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Some people are trying to be more conscientious about being too loose with
MONMSG, and just ignoring them. That's a good thing. However when they
save a join logical on one system and restore it on another they always
get a CPF3234. The authority on the file ends up the same on the target
system as it was on the source system:
Object ----------Object-----------
User Group Authority Opr Mgt Exist Alter Ref
SSA52 USER DEF X X X X X
*PUBLIC *EXCLUDE
Object ---------------Data---------------
User Group Authority Read Add Update Delete Execute
SSA52 USER DEF X X
*PUBLIC *EXCLUDE
And, near as I can figure, the deal is that, on this object, the group
SSA52 would have *ALL. Well, since you cannot add/update/delete a join
logical file the OS does some tweaks. However I "assumed" that would have
been taking care of at create time. If so, then why should we get this
CPF3234 upon restore?
If "resistance is futile, you will be assimilated", then is it safe to
just ignore CPF3234?
Rob Berendt
--
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
Benjamin Franklin
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