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HP OpenVMS DCL Dictionary
DIRECTORY
Provides a list of files or information about a file or group of files.
Requires execute (E) access to look up files you know the names
of, read (R) access to read or list a file or to use a file name with
the asterisk (*) and the percent sign (%) wildcard characters to look
up files.
Format
DIRECTORY [filespec[,...]]
DIRECTORY/FTP directory-spec
Parameter
filespec[,...]
Specifies one or more files to be listed. The syntax of a file
specification determines which files will be listed, as follows:
- If you do not enter a file specification, the DIRECTORY command
lists all versions of the files in the current default directory.
- If you specify only a device name, the DIRECTORY command uses your
default directory specification.
- Whenever the file specification does not include a file name, a
file type, and a version number, all versions of all files in the
specified directory are listed.
- If a file specification contains a file name or a file type, or
both, and no version number, the DIRECTORY command lists all versions.
- If a file specification contains only a file name, the DIRECTORY
command lists all files in the current default directory with that file
name, regardless of file type and version number.
- If a file specification contains only a file type, the DIRECTORY
command lists all files in the current default directory with that file
type, regardless of file name and version number.
The asterisk (*) and the percent sign (%) wildcard characters can be
used in the directory specification, file name, file type, or version
number fields of a file specification to list all files that satisfy
the components you specify. If you specify more than one file, separate
the file specifications with either commas (,) or plus signs (+).
directory-spec
Specifies the standard DECnet remote file specification. Use a quoted
file string to preserve the case (for case sensitive systems such as
UNIX) and to identify a foreign device/directory specification. See the
/FTP qualifier for more information.
Description
The DIRECTORY command lists the files contained in a directory. When
you use certain qualifiers with the command, additional information is
displayed, along with the names of the files.
The output of the DIRECTORY command depends on certain formatting
qualifiers and their defaults. These qualifiers are as follows:
/COLUMNS, /DATE, /FULL, /OWNER, /PROTECTION, and /SIZE. However, the
files are always listed in alphabetical order, with the highest
numbered versions listed first.
In studying the qualifiers and the capabilities they offer, watch for
qualifiers that work together and for qualifiers that override other
qualifiers. For example, if you specify the /FULL qualifier, the system
cannot display all the information in more than one column. Thus, if
you specify both the /COLUMNS and /FULL qualifiers, the number of
columns you request is ignored.
You can also select other languages and formats that have been defined
on your systems with international date and time formatting routines
available in the run-time library. See the HP OpenVMS RTL Library (LIB$) Manual.
Qualifiers
/ACL
Controls whether the access control list (ACL) is displayed for each
file. By default, the DIRECTORY command does not display the ACL for
each file. Access control entries (ACEs) that were created with the
hidden option are displayed only if the SECURITY privilege is turned
on. The /ACL qualifier overrides the /COLUMNS qualifier.
For further information, see the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security.
/BACKUP
Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE
qualifier. The /BACKUP qualifier selects files according to the dates
of their most recent backups. This qualifier is incompatible with the
/CREATED, /EXPIRED, and /MODIFIED qualifiers, which also allow you to
select files according to time attributes. If you specify none of these
four time qualifiers, the default is the /CREATED qualifier.
/BEFORE[=time]
Selects only those files dated prior to the specified time. You can
specify time as an absolute time, as a combination of absolute and
delta times, or as one of the following keywords: BOOT, LOGIN, TODAY
(default), TOMORROW, or YESTERDAY. Specify one of the following
qualifiers with the /BEFORE qualifier to indicate the time attribute to
be used as the basis for selection: /BACKUP, /CREATED (default),
/EXPIRED, or /MODIFIED.
For complete information on specifying time values, see the
OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.
/BRIEF (default)
Displays only a file's name, type, and version number. The brief format
lists the files in alphabetical order from left to right on each line,
in descending version number order. You can use the /ACL, /DATE,
/FILE_ID, /FULL, /NOHEADING, /OWNER, /PROTECTION, /SECURITY, and /SIZE
qualifiers to expand a brief display.
/BY_OWNER[=uic]
Selects only those files whose owner user identification code (UIC)
matches the specified owner UIC. The default UIC is that of the current
process.
Specify the UIC by using standard UIC format as described in the
OpenVMS User's Manual.
For further information, see the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security.
/CACHING_ATTRIBUTE
Displays the caching attributes of the selected files.
/COLUMNS=n
Specifies the number of columns in a brief display. The default is
four; however, you can request as many columns as you like, restricted
by the value of the /WIDTH qualifier. The /COLUMNS qualifier is
incompatible with the /ACL, /FULL, and /SECURITY qualifiers.
The number of columns actually displayed depends on the amount of
information requested for each column and the display value of the
/WIDTH qualifier. The system displays only as many columns as can fit
within the default or specified display width, regardless of how many
columns you specify with the /COLUMNS qualifier.
The DIRECTORY command truncates long file names only when you specify
more than one column and you have asked for additional information to
be included in each column. The default file name size is 19
characters. Use the /WIDTH qualifier to change the default. When a file
name is truncated, the system displays one less character than the file
name field size and inserts a vertical bar in the last position. For
example, if the file name is SHOW_QUEUE_CHARACTERISTICS, and if you
requested DIRECTORY to display both file name and size in each column,
the display for that file would be SHOW_QUEUE_CHARACT| 120.
/CREATED (default)
Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE
qualifier. The /CREATED qualifier selects files based on their dates of
creation. This qualifier is incompatible with the /BACKUP, /EXPIRED,
and /MODIFIED qualifiers, which also allow you to select files
according to time attributes. If you specify none of these four time
qualifiers, the default is the /CREATED qualifier.
/DATE[=option]
/NODATE (default)
Includes the creation, last modification, expiration, backup,
effective, or recording date for each specified file; the default is
the /NODATE qualifier. If you use the /DATE qualifier without an
option, the creation date is provided. Possible options are as follows:
Option |
Description |
ACCESSED
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Specifies the last access date.
See the Guide to OpenVMS File Applications for additional information.
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ALL
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Specifies all optional dates in the following order: creation, last
modification, expiration, backup, effective, and recording.
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ATTRIBUTES
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Specifies the last attribute modification date.
See the Guide to OpenVMS File Applications for additional information.
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BACKUP
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Specifies the last backup date.
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CREATED
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Specifies the creation date.
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DATA_MODIFIED
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Specifies the last data modification date.
See the Guide to OpenVMS File Applications for additional information.
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EFFECTIVE
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Specifies the effective date the contents are valid (ISO 9660).
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EXPIRED
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Specifies the expiration date.
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MODIFIED
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Specifies the last modification date.
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RECORDING
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Specifies the recording date on the media (ISO 9660).
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/EXACT
Use with the /PAGE=SAVE and /SEARCH qualifiers to specify a search
string that must match the search string exactly and must be enclosed
with quotation marks (" ").
If you specify the /EXACT qualifier without the /SEARCH qualifier,
exact search mode is enabled when you set the search string with the
Find (E1) key.
/EXCLUDE=(filespec[,...])
Excludes the specified files from the DIRECTORY command. You can
include a directory but not a device in the file specification.
The asterisk (*) and the percent sign (%) wildcard characters are
allowed in the file specification; however, you cannot use relative
version numbers to exclude a specific version.
If you specify only one file, you can omit the parentheses.
/EXPIRED
Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE
qualifier. The /EXPIRED qualifier selects files according to their
expiration dates. (The expiration date is set with the SET
FILE/EXPIRATION_DATE command.)
The /EXPIRED qualifier is incompatible with the /BACKUP, /CREATED, and
/MODIFIED qualifiers, which also allow you to select files according to
time attributes. If you specify none of these four time qualifiers, the
default is the /CREATED qualifier.
/FILE_ID
Controls whether the file identification (FID) number is displayed. By
default, the FID is not displayed unless the /FULL qualifier is
specified.
/FTP
Invokes the directory (dir or ls) operation of the
FTP utility. The DIRECTORY/FTP command writes a listing of the contents
of the specified remote directory to the local host over a TCP/IP
connection by invoking the FTP utility.
The format is:
$ DIR/FTP nodename"username password"::directory_pathname
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If the directory path name is omitted, the contents of the user's home
directory are displayed. If only the node name is entered, the contents
of the ANONYMOUS directory are displayed.
/FULL
Displays the following information for each file:
File name
File type
Version number
File identification number (FID)
Number of blocks used
Number of blocks allocated
File owner's user identification code (UIC)
Date of creation
Date last modified and revision number
Date of expiration
Date of last backup
Date of effective usage
Date of recording on media
File organization
Shelved state
Caching attribute
File attributes
Record format
Record attributes
RMS attributes
Journaling information
File protection
Access control list (ACL)
Client attribute
Value of the stored semantics tag (where applicable)
/GRAND_TOTAL
Displays only the totals for all files and directories that have been
specified. Suppresses both the per-directory total and individual file
information. (See the /TRAILING qualifier for information on displaying
directory totals.)
/HEADING
/NOHEADING
Controls whether heading lines consisting of a device description and
directory specification are printed. The default output format provides
this heading. When the /NOHEADING qualifier is specified, the display
is in single-column format and the device and directory information
appears with each file name. The /NOHEADING qualifier overrides the
/COLUMNS qualifier.
The combination of the /NOHEADING and /NOTRAILING qualifiers is useful
in command procedures where you want to create a list of complete file
specifications for later operations.
/HIGHLIGHT[=keyword]
Use with the /PAGE=SAVE and /SEARCH qualifiers to specify the type of
highlighting you want when a search string is found. When a string is
found, the entire line is highlighted. You can use the following
keywords: BOLD, BLINK, REVERSE, and UNDERLINE. BOLD is the default
highlighting.
/MODIFIED
Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE
qualifier. The /MODIFIED qualifier selects files according to the dates
on which they were last modified.
This qualifier is incompatible with the /BACKUP, /CREATED, and /EXPIRED
qualifiers, which also allow you to select files according to time
attributes. If you specify none of these four time modifiers, the
default is the /CREATED qualifier.
/OUTPUT[=filespec]
/NOOUTPUT
Controls where the output of the command is sent. By default, the
display is written to the current SYS$OUTPUT device. The asterisk (*)
and the percent sign (%) wildcard characters are not allowed.
If you enter the /OUTPUT qualifier with a partial file specification
(for example, /OUTPUT=[KIER]), DIRECTORY is the default file name and
.LIS the default file type. If you enter the /NOOUTPUT qualifier,
output is suppressed.
If the output will be written to a file in the same directory, the
output file name will appear in the directory listing.
/OWNER
/NOOWNER (default)
Controls whether the file owner's user identification code (UIC) is
listed.
The default size of the owner field is 20 characters. If the file
owner's UIC exceeds the length of the owner field, the information will
be truncated. The size of this field can be altered by specifying
/WIDTH=OWNER, along with a value for the owner field. For more
information, see the description of the /WIDTH qualifier.
/PAGE[=keyword]
/NOPAGE (default)
Controls the display of directory information on the screen.
You can use the following keywords with the /PAGE qualifier:
CLEAR_SCREEN
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Clears the screen before each page is displayed.
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SCROLL
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Displays information one line at a time.
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SAVE[=
n]
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Enables screen navigation of information, where
n is the number of pages to store.
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The /PAGE=SAVE qualifier allows you to navigate through screens of
information. The /PAGE=SAVE qualifier stores up to 5 screens of up to
255 columns of information. When you use the /PAGE=SAVE qualifier, you
can use the following keys to navigate through the information:
Key Sequence |
Description |
Up arrow key, Ctrl/B
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Scroll up one line.
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Down arrow key
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Scroll down one line.
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Left arrow key
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Scroll left one column.
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Right arrow key
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Scroll right one column.
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Find (E1)
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Specify a string to find when the information is displayed.
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Insert Here (E2)
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Scroll right one half screen.
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Remove (E3)
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Scroll left one half screen.
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Select (E4)
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Toggle 80/132 column mode.
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Prev Screen (E5)
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Get the previous page of information.
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Next Screen (E6), Return, Enter, Space
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Get the next page of information.
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F10, Ctrl/Z
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Exit. (Some utilities define these differently.)
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Help (F15)
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Display utility help text.
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Do (F16)
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Toggle the display to oldest/newest page.
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Ctrl/W
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Refresh the display.
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The /PAGE qualifier is not compatible with the /OUTPUT qualifier.
/PRINTER
Puts the display in a file and queues the file to SYS$PRINT for
printing under the name given by the /OUTPUT qualifier. If you do not
specify the /OUTPUT qualifier, output is directed to a temporary file
named DIRECTORY.LIS, which is queued for printing and then is deleted.
/PROTECTION
/NOPROTECTION (default)
Controls whether the file protection for each file is listed.
/SEARCH="string"
Use with the /PAGE=SAVE qualifier to specify a string that you want to
find in the information being displayed. Quotation marks are required
for the /SEARCH qualifier, if you include spaces in the text string.
You can also dynamically change the search string by pressing the Find
key (E1) while the information is being displayed. Quotation marks are
not required for a dynamic search.
/SECURITY
Controls whether information about file security is displayed; using
the /SECURITY qualifier is equivalent to using the /ACL, /OWNER, and
/PROTECTION qualifiers together. ACEs that were created with the hidden
option are displayed only if the SECURITY privilege is turned on.
For further information, See the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security.
/SELECT=(keyword[,...])
Allows you to select files for display. Choose one of the following
keywords:
ACL
NOACL
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Displays files that have an associated ACL or files that do not (NOACL
keyword).
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CACHING_ATTRIBUTE=(option[,...])
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Displays files that have the specified caching attribute. Possible
options are:
NO_CACHING
WRITETHROUGH
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FILE=(option[,...])
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Displays portions of the file specification. The /SELECT=FILE qualifier
is used to turn off specific portions by explicit or implicit
specification of the options. Possible options are:
[NO]NODE
[NO]DEVICE
[NO]DIRECTORY
[NO]NAME
[NO]TYPE
[NO]VERSION
/SELECT=FILE qualifier cannot be used with the /FULL qualifier.
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ONLINE
NOONLINE
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Displays files that are online or shelved.
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PRESHELVED
NOPRESHELVED
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Displays files that are preshelved or not preshelved.
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SHELVABLE
NOSHELVABLE
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Displays files that are shelvable or not shelvable.
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SIZE=(option[,...])
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Displays files according to their size. Possible options are:
Option |
Description |
MAXIMUM=
n
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Displays files that have fewer blocks than the value of
n, which defaults to 1,073,741,823. Use with MINIMUM=n to
specify a size range for files to be displayed.
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MINIMUM=
n
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Displays files that have blocks equal to or greater than the value of
n. Use with MAXIMUM=n to specify a size range for files to be
displayed.
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(MINIMUM=
n,
MAXIMUM=
n)
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Displays files whose block size falls within the specified MINIMUM and
MAXIMUM range.
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UNUSED[=n]
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Displays a file only if the difference between the used portion of a
file and the allocated size of a file exceeds the disk's cluster size.
If a value is specified, any file with unused space exceeding that
value is displayed.
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VERSION=(option[,option]) (Alpha/Integrity servers Only)
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Displays all files with version numbers that fall within the range
specified by one or both of the following options:
MINIMUM=number
MAXIMUM=number
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/SHELVED_STATE
Displays whether the file is shelved, preshelved, or online.
/SINCE[=time]
Selects only those files dated on or after the specified time. You can
specify time as an absolute time, as a combination of absolute and
delta times, or as one of the following keywords: BOOT, JOB_LOGIN,
LOGIN, TODAY (default), TOMORROW, or YESTERDAY. Specify one of the
following qualifiers with the /SINCE qualifier to indicate the time
attribute to be used as the basis for selection: /BACKUP, /CREATED
(default), /EXPIRED, or /MODIFIED.
For complete information on specifying time values, See the
OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.
/SIZE[=option]
/NOSIZE (default)
Displays the size in blocks of each file. If you omit the option
parameter, the default lists the file size in blocks used (USED).
Specify one of the following options:
ALL
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Lists the file size both in blocks allocated and blocks used.
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ALLOCATION
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Lists the file size in blocks allocated.
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UNITS[=option]
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Allows you to override the current default specified by SET
PROCESS/UNITS so that you can display file size in your choice of
blocks or bytes.
The following keywords are valid options with the UNITS keyword:
BLOCKS, BYTES.
If you specify UNITS with no option, the default value is not
changed.
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USED
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Lists the file size in blocks used.
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The size of this field can be altered by supplying the size value of
the /WIDTH qualifier.
/STYLE=keyword[,keyword]
Specifies the file name format for display purposes while displaying
directory contents.
The valid keywords for this qualifier are CONDENSED and EXPANDED.
Descriptions are as follows:
Keyword |
Explanation |
CONDENSED (default)
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Displays the file name representation of what is generated to fit into
a 255-length character string. This file name may contain a DID or FID
abbreviation in the file specification.
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EXPANDED
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Displays the file name representation of what is stored on disk. This
file name does not contain any DID or FID abbreviations.
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If both CONDENSED and EXPANDED keywords are specified, then the file
specifications are displayed in two columns. The column size is
dependent on the display width, and the file names wrap within their
respective columns.
File errors are displayed with the CONDENSED file specification unless
the EXPANDED keyword is specified.
See the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual, Volume 1: Essentials for more information.
/SYMLINK=keyword(default)
/NOSYMLINK
If an input-file specification parameter is a symbolic link, the
displayed file attributes are those of the symbolic link itself. If any
file attribute is requested, then the contents of the symbolic link are
also displayed, with an arrow appearing between the file name and the
contents (for example, LINK.TXT -> FILE.TXT).
The /NOSYMLINK qualifier indicates that if an input file specification
is a symbolic link, then the file attributes of the file to which the
symbolic link refers are displayed; the displayed name is still the
name of the symbolic link itself.
The valid keywords for this qualifier are [NO]WILDCARD, [NO]ELLIPSIS,
and [NO]TARGET. Descriptions are as follows:
Keyword |
Explanation |
WILDCARD
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Indicates that symlinks are enabled during wildcard searches.
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NOWILDCARD
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Indicates that symlinks are disabled during directory wildcard searches.
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ELLIPSIS
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Equivalent to WILDCARD (included for command symmetry).
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NOELLIPSIS
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Indicates that symlinks are matched for all wildcard fields except for
ellipsis.
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TARGET
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Indicates that if the target file of the file specification is a
symlink, then the target file is followed.
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NOTARGET
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Indicates that the command operates on the target file even if it is a
symlink.
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If the file named in the DIRECTORY command is a symlink, the command by
default operates on the symlink itself.
/TIME[=option]
/NOTIME (default)
The same as the /DATE qualifier: includes the backup, creation,
expiration, or modification time for each specified file; the default
is the /NOTIME qualifier. If you use the /TIME qualifier without an
option, the creation time is provided. Possible options are as follows:
Option |
Description |
ALL
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Specifies creation, expiration, backup, and last modification times.
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BACKUP
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Specifies the last backup time.
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CREATED
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Specifies the creation time.
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EFFECTIVE
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Specifies the effective time the contents are valid.
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EXPIRED
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Specifies the expiration time.
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MODIFIED
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Specifies the last modification time.
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RECORDING
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Specifies the recording time on the media.
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/TOTAL
Displays only the directory name and total number of files.
By default, the output format is determined by the /BRIEF qualifier,
which gives this total but also lists all the file names, file types,
and their version numbers.
/TRAILING
/NOTRAILING
Controls whether trailing lines that provide the following summary
information are displayed:
- Number of files listed
- Total number of blocks used per directory
- Total number of blocks allocated
- Total number of directories and total blocks used or allocated in
all directories (only if more than one directory is listed)
By default, the output format includes most of this summary
information. The /SIZE and /FULL qualifiers determine more precisely
what summary information is included.
When used alone, the /TRAILING qualifier lists the number of files in
the directory. When used with the /SIZE qualifier, the /TRAILING
qualifier lists the number of files and the number of blocks (displayed
according to the option of the /SIZE qualifier, FULL or ALLOCATION).
When used with the /FULL qualifier, the /TRAILING qualifier lists the
number of files as well as the number of blocks used and allocated. If
more than one directory is listed, the summary includes the total
number of directories, the total number of blocks used, and the total
number of blocks allocated.
/VERSIONS=n
Specifies the number of versions of a file to be listed. The default is
all versions of each file. A value less than 1 is not allowed.
/WIDTH=(keyword[,...])
Formats the width of the display. If you specify only one keyword, you
can omit the parentheses. Possible keywords are as follows:
DISPLAY=
n
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Specifies the total width of the display as an integer in the range 1
to 256 and defaults to zero (setting the display width to the terminal
width). If the total width of the display exceeds the terminal width,
the information will be truncated.
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FILENAME=
n
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Specifies the width of the file name field; defaults to 19 characters.
If you request another piece of information to be displayed along with
the file name in each column, file names that exceed the
n parameter cause the line to wrap after the file name field.
(See the /COLUMNS qualifier.)
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OWNER=
n
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Specifies the width of the owner field; defaults to 20 characters. If
the owner's user identification code (UIC) exceeds the length of the
owner field, the information will be truncated.
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SIZE=
n
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Specifies the width of the size field; defaults to 6 characters on
systems prior to OpenVMS Version 6.0; the default is 7 characters on
OpenVMS Version 6.0 systems or higher. If the file size exceeds the
length of the size field, the field is filled with asterisks.
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/WRAP
/NOWRAP (default)
Use with the /PAGE=SAVE qualifier to limit the number of columns to the
width of the screen and to wrap lines that extend beyond the width of
the screen to the next line.
The /NOWRAP qualifier extends lines beyond the width of the screen and
can be seen when you use the scrolling (left and right) features
provided by the /PAGE=SAVE qualifier.
Examples
#1 |
$ DIRECTORY AVERAGE.*
Directory DISK$DOCUMENT:[SOUDER]
AVERAGE.EXE;6 AVERAGE.FOR;6 AVERAGE.LIS;4 AVERAGE.OBJ;12
Total of 4 files.
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In this example, the DIRECTORY command lists all files with the file
name AVERAGE and any file type.
#2 |
$ DIRECTORY/SIZE=USED/DATE=CREATED/VERSIONS=1/PROTECTION AVERAGE
Directory DISK$DOCUMENT:[SLOUGH]
AVERAGE.EXE;6 6 19-DEC-2001 15:43:02.10 (RE,RE,RWED,RE)
AVERAGE.FOR;6 2 19-DEC-2001 10:29:53.37 (RE,RE,RWED,RE)
AVERAGE.LIS;4 5 19-DEC-2001 16:27:27.19 (RE,RE,RWED,RE)
AVERAGE.OBJ;6 2 19-DEC-2001 16:27:44.23 (RE,RE,RWED,RE)
Total of 4 files, 15 blocks.
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In this example, the DIRECTORY command lists the number of blocks used,
the creation date, and the file protection code for the highest version
number of all files named AVERAGE in the current directory.
#3 |
$ DIRECTORY/FULL DISK$GRIPS_2:[VMS.TV]DEMO.EXE
Directory DISK$GRIPS_2:[VMS.TV]
DEMO.EXE;1 File ID: (36,11,0)
Size: 390/390 Owner: [0,0]
Created: 12-NOV-2001 11:45:19.00
Revised: 14-DEC-2001 15:45:19.00 (34)
Expires: <None specified>
Backup: 28-NOV-2001 04:00:12.22
Effective: <None specified>
Recording: <None specified>
File organization: Sequential
Shelved state: Online
Caching attribute: Writethrough
File attributes: Allocation: 390, Extend: 0, Global buffer count: 0,
Version limit: 0, Backups disabled, Not shelvable
Record format: Fixed length 512 byte records
Record attributes: None
RMS attributes: None
Journaling enabled: None
File protection: System:RE, Owner:RE, Group:RE, World:RE
Access Cntrl List: None
Client attributes: None
Total of 1 file, 390/390 blocks.
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The example illustrates the DIRECTORY/FULL command.
#4 |
$ DIRECTORY/VERSIONS=1/COLUMNS=1 AVERAGE.*
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The DIRECTORY command in this example lists only the highest version of
each file named AVERAGE in the current default directory. The format is
brief and restricted to one column. Heading and trailing lines are
provided.
The DIRECTORY command in this example locates all versions and types of
files in the default device and directory whose names begin with the
letters BLOCK and end with any three additional characters. The default
output format is brief, four columns, with heading and trailing lines.
#6 |
$ DIRECTORY/EXCLUDE=(AVER.DAT;*,AVER.EXE;*) [*...]AVER
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The DIRECTORY command in this example lists and totals all versions and
types of files named AVER in all directories and subdirectories on the
default disk, except any files named AVER.DAT and AVER.EXE.
#7 |
$ DIRECTORY/SIZE=ALL FRESNO::DISK1:[TAMBA]*.COM
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The DIRECTORY command in this example lists all versions of all files
with the file type COM in the directory TAMBA on node FRESNO and device
DISK1. The listing includes the file size both in blocks used and in
blocks allocated for each file.
#8 |
$ DIRECTORY-
_$ /MODIFIED/SINCE=14-DEC-2001:01:30/SIZE=ALL/OWNER-
_$ /PROTECTION/OUTPUT=UPDATE/PRINTER [A*]
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The DIRECTORY command in this example locates all files that have been
modified since 1:30 a.m. on December 14, 2001, and that reside on the
default disk in all directories whose names begin with the letter A. It
formats the output to include all versions, the size used and size
allocated, the date last modified, the owner, and the protection codes.
The output is directed to a file named UPDATE.LIS, which is queued
automatically to the default printer queue and then is deleted.
#9 |
$ DIRECTORY/SHELVED_STATE
Directory MYDISK:[THOMPSON]
MYFILE.TXT;2 Online
NOT_SHELVED.TXT;1 Online
SHELVED.TXT Shelved
Total of 3 files.
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The DIRECTORY command in this example lists all the files in a
directory and shows whether a file is shelved, preshelved, online, or
remote.
#10 |
$ DIRECTORY *.PS
Directory MYDISK:[TEST]
REPORT.PS;1 1197
Total of 1 file, 1197 blocks.
$ DIRECTORY/SIZE=UNITS=BYTES *.PS
Directory $1$DKC600:[TEST]
REPORT.PS;1 598KB
Total of 1 file, 598KB
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By default, the first DIRECTORY command displays the file size in
blocks. The second DIRECTORY command specifies that the file size be
displayed in bytes.
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