Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users ACF2 equivalent in Unix or Linux ? Post 302232513 by indra_saha on Thursday 4th of September 2008 04:19:20 PM
Old 09-04-2008
ACF2 equivalent in Unix or Linux ?

In IBM Mainframe they have something called ACF2 rule which is essentially used to control the dataset access. It is kind of a list-based access control for mainframe datasets. [Mainframe datasets are equivalent to Unix files]


Is there anything equivalent to ACF2 available in Unix ?


Thanks
Rabi
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Linux

Linux equivalent for daemon2

Hi all... In my Unix system a program exists called "daemon2" which is responsible to enqueue program executions. For example, if I want to make the system to enqueue lpr executions for certain users, I call daemon2 with lpr as the parameter. Is there an equivalent in Linux? Thanks Jaime (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jstuardo
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

ufsdump equivalent in linux and unix

Hi all, I am preparing for a worst case scenario. Say i have a production server A, should A fails ( for whatever reason), i want another server B to take over. How can i move everything from A to B? Assuming i have regular backup of A. I've searched in the forums, and briefly came across... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: new2ss
4 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Equivalent for iostat -e in AIX HP-UX Linux

iostat -e gives the soft, hard and transport error information in Solaris. What is the equivalent command in the other flavors of Unix AIX HP Linux. Thanks Prasi (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: prasi_in
1 Replies

4. Linux

Mksysb Equivalent For Linux?

I have experience with making bootable images of AIX systems using mksysb and wondered if there was some type of equivalent software for Linux. Or perhaps some of the folks here have alternatives or unique ideas for how they are backing up their Linux systems enabling them to recover them as... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: scotbuff
13 Replies

5. Linux

Linux equivalent for...

I moved to a Linux system from Windows a few months ago. Most of the programs I had been using were already native to Linux (Firefox, the GIMP, Pari, etc.) and most others I found a close enough program (Crimson Editor -> gedit, Visual Studio -> KDevelop, Primo -> Morain's ECPP). Now I'm down... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: CRGreathouse
1 Replies

6. Programming

WSAAsyncSelect equivalent for linux

Hello, I'm writing a multi-threaded socket server in C++ and I needed something like wsaasyncselect to handle messages like fd_accept, fd_read, fd_connect, fd_close. Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lucastonon
2 Replies

7. HP-UX

UNIX VI editor equivalent of LINUX

Hi All, I am comfortable working in LINUX and need equivalents for HP-UX for below mentioned, 1. We use TAB key to expand/reveal a name in LINUX. Is there any way to make this work for UNIX, where it is double escape. 2. Also can we use make use of left,down,up,right keys instead... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pradebban
3 Replies

8. Linux

/etc/netmasks equivalent in linux

Hi Guys, I am used to configuring DHCP on Solaris and foreach subnet added I place a corresponding entry in /etc/netmasks. I am now looking at configuring DHCP on linux, is there an equivalnet entry required somewhere or is this not needed in linux Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: eeisken
3 Replies

9. Red Hat

NFS_v4_fail_over_timeout equivalent in Linux

Hi, I need to mount a replicated nfs4 export on a number of AIX and Redhat hosts. To get the failover on the clients working smoothly, I need to change certain values on the AIX boxes like nfs_v4_fail_over_timeout, timeo and retrans values. Since I have no clue about Linux, I am not quite sure... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zxmaus
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need Linux equivalent for UNIX

I have a folder called "log" which has a few sub-folders say "fda" "fd7" "fdd" "fd6 .... " I wish to fire the below command inside each subfolder starting with the folder with the latest time stamp. grep "$greptime.*exit" Prod.$(hostname).log | grep $fdrdate_new If the seach did not yield... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
3 Replies
H5TOTXT(1)							      h5utils								H5TOTXT(1)

NAME
h5totxt - generate comma-delimited text from 2d slices of HDF5 files SYNOPSIS
h5totxt [OPTION]... [HDF5FILE]... DESCRIPTION
h5totxt is a utility to generate comma-delimited text (and similar formats) from one-, two-, or more-dimensional slices of numeric datasets in HDF5 files. This way, the data can easily be imported into spreadsheets and similar programs for analysis and visualization. HDF5 is a free, portable binary format and supporting library developed by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the Uni- versity of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. A single h5 file can contain multiple data sets; by default, h5totxt takes the first dataset, but this can be changed via the -d option, or by using the syntax HDF5FILE:DATASET. By default, the entire dataset is dumped to the output. in row-major order. For 3d datasets, this corresponds to a sequence of yz slices, in order of increasing x, separated by blank lines. If -T is specified, outputs in the transposed (column-major) order instead Often, however, you want only a one- or two-dimensional slice of multi-dimensional data. To do this, you specify coordinates in one or more slice dimensions, via the -xyzt options. The most basic usage is something like 'h5totxt foo.h5', which will output comma-delimited text to stdout from the data in foo.h5. OPTIONS
-h Display help on the command-line options and usage. -V Print the version number and copyright info for h5totxt. -v Verbose output. -o file Send text output to file rather than to stdout (the default). -s sep Use the string sep to separate columns of the output rather than a comma (the default). -x ix, -y iy, -z iz, -t it This tells h5totxt to use a particular slice of a multi-dimensional dataset. e.g. -x causes a yz plane (of a 3d dataset) to be used, at an x index of ix (where the indices run from zero to one less than the maximum index in that direction). Here, x/y/z cor- respond to the first/second/third dimensions of the HDF5 dataset. The -t option specifies a slice in the last dimension, whichever that might be. See also the -0 option to shift the origin of the x/y/z slice coordinates to the dataset center. -0 Shift the origin of the x/y/z slice coordinates to the dataset center, so that e.g. -0 -x 0 (or more compactly -0x0) returns the central x plane of the dataset instead of the edge x plane. (-t coordinates are not affected.) -T Transpose the data (interchange the dimension ordering). By default, no transposition is done. -. numdigits Output numdigits digits after the decimal point (defaults to 16). -d name Use dataset name from the input files; otherwise, the first dataset from each file is used. Alternatively, use the syntax HDF5FILE:DATASET, which allows you to specify a different dataset for each file. You can use the h5ls command (included with hdf5) to find the names of datasets within a file. BUGS
Send bug reports to S. G. Johnson, stevenj@alum.mit.edu. AUTHORS
Written by Steven G. Johnson. Copyright (c) 2005 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. h5utils March 9, 2002 H5TOTXT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:03 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy