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Oops, Sorry, my bad (my apologies to David and Dennis)

Luis Rodriguez
IBM Certified Systems Expert — eServer i5 iSeries
--



On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 10:00 AM, Dennis Lovelady <iseries@xxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:

Wrong credit. That comment about presumption came from someone else.

Dennis Lovelady
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady
--
"Abstract Art: A product of the untalented, sold by the unprincipled to the
utterly bewildered."
-- Al Capp


Dennis,

I think that the idea is not to "presume" that the program source comes
from
the dev LPAR but to ASSURE that is the case. That is where good Source
Management systems (Like MKS, Aldon, etc) come handy.

Regards,
Luis Rodriguez
IBM Certified Systems Expert - eServer i5 iSeries
--


On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 8:36 AM, David FOXWELL
<David.FOXWELL@xxxxxxxxx>wrote:


-----Message d'origine-----
[mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] De la part de Vern Hamberg

If you DO have a separate development LPAR, put
source there - there's no reason to put it on the production
LPAR - see debugging response below.


For OPM *PGMs, DSPPGM shows the source on the first page. For
ILE *PGMs,
the source is in the *MODULE detail of DSPPGM (put a 5 on the
module
listed and see the DSPMOD output, where the source is given).

So when a program malfunctions, and you want to inspect the source,
you
have to <presume> it was created from the source on the dev lpar?
Would the development lpar contain all sources and objects but the
prod
lpar only the objects necessary for execution which are copies of the
objects on the development lpar?
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