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The question is to programmatically process the current overrides. I'm trying to avoid having to parse the DSPOVR spooled file.
Thanks
-----Original Message-----
From: smith5646midrange@xxxxxxxxx [mailto:smith5646midrange@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2020 9:34 AM
To: 'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion' <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: QCMDEXC & OVRPRTF anomaly
If you are just trying to find out if the override is still in place at the time the program is called, can you add a DSPOVR *PRINT right before the printfile is opened? Since it is only one user, you could condition it with "if user = 'xxx'..." so it doesn't do the DSPOVR for everyone.
The other thing that I have seen done for weird stuff like this is to put a library at the very top of the syslibl for her only that contains a custom version of OVRPRTF and DLTOVR that logs when they are being executed.
Logging could be as simple as a dump of the call stack. Typically this ends up being some rarely executed code triggered by "If Tuesday and raining in Arizona then...".
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