PHREF(3) MBK PHYSICAL STRUCTURE DEFINITIONS PHREF(3)NAME
phref - mbk physical reference
DESCRIPTION
The phref structure is used to describe a reference belonging to a symbolic layout model, see phfig(3) for details. A reference allows to
name a point anywhere in a given model. It may then be seen as a name, and not anymore as a couple of coordinates. References are mostly
used for cell programming and multi-access connector representation.
The declarations needed to work on phref are available in the header file "/labo/include/mph402.h", where '402' is the actual mbk version.
The following C structure supports the description of the reference :
typedef struct phref {
struct phref *NEXT;
char *FIGNAME;
char *NAME;
long XREF,YREF;
struct ptype *USER;
} phref_list;
NEXT Pointer to the next reference in the list.
FIGNAME Kind of reference. Gives information about the possible uses of the object. Some FIGNAME are in use today :
"ref_con" for multi-access connectors
"ref_ref" for all other uses
NAME Name of the reference. The refence is identified by its name, so it should be unique at a given hierarchical level.
XREF, YREF Coordinates of the point beeing referenced.
USER Pointer to a ptype list, see ptype(3) for details, that is a general purpose pointer used to share informations on the
reference.
SEE ALSO mbk(1), addphref(3), getphref(3), delphref(3), phfig(3), ptype(3).
BUG REPORT
This tool is under development at the ASIM department of the LIP6 laboratory.
We need your feedback to improve documentation and tools.
ASIM /LIP6 October 1, 1997 PHREF(3)
Check Out this Related Man Page
PHREF(3) MBK PHYSICAL STRUCTURE DEFINITIONS PHREF(3)NAME
phref - mbk physical reference
DESCRIPTION
The phref structure is used to describe a reference belonging to a symbolic layout model, see phfig(3) for details. A reference allows to
name a point anywhere in a given model. It may then be seen as a name, and not anymore as a couple of coordinates. References are mostly
used for cell programming and multi-access connector representation.
The declarations needed to work on phref are available in the header file "/labo/include/mph402.h", where '402' is the actual mbk version.
The following C structure supports the description of the reference :
typedef struct phref {
struct phref *NEXT;
char *FIGNAME;
char *NAME;
long XREF,YREF;
struct ptype *USER;
} phref_list;
NEXT Pointer to the next reference in the list.
FIGNAME Kind of reference. Gives information about the possible uses of the object. Some FIGNAME are in use today :
"ref_con" for multi-access connectors
"ref_ref" for all other uses
NAME Name of the reference. The refence is identified by its name, so it should be unique at a given hierarchical level.
XREF, YREF Coordinates of the point beeing referenced.
USER Pointer to a ptype list, see ptype(3) for details, that is a general purpose pointer used to share informations on the
reference.
SEE ALSO mbk(1), addphref(3), getphref(3), delphref(3), phfig(3), ptype(3).
BUG REPORT
This tool is under development at the ASIM department of the LIP6 laboratory.
We need your feedback to improve documentation and tools.
ASIM /LIP6 October 1, 1997 PHREF(3)
Manufacturer Links
General Information
Home Page: IBM United States
Documentation/Information: IBM System p - UNIX servers: Support and services
pSeries and AIX Information Center
Developerworks AIX Wiki: AIX Wiki
AIX for System Administrators
In-depth information from IBM:
IBM... (0 Replies)
Not sure if anyone is interested but I am just getting into UNIX like shell scripting...
I have great interest in pseudo-animations in text mode and accessing HW like /dev/dsp for example...
...
Have fun, I do... ;o)
# !/bin/sh
#
# Bargraph_Generator.sh
#
# A DEMO 6 bit coloured... (0 Replies)
For a starter I know the braces are NOT in the code...
Consider these code snippets:-
#!/bin/bash --posix
x=0
somefunction()
if
then
echo "I am here."
fi
# somefunction
#!/bin/bash --posix
x=0
somefunction()
if (2 Replies)
For those interested in installing dash shell on OSX Lion to help test POSIX compliancy of shell scripts, it is quite easy. I did it like this:
If you don't have gcc on your system:
0. Download and install the Command Line Tools for Xcode package from Sign In - Apple *
1. Download the dash... (2 Replies)
Hearing Aid...
Hi folks yet another bizarre piece of code that is Apple OSX 10.12.x to at least 10.14.1 specific.
It requires only a default OSX install, and the internal microphone along with an external headphone assembly.
Pre-amble, 14-02-2019:
For over 3 weeks now I have been suffering a... (3 Replies)
What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file.
# When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it
shopt -s histappend (3 Replies)
Greetings,
I'm trying to delete a file with a weird name from within Terminal on a Mac.
It's a very old file (1992) with null characters in the name: ââWord FinderÂŽ Plusâ˘.
Here are some examples of what I've tried:
12FX009:5 dpontius$ ls
ââWord FinderÂŽ Plusâ˘
12FX009:5 dpontius$ rm... (29 Replies)
I have to print the number of stars that increases on each line from the minimum number until it reaches the maximum number, and then decreases until it goes back to the minimum number. After printing out the lines of stars, it should also print the total number of stars printed.
I have tried... (13 Replies)
Hi all...
Well guys and gals, I jumped in at the deep end and found things that PERL cannot do by default.
Many tricky terminal escape codes are not catered for so I had to create workarounds.
One thing I searched for was this:
Passing perl variable to shell command
AND, @Neo this was... (15 Replies)
Well, guys I saw a question about GOTO for Python.
So this gave me the inspiration to attempt a GOTO function for 'dash', (bash and ksh too).
Machine: MBP OSX 10.14.3, default bash terminal, calling '#!/usr/local/bin/dash'...
This is purely a fun project to see if it is possible in PURE... (3 Replies)
I am sharing a code snippet.
for (( i=0; i<=$(( $count -1 )); i++ ))
do
first=${barr2}
search=${barr1}
echo $first
echo "loop begins"
for (( j=0; j<=5000; j++ ))
do
if } == $search ]]; then
echo $j
break;
fi
done
second=${harr2}
echo $second (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm having a python script: test.py in /path/to/script/test.py
I'm using a properties file: test_properties.py (it is having values as dictionary{}) which is in same DIR as the script.
Sample Properties file:
params = {
'target_db' : 'a1_db'
'src_db' : ... (15 Replies)