The user ID is the current logon ID for the remote system (such as USER25).
It is suggested that you use one of the low-level qualilfiers shown in Table 1.
| Type of members in the data set: | Suggested low level qualifier: | Example name of the data set: |
|---|---|---|
| COBOL source file members | SRCLIB | <userid> .SFP1CO.USER.SRCLIB1 |
| COBOL copy book file members | COPYLIB | <userid> .SFP1CO.USER.COPYLIB |
| JCL file members | JCL | <userid> .SFP1CO.USER.JCL |
| 1 For a data set having the low level qualifier SRCLIB, see the following topics: | ||
The high-level qualifier should be meaningful. For example, you could choose a high-level qualifier that indicates the service flow project, the flow, and perhaps the flow version from which the members of the data set are generated (see Table 2):
| EXAMPLE: | Name of the service flow project: | Names of the flows: | Name of the version: | Names for PDS's: |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. The PDS name suggests the service flow name: | SFP_01 | (The flow name is not used in this example.) | (The version name is not used in this example.) | <user_id>.SFP1.USER.SRCLIB |
| 2. The PDS name suggests the flow name (especially if you have more than one flow): | SFP_01 | CatalogOrder CheckAvailability | (The version name is not used in this example.) | -- For CatlogOrder: -- For CheckAvailability: |
| 3. The PDS name suggests the version of the flow: | SFP_01 | CatalogOrder | Version 1 | <user_id>.SFP1CO.V001.USER.SRCLIB |