kolibrios-gitea/programs/fs/unzip60/cmsmvs/README.MVS
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2016-11-18 13:40:05 +00:00

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Thank you for trying this port of UNZIP for VM/CMS and MVS!
Using under MVS:
-------------------------
1. To use the Info-ZIP's UNZIP under MVS you need:
- C/370 ver 2.1 compiler or another compatible compiler supporting
long names for function/variable names.
2. To compile the program under MVS do :
- unzip all the files from unz54vm.zip file. They are stored as
ASCII format so you have to unzip them first on PC or other
system that already have UNZIP, and then upload them to the
mainframe with ASCII to EBCDIC conversion.
- Copy all the .C files in the PDS called USERID.UNZIP.C
- Copy all the .H files in the PDS called USERID.UNZIP.H
- adjust the job UNZMVSC.JOB to work on your site. Change USERID
to your userid. You might need to change the CEE dataset names
to match your OS/390 system.
- Preallocate PDS datasets named: USERID.UNZIP.OBJ and
USERID.UNZIP.LOAD
- execute the job UNZMVSC to compile and link all the sources.
- if everything is ok you will get an UNZIP MODULE
3. Using UNZIP
- Just read the UNZIP.TXT
- A few exceptions concerning MVS
3.0. There are different ways to invoke UNZIP.
- allocating UNZIP.LOAD dataset to your ISPLLIB if you
want to invoke UNZIP under ISPF.
Then just type UNZIP ...parms... to get it work
- You can also call it directly with :
TSO CALL 'userid.UNZIP.LOAD(UNZIP)' '...parms...'
(notice to quotes!)
- You can even call it from a batch job like:
//MYZIP JOB (account)
//STEP1 EXEC PGM=UNZIP,PARM='-l mytestz.zip *.c'
//STEPLIB DD DSN=userid.UNZIP.LOAD,DISP=SHR
//SYSPRINT DD SYSOUT=*
This will list all the .c files from the zip file mytestz.zip
3.1. If the ZIP file has been zipped on an ASCII based system
it will be automatically translated to EBCDIC
( I hope I got all those translation tables OK :-).
You can force ASCII to EBCDIC conversion with the -a flag.
3.2. The date/time of the output files is set to the
current system date/time - not according the date/time in
the zip file.
3.3. You can even unzip using TSO/E PIPELINES
so unzip can be used as pipeline filter:
'pipe cms unzip -p test.zip george.test | count lines | cons'
( we do also a lot of pipethinking here ;-)
3.4. If you got also the ZIP program (see ZIP21VM.ZIP) you can
do zipping and unzipping without translating to ASCII
the ZIP also preserves the file informations (LRECL,BLKSIZE..)
So when you UNZIP a file zipped with ZIP under MVS it
restores the file info.
There currently some problems with file with RECFM=V*
I don't save the length of each record yet :-)
3.5. No wildcards are supported in the input zip name you have
to give the real name (.zip is not necessary)
So you CAN'T use things like: unzip -t *.zip
3.6. But you CAN use wildcards as filename selection like:
unzip -t myzip *.c - OK or even
unzip -t myzip *.c -x z*.c - to exclude all files matching
z*.c
3.7. You can unzip to a PDS using the -d parameter,
for example:
unzip -dmyzip myzip *.c
This will unzip all .c files that are in the zip file in a
PDS directory called MYZIP.C
BE AWARE that the extension of every files is being placed as
last identifier on the PDS name, so if you have a file in the
zipfile called 'testp.doc' and you use '-d mypds' the PDS
name will become 'mypds.doc(testp)'
Depending on which options IBM chose for C this week, unzip
may or may not prefix output files with your userid and/or
TSO prefix. To prevent this, quote the filename to -d, for
example
//UNZIP EXEC PGM=UNZIP,
// PARM='/-a -o ''userid.zip'' -d ''hlq.test'' *'
//STEPLIB DD DSN=USERID.UNZIP.LOAD,DISP=SHR
//SYSPRINT DD SYSOUT=*
//SYSOUT DD SYSOUT=*
The above JCL converts from ASCII to EBCDIC (-a), always
overwrites existing members (-o), extracts from 'userid.zip',
writes to files starting with 'hlq.test', all members (*).
Note the double quotes because PARM= requires single quotes.
3.8. The rules for output DCBs are a little messy. If the output
file already exists (remember the -d option) then unzip uses
the existing DCB and space values.
If the output file does not exist and the input zip came from
MVS then unzip makes its best attempt at preserving the
original DCB. However there is not enough information stored
in the zip file to do this correctly for all file types, some
file types may be corrupted.
If the output file does not exist and the input zip does not
contain MVS DCB information then unzip uses RECFM=U,
LRECL=32760 for binary data, RECFM=V, LRECL=133 for text.
Text includes ASCII to EBCDIC conversion. As soon as the
output file is created, unzip uses the same output DCB for
all following members, even if the input is a mixture of text
and binary.
In all cases, unzip has no built in parameters for space.
For a preallocated file this is not a problem. If unzip
creates an output file you get a default space allocation
which is site dependent.
It is far better to preallocate the output files with the
correct space and DCB values then use the -d option to point
to those files.
3.9. All '+','_' or '-' signs are skipped from the filenames
Please repport all bugs and problems to :
Zip-Bugs@lists.wku.edu
That's all for now.
Have fun!
George Petrov
e-mail: c888090@nlevdpsb.snads.philips.nl
tel: +31-40-781155
Philips C&P
Eindhoven
The Netherlands
Updated by:
Keith Owens <kaos@ocs.com.au>