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Debugging $qio I/O output?

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The Question is:

 
I have inherited an in-house application that uses sys$qiow to dump serial data
 down to a printer from a VAX COBOL program.  The printers are being replaced,
 and the new printers were detecting unknown characters in the text string.
 Using a serial data a
nalyzer, I could see that the characters were a carriage return and line feed,
 inserted randomly through my text string.  However, about 50% of the time the
 text comes down to the printer clean.  I do an on-screen display of the text
 string right before t
he qio call, so I know that it is ok going into the qio.  My question:  Have
 you heard of a sys$qiow inserting a CR/LF before, and is there a way of
 preventing it?
 
The client is pushing hard for this to be resolved.  I would appreciate any
 help you could give me quickly.
 
Thanks
Steve Browning
 


The Answer is :

 
  Rather than using a datascope, the OpenVMS Wizard would monitor what
  was passed into the $qio call, and what is different between the case(s)
  that work and the case(s) that fail.  $qio is a low-level raw I/O call,
  and only performs the formatting that is explicitly requested, either
  by formatting that is directly embedded in the data written via the
  $qio call, or by explict specification of the terminal driver carriage
  forms control mechanisms in the $qio call.
 
  $qio is the interface into OpenVMS device drivers, and it underlies the
  vast majority of OpenVMS I/O operations.  Any prevelent or any common
  problem with the $qio call itself would thus tend to appear in a wide
  variety of areas and a wide variety of components.  While this does not
  rule out bugs in $qio, the first assumption would be bugs in the
  application code or in another part of the I/O configuration -- in
  the site-specific I/O configuration, in (for the largest I/O buffer
  permitted) the setting of the system parameter MAXBUF, in the device
  driver or device-specific configration, etc.
 
  In particular, you will want to determine the difference -- the input
  data file contents, the record lengths, the target device, the printer
  settings, the terminal server port characteristcs, IP vs LAT, terminal
  port settings, etc -- between the fifty percent of the calls that
  reportedly succeed and the fifty percent of the calls that reportedly
  fail.  If, for instance, the specific terminal line is set up to wrap
  the output based on the width of the terminal (or printer), you will
  the terminal driver -- though not $qio -- insert a carriage return
  and line feed as required to manage the width.
 
  For some of the more typical programming errors that the OpenVMS Wizard
  is familiar with, please see topic (1661).
 
  Use of $sndjbc, a print queue, and a (temporary) file may provide an
  alternative approach to the $qio to the printer device.
 

answer written or last revised on ( 7-SEP-2001 )

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