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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Encoding Problem while using "|" (PIPE) as delimiter from Mainframe to Unix Post 302168979 by seshendra on Wednesday 20th of February 2008 01:22:28 AM
Old 02-20-2008
Encoding Problem while using "|" (PIPE) as delimiter from Mainframe to Unix

We are facing a problem with PIPE (|) as a delimiter in one of our FTP flat files.
  1. We are constructing a Flat file in IBM-AIX and this contains various strings delimted by PIPE Symbol and then FTPing this to a Mainframe System
  2. The Mainframe program simply recieves this and FTPs the same (with our any manipulations) to another IBM-AIX machine
  3. As soon as the File is recieved on the third system, all the delimiters (|s) are being replaced by "M-3"

Earlier we used comma (,) as the delimiter and never faced such an issue. Now we have changed it to PIPE and are in this situation.

Is there anything to do specifically with PIPE when transferring files between Mainframe & UNIX?

Is there any work around for this without changing the delimiter symbol from PIPE to some another?
 

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PIPE(2) 							System Calls Manual							   PIPE(2)

NAME
pipe - create an interprocess channel SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h> #include <libc.h> int pipe(int fd[2]) DESCRIPTION
Pipe creates a buffered channel for interprocess I/O communication. Two file descriptors are returned in fd. Data written to fd[1] is available for reading from fd[0] and data written to fd[0] is available for reading from fd[1]. After the pipe has been established, cooperating processes created by subsequent fork(2) calls may pass data through the pipe with read and write calls. The bytes placed on a pipe by one write are contiguous even if many processes are writing. Write boundaries are preserved: each read terminates when the read buffer is full or after reading the last byte of a write, whichever comes first. The number of bytes available to a read(2) is reported in the Length field returned by fstat or dirfstat on a pipe (see stat(2)). When all the data has been read from a pipe and the writer has closed the pipe or exited, read(2) will return 0 bytes. Writes to a pipe with no reader will generate a note sys: write on closed pipe. SOURCE
/sys/src/libc/9syscall SEE ALSO
intro(2), read(2), pipe(3) DIAGNOSTICS
Sets errstr. BUGS
If a read or a write of a pipe is interrupted, some unknown number of bytes may have been transferred. When a read from a pipe returns 0 bytes, it usually means end of file but is indistinguishable from reading the result of an explicit write of zero bytes. PIPE(2)
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