HP T6553 D45 Reference Manual page 156

File utility program
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FUP Commands
security were removed. For more information, see the Safeguard Reference
Manual.
14. SECONDARY PARTITION indicates the file is a secondary partition of an Enscribe
file.
15. Lists dates and times of file activity. DATA MODIF indicates when the data in the
file was last modified and one of the open states (if applicable). CREATION DATE
indicates when the file was created. REDEFINITION TIME indicates when a
change to the SQL table or index caused an SQL object program to be recompiled.
LAST OPEN indicates when the file was last open.
The modification date can be older than the file-creation date if the file was created
by duplicating it with the FUP DUP command (with the SAVEALL or
SOURCEDATE option).
The open states are:
BLANK
BROKEN
CORRUPT
DEFINITION
INVALID
LABEL
QUESTIONABLE
OPEN
QUESTIONABLE
REDO NEEDED
UNDO NEEDED
Note. For more information about media recovery, see the TMF Operations and Recovery
Guide.
16. For unstructured files, EOF is the end-of-file pointer containing the relative byte
address of the byte—following the last significant data byte.
For structured files, EOF is the relative byte address of the first byte of the next
available block.
If all extents were allocated, the percent-used parameter is the amount of
available file space currently used based on available space.
The file is not open, failed, or broken.
The file is open but received an I/O or consistency check failure
and needs media recovery.
The file is corrupt. (The contents of the file are in question.) DUP
and LOAD mark the destination files as corrupt while these
operations are being performed. If the operation does not complete
normally, the file is marked corrupt and should be purged.
The data or definition of the object is invalid.
The file is in crash-label state. This state applies only to SQL
views. A file is in the crash-label state if a file label operation was
taking place at the time of a total system failure or if the disk on
which it is located becomes unavailable.
The file is open, or a TMF transaction is active on the file.
The file is in crash-open state. Either the file was open when a total
system failure occurred, or the volume where the file resides
became unavailable while the file was open.
The file cannot be opened, and media recovery (redo) is needed.
The file cannot be opened, and media recovery (undo) is needed.
File Utility Program (FUP) Reference Manual—523323-014
2-104
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