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The conventions for file names on ODS-5 disk volumes are more liberal than for those on ODS-2 disks, as outlined in Section 4.6.1, File Naming Conventions: ODS-2 and ODS-5 Comparisons. In addition, to enable compatibility with legacy applications (such as MS-DOS) whose file naming conventions are more restricted than those used by the Advanced Server, Advanced Server for OpenVMS servers, Version 7.3 or later, automatically create alias file names for files whose names do not comply with the file naming standards of those applications. For more information about alias file names, see Section 4.6.2, Support of Alias File Names.
The language configured for the Advanced Server defines the character set and client code page to be used by the server for storing file names on either ODS-2 and ODS-5 volumes. For information about how to configure the server language, refer to the HP Advanced Server for OpenVMS Server Installation and Configuration Guide. Parameters that set up the server language are described in Appendix A, Server Configuration Parameters.
The Advanced Server allows client computers to create, access, or delete any file whose file name characters map to the language currently configured on the server. If the client computer attempts to create, for example, a file whose name includes characters that are not contained in the server's currently configured language, the client computer receives an error message such as the following, where filename.ext is the file name consisting of one or more characters not contained in the current server language:
Cannot copy filename.ext: No mapping for the Unicode character exists in the target multi-byte code page. |
File naming conventions for files stored on the Advanced Server depend on whether the disk volume used for storing files is an ODS-2 disk volume or an ODS-5 disk volume.
The Advanced Server uses the file naming conventions shown in Table 4-11, Advanced Server File-Naming Conventions. For each aspect of file names, the table shows the conventions supported by each type of OpenVMS file system.
Convention | Supported on ODS-2 | Supported on ODS-5 |
---|---|---|
File name length | Up to 78 characters, including the extension (39.39 format). Separate the extension from the name by using a period. 1 | Up to 236 8-bit (Latin-1) characters (or 118 16-bit Unicode characters), including the extension. Separate the extension from the name by using a period. |
File names can contain characters other than (A-Z, a-z, 0-9), dollar sign ($), underscore (_) and hyphen (-). | No | Yes |
File names can contain any of the 8-bit characters of the ISO Latin-1
character set in addition to the alphanumeric characters described in
the preceding row, with the exception of the following characters: C0
control codes (0x00 to 0x1F inclusive)
Double quotation marks (") Asterisk (*) Backslash (\) Colon (:) Left angle bracket (<) Right angle bracket (>) Slash (/) Question mark (?) Vertical bar (|) |
Yes 2 | Yes |
Any OpenVMS system file or directory name that contains excluded characters is neither visible nor accessible by the client. | Yes | Yes |
On-disk character support | Characters that are not alphanumeric characters are stored with escape encoding. For more information, see Section 4.4.3.1, File Name Storage and Handling on ODS-2 Volumes. | All supported characters are stored without encoding. Some ISO Latin-1 characters require an escape character to precede them in a file specification in order to be interpreted as literal characters rather than special function characters. |
Uppercase and lowercase characters are allowed | Yes; however, file names are stored in all uppercase. | Yes: file names are stored in mixed case; however, file name comparisons are not case sensitive. |
Some clients and client applications are more restrictive than the Advanced Server and Windows NT in both the lengths of file names and in the set of valid characters supported for file names. For example, MS-DOS file names are limited to the "8.3" convention: file names can be no longer than eight characters, with a period separating the file name from the file extension, and the file extension can be up to three characters. Obviously, these applications do not take full advantage of the capabilities of the OpenVMS ODS-5 disk volume and longer file names supported on Windows NT, the Advanced Server, and other systems.
To maintain compatibility between MS-DOS clients and Windows NT, and between legacy applications and Windows NT, the Windows NT Server provides an alternate way of accessing files with names that are not compatible with MS-DOS conventions. Windows NT generates MS-DOS-compatible alias names for these files.
Beginning with Version 7.3 of the Advanced Server for OpenVMS, the Advanced Server file server now also creates MS-DOS-compatible alias file names for shared files whose names do not conform to the MS-DOS format. As a result, client applications that must use, or choose to use, the MS-DOS format for file names, can access these shared files on the server by using the file's associated alias name. Clients (depending on their file systems) can use either the real file name or the alias file name to access the file.
Alias file names are usually used by client applications. Users will seldom need to use them. |
An alias file name is also created for any file whose real name
contains any extended character set characters with values of 128
through 255 (hexadecimal 0080 through 00FF). This is done even when the
real filename is MS-DOS-compatible (has the 8.3 format and contains no
characters that are explicitly invalid in MS-DOS file names). The
Advanced Server V7.3B for OpenVMS returns a file's alias name, instead of the real file
name, to an MS-DOS client only if the real name is not
MS-DOS-compatible, or if any extended character set character in the
real name does not map to the client code page. Otherwise, the
Advanced Server returns the file's real name to the MS-DOS client. For
more information about support of extended character sets, see
Section 4.4, Unicode and Extended Character Sets.
4.6.2.1 Advanced Server Alias File Names
The Advanced Server alias file names are functionally equivalent to the alias names generated by the Windows NT Server in that each alias file name:
For generating its alias file names, the Advanced Server uses a different
algorithm than does Windows NT; consequently, the alias file names
generated by the Advanced Server do not resemble alias file names
generated by the Windows NT Server. An Advanced Server alias file name
always includes an eight-character base, and includes an extension of
the same length as the original extension, if any, up to three
characters. The first character and extension of the alias file name
are derived from the real file name and its extension, substituting an
underscore (_) for any such character that is not MS-DOS-compatible.
4.6.2.2 Example Listing Showing Alias File Names
The following example shows an MS-DOS directory listing that includes alias file names generated for MS-DOS compatibility. In this example:
F:\DEMO>dir/x Volume in drive F is USER1 Volume Serial Number is 0000-0001 Directory of F:\DEMO 03/01/00 01:14p <DIR> . 08/31/99 04:14p <DIR> .. 08/31/99 04:30p 16 12345678.123 08/31/99 04:30p 16 14AD1'HA.123 123456789.1234 08/31/99 04:30p 16 L1JKGVAM LONG FILENAME 08/31/99 04:30p 16 E0G(4B%3.PS ESPAÑOL.PS 08/31/99 04:30p 16 X2$'XC`R.1_3 X.1+345678 08/31/99 04:30p 16 _0XY8I@H._ +.+ . . . |
Advanced Server software lets you share printers connected to the network (accessible from the OpenVMS system). You can create an Advanced Server print share for any OpenVMS print queue and assign access permissions to that share. Users can then send print jobs to the queue specified by the share as though they were using a local printer.
The procedures you use to manage shared printers are described in this chapter:
The Advanced Server makes printers available to network users through shared print queues. A print queue stores print jobs as users submit them. When a printer associated with the queue becomes available, the Advanced Server routes a job to that printer.
To share a printer, you add the printer (print queue) to the server's share database. You can use ADMINISTER commands to add a print queue and set it up for sharing. You assign the share name to a queue that points to the printer. Alternatively, you can use Windows NT to add printers and to allow them to be shared.
Because the Advanced Server is based on the OpenVMS operating system, the print queues and the printers that you share can be OpenVMS print queues and printers. However, note that the characters valid for Advanced Server print share or print queue names are not restricted to those supported by OpenVMS queues and printers. Advanced Server print share and print queue names can include Unicode extended characters, for example. For information about restrictions that do apply to print share names containing Unicode extended characters, see Section 5.3.2.7.2, Creating Print Shares With Names That Include Unicode Extended Characters.
This chapter explains how to share printers that are connected to the
network, accessible from the OpenVMS system.
5.1 OpenVMS Print Queues
OpenVMS systems use execution queues and generic queues to provide access to printers as follows:
You can use any of the following methods to create and manage OpenVMS print queues:
Refer to the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual for information about setting up print
queues on OpenVMS systems. For a conceptual discussion of the
differences between managing printers using Advanced Server ADMINISTER
commands and using Windows NT print services, refer to the
HP Advanced Server for OpenVMS Concepts and Planning Guide.
5.1.1 Types of Advanced Server Print Queues
An Advanced Server print queue can be either of the following:
To support the printing needs of your users, plan print queues and
print shares to meet their requirements. You can set up printers as
shared devices, and you can establish constraints on print queues.
5.2.1 Sharing Printers and Print Queues
The way you make printers available to Advanced Server users depends on your server installation and whether you want to share existing OpenVMS print queues or create new ones.
Advanced Server users access the print queue by specifying a print share.
To make a print share operational, a print queue must be established first. To establish both a print queue and a print share, first set up the print queue, then set up the print share.
With the ADMINISTER interface, you create a print share so that users can send print requests to the print share rather than to individual print queues. For access from Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows 2003 clients that will print to a Advanced Server shared print queue, the share name and the queue name must be the same; for other clients, like Windows 3.11, the share and queue name can be different. Multiple print shares can point to the same print queue.
The Advanced Server print queue name (or, from the perspective of Windows NT management, the printer name) is limited to no more than 12 characters. If the OpenVMS print queue name has more than 12 characters, you can define an OpenVMS logical name for the print queue, to translate the queue name. You might use a logical name that is the same as the share name.
For example, the following OpenVMS command defines a logical name GLENDA for the OpenVMS print queue GLENDASPRINTER:
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM GLENDA GLENDASPRINTER |
Then, when you use ADMINISTER commands, you can use the logical name to
specify the print queue when you create a print share for it.
5.3 Managing Printers, Print Shares, and Print Jobs
By default, you manage printers, print shares, and print jobs by using the ADMINISTER command-line interface. You can choose to manage server shared printers remotely from a Windows NT Server or workstation, using the Windows NT print services, including the easy-to-use Windows NT Print Manager dialog boxes.
If you prefer the ADMINISTER command-line interface and the way you have worked with shared printers on the Advanced Server in the past, you can continue using the ADMINISTER command-line interface for print queue management.
If you prefer the advantages that Windows NT printer management offers, then you might consider enabling that style of management when you configure your server. Whichever style you choose, you only have full functionality from the style chosen. Earlier versions of the Advanced Server for OpenVMS have always supported elementary management functions from Windows NT, such as pausing, deleting, and displaying print jobs, and this support is still available on the latest Advanced Server for OpenVMS if you maintain the default of using ADMINISTER commands to manage server printers. Likewise, if you configure the Advanced Server to support Windows NT printer management, you can still use ADMINISTER commands for several minor printer management functions, and you can continue to use all the ADMINISTER commands for managing other objects (users, groups, file shares, and so forth). However, you should not use the following commands:
ADD SHARE/PRINT
REMOVE PRINT QUEUE
SET PRINT QUEUE
The concepts, terminology, and procedures used for managing Advanced Server shared printers differ significantly for each style of management. The management of shared printers with the ADMINISTER command involves creating a print queue (ADD PRINT QUEUE command), defining it as either a printer queue (OpenVMS execution queue) or a routing queue (OpenVMS generic queue), and then creating a share for that queue.
Basic first-step management of shared printers with the ADMINISTER command involves:
With Windows NT-style management, you manage printers, printer ports, print queues, and the associated parameters defined in each printer's OpenVMS Registry entry. You use the Add Printer Wizard to add a printer to the server. The Add Printer Wizard allows you to select such options as whether:
For more understanding about the conceptual and functional differences between ADMINISTER and Windows NT printer management, refer to the HP Advanced Server for OpenVMS Concepts and Planning Guide.
Some of the advantages of using Windows NT-style printer management include the following:
To enable remote management of Advanced Server printers from Windows NT, you must reconfigure the server and change the appropriate configuration setting. For information about enabling remote Windows NT printer management, refer to the HP Advanced Server for OpenVMS Server Installation and Configuration Guide. For information about how to manage Advanced Server printers, print queues, and print shares from Windows NT, see Section 5.3.3, Managing Advanced Server Printers Using Windows NT.
For a list of restrictions that apply when Windows NT printer management is enabled, see Section 5.3.3.5, Windows NT Printer Management Restrictions.
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