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I think this info is associated with a job name and user. We use the default naming for PC5250, so I don't always get back to where I was and lose what record of work I did. Maybe an option is to save the session every time to a source member.

http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l/200111/msg00343.html is the message that explains this.

Try the following command, assuming the profile name is Mike:

DMPSYSOBJ ISQLSTMIKE* QRECOVERY TYPE(19) SUBTYPE(EE)

I did this for myself and got 2 objects dumped to the spooled file. The first object was


NAME-        ISQLSTVERN      QPADEV000G0000
LIBRARY-     QRECOVERY

The name actually has the blanks in it - system objects can do that. The second was

NAME-        ISQLSTVERN      QPADEV000G0001
LIBRARY-     QRECOVERY

One of my current jobs is QPADEV000G and I see the history for that one. The other job is QPADEV000B, and it uses the second one, so I think the number at the end is some kind of serial number. The linkage seems to be in each job, as there is no other reference to QPADEV000B in either object. So you won't know to which job each history is associated. But at least you can see all the statements.

At 02:25 AM 3/2/2005, you wrote:

On 02/03/2005, at 10:56 AM, Chris Bipes wrote:

Where or where does the system store your sessions, not the ones you save to
a source member, but your current session after you exit.  For instance I
start three interactive jobs and I start an ISQL session in each.
After
exiting all three, in which one has the update statement I want, were does
or how does the system save these?  Is the first ISQL session saved as user
session1, the second as user session2, the third as user session3?  Or is
based on User/Job for each interactive user.

Check the archives for Midrange-l or MI400-l. This has been discussed in detail on at least one of those.


I have a programmer that cannot keep track of where he was but has a hard
time finding that statement he build before lunch.

30-second attention span? Must be young (or really old ...) or possibly imbibing something at lunch that perhaps he shouldn't?


Second, can I limit them to one ISQL session?  (Management override to solve
confused programmer ;-)

Only by limiting them to one signed-on session. If they have trouble recalling what they were doing an hour ago then multiple sessions are probably too much for them also.


Regards,
Simon Coulter.
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