11-26-2003
I think that RMCobol will run on XP. That might be a solution. I would also contact the compiler vendor. It does not make sense to lock records in input mode.
Samba is not NFS. There are NFS products for XP. They may support the lockd protocol, but I'm not sure.
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RPC.LOCKD(8) BSD System Manager's Manual RPC.LOCKD(8)
NAME
rpc.lockd -- NFS file locking daemon
SYNOPSIS
rpc.lockd [-d debug_level] [-g grace period]
DESCRIPTION
The rpc.lockd daemon provides monitored and unmonitored file and record locking services in an NFS environment. To monitor the status of
hosts requesting locks, the locking daemon typically operates in conjunction with rpc.statd(8).
Options and operands available for rpc.lockd :
-d The -d option causes debugging information to be written to syslog, recording all RPC transactions to the daemon. These messages are
logged with level LOG_DEBUG and facility LOG_DAEMON. Specifying a debug_level of 1 results in the generation of one log line per
protocol operation. Higher debug levels can be specified, causing display of operation arguments and internal operations of the dae-
mon.
-g The -g option allow to specify the grace period, in seconds. During the grace period rpc.lockd only accepts requests from hosts which
are reinitialising locks which existed before the server restart. Default is 30 seconds.
Error conditions are logged to syslog, irrespective of the debug level, using log level LOG_ERR and facility LOG_DAEMON.
The rpc.lockd daemon must NOT be invoked by inetd(8) because the protocol assumes that the daemon will run from system start time. Instead,
it should be configured in rc.conf(5) to run at system startup.
FILES
/usr/include/rpcsvc/nlm_prot.x RPC protocol specification for the network lock manager protocol.
SEE ALSO
syslog(3), rc.conf(5), rpc.statd(8)
STANDARDS
The implementation is based on the specification in X/Open CAE Specification C218, "Protocols for X/Open PC Interworking: XNFS, Issue 4",
ISBN 1 872630 66 9
HISTORY
A version of rpc.lockd appeared in SunOS 4.
BUGS
The current implementation provides only the server side of the protocol (i.e. clients running other OS types can establish locks on a NetBSD
fileserver, but there is currently no means for a NetBSD client to establish locks).
The current implementation serialises locks requests that could be shared.
BSD
September 24, 1995 BSD