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Charles:

Have you tried DETAIL(*EXTENDED) on the CRTPGM or CRTSRVPGM commands?

HTH,
Mark S.Waterbury

> On 2/8/2017 4:44 PM, Charles Wilt wrote:
Thanks Mark...

Not quite what I'm looking for, but Bryan's use of the Qbnlpgmi and
Qbnlspgm APIs are probably the closest I'm going to get.

Really, what I'd like is two fold
1) Imagine CRTPGM generating a listing of where it found various procedures
during the binding step
2) Have that list info stored in the program object; ideally shown with
where they'd be found at runtime with the current LIBL.

When your binding directories have service programs specified with *LIBL...
and you're dealing with multiple releases of various objects in various
libraries....and your change management isn't perfect....well things can
get a bit confusing. :)



Charles


On Wed, Feb 8, 2017 at 1:58 PM, Mark S Waterbury <
mark.s.waterbury@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Charles:

Try a google search for "os/400 ile procedure cross-reference" (without
quotes).

HTH,

Mark S. Waterbury


On 2/8/2017 3:19 PM, Charles Wilt wrote:
I'm working with a code base that doesn't include a "namepace"
prefix/suffix on procedures.

There's also not a direct correlation between the source file containing
the PR and the *SRVPGM with the procedure.

Now I can use DSPPGM, see the SRVPGMs bound in and do a 5=Display on each
to eventually see the procedures in the SRVPGM: DSPSRVPGM
DETAIL(*PROCEXP)


Is their anyway to determine directly where a given procedure used in a
program is coming from?

Basically looking for a DSPPGM DETAIL(*PROCIMP)

I realize that the procedures are bound by ordinal number, as opposed to
name...so the name may not be stored explicitly in the *PGM object. But
seems like some behind the scenes resolving either by an IBM utility or a
user written one could happen.

Actually, what would be really nice is too be able to know where the
procedure was found at CRTPGM bind time when *LIBL was used to resolve the
service program. Basically like how DSPPGMREF shows where the file on an
f-spec was found at compile time. But I'm probably out of luck with that
unless there's something stored within the object as part of the debug
listing.

Thanks!
Charles


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