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Hi Rob, Crispin and Vern

Thanks for the quick replies - it's been a successful day now as I've
learned something. I've passed it on to my colleague who's also
grateful.

All the best and have a great weekend.

Jonathan



Rob@xxxxxxxxx wrote :

Ah, there's the clue "attempts to copy the file to IFS". I assume
that is done with CPYTOIMPF. Ever run that after typing in the
You ought to see all the SQL they use under the covers. What an
command STRDBG? abomination. No wonder anyone who follows Scott
can write something that runs faster. ... and I love sql!

If you google CPYTOIMPF and SQL0204 you get 8 hits.

One of them was
http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l/200212/msg01320.html

Rob Berendt
--
Group Dekko Services, LLC
Dept 01.073
Dock 108
6928N 400E
Kendallville, IN 46755
http://www.dekko.com





From:
"Jonathan Mason " <jonathan.mason@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To:
<midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:
11/07/2008 09:07 AM
Subject:
Anybody know what *MEM is?
Sent by:
midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx



Hi All

Klement's IFS tutorials One of my colleagues is looking at a joblog
in it that reads:

OC23907689 in OCRD type *MEM not found

We're not sure what's generating the message - the program has run a
that has an SQL0204 message batch FTP script and deleted the overrides
(eventually) tries to copy the retrieved file to the IFS when the
message occurs.

The thing that's puzzling us is that the program doesn't use SQL,
OPNQRYF and there aren't any files with triggers on that we know about
so we can't see why there would be an SQL0204 message and we've never
come across a type of *MEM before (first thoughts was "member", but we
figure that's not a type and if it was it'd surely be *MBR).

If anybody knows what type *MEM is can you please let me know.

Thanks in advance

Jonathan



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www.astradyne-uk.com


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