• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Admin Alert: Searching for Elusive OS/400 Green-Screen Commands

    August 18, 2004 Joe Hertvik

    In spite of many recent graphical enhancements to OS/400, sometimes the fastest way to finish your work is by running an old-fashioned 5250 green-screen command. But the problem with green-screen commands is that you need to know the exact command name in order to run it, and executing the right command sometimes depends on how good your memory is. Fortunately, IBM offers a few easy to remember green-screen utilities for finding the right command at the right time.

    The first place to stop during your command search is at the Major Command Groups menu. You can reach the MCG menu simply by pressing the F4 key from any OS/400 command line. The menu lets you browse through all the commands that are listed under 23 different groupings. These groupings include menu options for finding and running all the save and restore commands (option 6), print commands (option 10), and program commands (option 13). Each command group menu also contains a list of related commands, such as displaying all the tape commands as a menu item inside the save and restore commands menu. The MCG menu is a good reference for finding that one command you may have forgotten.

    If you don’t want to search through the Major Command Groups menu, you can use Select Command (SLTCMD). This command is good for finding and executing commands when you know the command name you want to execute but not its location, or when you only know part of the command name. For example, I created a command called DSPQSYSOPR in my shop for displaying the system operator message queue in a certain way. If that command wasn’t in my library list, I could find and execute it by running the following SLTCMD command:

    SLTCMD CMD(*ALL/DSPQSYSOPR)
    

    In this case, SLTCMD would search every library on my iSeries or AS/400 (as designated by the *ALL part of the Command parameter (CMD) until it found all the commands named DSPQSYSOPR in my system. SLTCMD produces a list containing the target commands, and I can prompt and run any command in that list by placing a 1 in front of the command’s entry and pressing Enter. Note that executing the command from the SLTCMD list is the same as typing in the command name and then pressing the F4 key for parameter prompting.

    SLTCMD can also be used to produce a wildcard list of commands that begin with a certain string. If, for example, I knew I wanted to work with OS/400 documents (DOC) but didn’t know the exact command to use, I could enter SLTCMD like this:

    SLTCMD CMD(WRKDOC*)
    

    And SLTCMD would show me all the commands in my library list that start with the string WRKDOC. I could then select the one I wanted to execute, and I’d be on my way. Also notice that you can use SLTCMD to search for commands in a specific library or in a number of different libraries by changing the library part of the CMD parameter. Using the WRKDOC* example, we can look for our target commands in a number of different places just by manipulating the libraries we ask SLTCMD to search through. Here are some of the different SLTCMD search permutations we could run:

    • SLTCMD CMD(*ALL/WRKDOC*) to look in all libraries on the system.

    • SLTCMD CMD(*LIBL/WRKDOC*) to look in the user library list, which is the default setting.

    • SLTCMD CMD(*CURLIB/WRKDOC*) to look only in the user’s current library.

    • SLTCMD CMD(*USRLIB/WRKDOC*) to look in the user part of the library list.

    • SLTCMD CMD(*ALLUSR/WRKDOC*) to look in all user libraries on the system.

    • SLTCMD CMD(LIBNAME/WRKDOC*) to look only in the specific library you hard-coded into the command.

    SLTCMD is also available as option 3 from the Major Command Groups menu.

    The final place to search for specific commands is the Verb Commands menu, which you can reach by typing GO VERB at any OS/400 command line (this menu is also available as option 2 of the Major Command Groups menu). The Verb Commands menu is handy for finding commands based on the OS/400 verb used in the command’s name (like WRK, ADD, or DLT). So if you wanted to find a command to copy a library (which starts with the literal CPY), you could go to the Verb Commands menu and select option 18, Copy Commands. For Delete Commands (DLT), you would select option 25, and for commands that start with WRK (work), you would select option 88, Work Commands. In OS/400 V5R2, there are up to 88 verb categories listed on the Verb Commands menu. However, to find a specific command, it may be quicker to use the Major Command Groups menu, the Subject Commands menu, or the Select Command command.

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags:

    Sponsored by
    ARCAD Software

    [Webinar] Synchronous IBM i and non-IBM i Deployments
    April 13 at 12 p.m. ET

    Do you need to automate and synchronize deployments across ALL your environments and applications?

    Many backend IBM i applications have off-platform components, such as an API layer, or Web front-end. To ensure your application stays reliable, artifacts must be deployed securely and in-sync.

    In our Webinar, learn how to orchestrate all your deployments, multi-platform and multi-cloud, using DROPS by ARCAD Software:

    – One single console to deploy across multiple endpoints – IBM i, Windows, Linux, IBM z, on prem or cloud

    – Real-time visibility of application status, from anywhere

    – Deployment plans and one-click-deploy

    – Rollback on error

    Simplify and secure your application delivery.

    Register Now

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Wake Up, Sunrise 2005 Is Almost Here Midrange i5s Versus the iSeries, Revisited

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Content archive

  • The Four Hundred
  • Four Hundred Stuff
  • Four Hundred Guru

Recent Posts

  • LANSA Developing Business Intelligence Tool
  • Blazing The Trail For VTL In The Cloud
  • Data De-Dupe Gives VTL Customers More Options
  • Four Hundred Monitor, March 29
  • The Big Spending On IT Security Is Only Going To Get Bigger
  • IBM Tweaks Some Power Systems Prices Down, Others Up
  • Disaster Recovery: From OS/400 V5R3 To IBM i 7.4 In 36 Hours
  • The Disconnect In Modernization Planning And Execution
  • Superior Support: One Of The Reasons You Pay The Power Systems Premium
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 25, Number 13

Subscribe

To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Four Hundred Monitor
  • IBM i PTF Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe

Search

Copyright © 2023 IT Jungle