
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other(s).
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When used with GT.CM, LKE may display and change information on
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other nodes of a distributed database system.
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2 LOCK_database
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MUMPS LOCKs and Global Directories
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GT.M distributes the LOCK database among the database files
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identified by the Global Directory (GD). The Global Directory
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Editor (GDE) creates and maintains Global Directories.
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GT.M maps LOCKs of resource names starting with a caret (^) to the
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database file used to map variables with the same name. If the
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Global Directory maps the name A to file A.DAT, GT.M maps all LOCKs
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on resource name ^A to file A.DAT.
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GT.M maps LOCKs on names not starting with a caret (^) to the
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region of the database specified with the GDE command LOCK -REGION.
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By default, GDE creates Global Directories mapping local LOCKs to
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the region DEFAULT.
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These two factors result in the following:
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o ^ LOCKs automatically intersect for all users of the same data
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in any database file, because GT.M stores the ^ LOCKs in the
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same file as the data
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o "local" LOCKs intersect dependent on the Global Directory,
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because users may access the database through different Global
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Directories.
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2 Global_Directories
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Establishing a Global Directory
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GDE and LKE use the environment variable gtmgbldir to identify
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which file to use for the Global Directory. gtmgbldir should be
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defined by individual users in their login files.
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Example
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$ gtmgbldir=prod.gld
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$ export gtmgbldir
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When a process invokes a GT.M image, GT.M identifies the current
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Global Directory by the environment variable gtmgbldir. Within
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MUMPS, SET $zgbldir=expr changes the Global Directory. $zgbldir is
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an intrinsic special variable. An individual LOCK, ZALLOCATE or
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ZDEALLOCATE argument may specify a Global Directory with the
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extended global syntax.
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1 CLEAR
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C[LEAR]
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The CLEAR command removes active LOCKs. The format of the CLEAR
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command is:
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C[LEAR] [-qualifier...]
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The optional CLEAR command qualifiers are:
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-A[LL]
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-I[NTERACTIVE]
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-O[UTPUT]=file-spec
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-P[ID]=pid
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-R[EGION]=region-name
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By default, CLEAR operates interactively (-INTERACTIVE).
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2 Qualifiers
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-ALL
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-A[LL]
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Specifies the removal of all current LOCKs. If used with the
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-REGION qualifier -ALL removes all LOCKs in the region. Issue a
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CLEAR -ALL only when there are no active GT.M processes using
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LOCKs or when you can predict the effect on the application.
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The -ALL qualifier is incompatible with the -INTERACTIVE
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qualifier.
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-INTERACTIVE
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-I[NTERACTIVE]
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Clears one LOCK at a time interactively. LKE displays each
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current LOCK with the PID of the owner process and prompts for
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verification that the LOCK should be cleared. LKE retains the
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LOCK for any response other than Y[ES].
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The -INTERACTIVE qualifier is incompatible with the -ALL
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qualifier.
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By default, CLEAR operates interactively (-INTERACTIVE).
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-OUTPUT
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-OUTPUT=file-spec
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Directs the reporting of all cleared LOCKs. If you specify an
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existing file, LKE overwrites that file.
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The -OUTPUT qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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By default, CLEAR sends its messages to the standard output.
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-PID
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-/P[ID]=pid
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Clears all LOCKs associated with the specified process
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identification number. LKE interprets the PID as a decimal
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number. This command provides a means for directing CLEAR to
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LOCKs held by a process that is behaving abnormally.
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The -PID qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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-REGION
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-/R[EGION]=region-name
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Clears LOCKs mapped by the current Global Directory to a region
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specified by the region-name.
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The -REGION qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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By default, CLEAR -REGION= operates interactively (-INTERACTIVE).
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1 EXIT
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E[XIT]
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The EXIT command ends an LKE session. The format of the EXIT command
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is:
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E[XIT]
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1 HELP
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H[ELP]
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The HELP command explains LKE commands. The format of the HELP command
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is:
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H[ELP] [options...]
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Enter the LKE command for which you want information at the Topic
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prompt(s). Use <RETURN> or <CTRL Z> to return to the LKE prompt.
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Example
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LKE> HELP SHOW
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This command displays help for the SHOW command.
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1 SHOW
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SH[OW]
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The SHOW command provides a status report on the LOCK mechanism and
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the LOCK database. The format of the SHOW command is:
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SH[OW] [ -qualifier...]
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By default, SHOW displays -ALL.
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The SHOW command reports active LOCKs. Information displayed about
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specific LOCKs includes the LOCK resource name and the process
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identification (PID) of the LOCK owner. The results of a SHOW may be
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immediately "outdated" by MUMPS LOCK activity.
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2 Qualifiers
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-ALL
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-A[LL]
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Specifies a display of all current LOCKs in all regions and
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information about the state of processes owning these LOCKs. The
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-ALL qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers. SHOW
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-ALL -WAIT displays both -ALL and -WAIT information.
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By default, SHOW displays -ALL.
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-OUTPUT
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-OUTPUT=file-spec
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Directs the reporting of the current LOCKs. When you specify a
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file, LKE overwrites that file.
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The -OUTPUT qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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By default, SHOW directs all messages to SYS$OUTPUT.
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-PID
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-P[ID]=process-identification
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Displays all LOCKs owned by the specified PID.
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The -PID qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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By default, SHOW displays the LOCKs for all PIDs.
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-REGION
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-R[EGION]=region-name
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Displays LOCKs for the specified region.
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The -REGION qualifier is compatible with all other qualifiers.
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By default, SHOW displays the LOCKs for all regions.
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-WAIT
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-W[AIT]
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Displays the LOCK resource name and the process state
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information of all processes waiting for the LOCK to be granted.
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LKE does not display the owner of the LOCK. SHOW -ALL -WAIT
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displays both -ALL and -WAIT information.
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1 SPAWN
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SP[AWN]
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The SPAWN command creates a sub-process for access to the shell
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without terminating the current LKE environment. Use the SPAWN command
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to suspend a session and issue shell commands such as ls or printenv.
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The SPAWN command accepts an optional command string for execution by
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the spawned sub-process. If the SPAWN has command string parameter,
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the created sub-process prompts and accepts any legal shell command.
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To terminate the sub-process use the shell logout command.
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The format of the SPAWN command is:
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SP[AWN]
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