/AFTER=time
/NOAFTER
Requests that the specified job be held until after a specific time. If
the specified time has already passed, the job is scheduled for
processing.
You can specify either absolute time or a combination of absolute and
delta times. For complete information on specifying time values, refer
to the OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.
Note
Releasing or rescheduling a job before its submission time is not
supported for security reasons. Therefore, if you set the system time
to a future time and submit a job on a node where the queue manager is
running, you cannot release or reschedule that job back to the present
time if you reset the system time.
For example, you can set the system time to a future time of January 1,
2020 and submit a job to run on January 9, 2020; however, if you set
the system time back to the present time and try to release the job to
the present time, the job will be released to January 1, 2020.
This situation impacts the following qualifiers: /AFTER, /NOHOLD, and
/RELEASE.
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To specify /AFTER for a job on hold, you must also specify /NOHOLD in
order to cause the job to be held only until the specified time. Jobs
can be released before the specified time by using the /NOAFTER or
/RELEASE qualifier with the SET ENTRY command.
/BURST
/NOBURST
Controls whether two file flag pages with a burst bar between them are
printed preceding each file in a job.
Use the /[NO]BURST qualifier to override the /DEFAULT qualifier options
that have been set for the output queue you are using. The /[NO]BURST
qualifier does not override the /SEPARATE qualifier options set for the
queue.
When you specify the /BURST qualifier for a file, the /[NO]FLAG
qualifier does not add or subtract a flag page from the two flag pages
that are printed preceding a file.
/CHARACTERISTICS=(characteristic[,...])
/NOCHARACTERISTICS
Specifies the name or number of one or more characteristics to be
associated with the job. Characteristics can refer to such things as
color of ink. If you specify only one characteristic, you can omit the
parentheses.
A characteristic's number must range from 0 to 127. To see which
characteristics have been defined for your system, use the SHOW
QUEUE/CHARACTERISTICS command. To see which characteristics are
associated with a particular queue, use the SHOW QUEUE/FULL command.
A print job can be processed on an execution queue if none, some, or
all of the characteristics associated with the queue also are
associated with the job. That is, the job's characteristics must be a
subset of the queue's characteristics. However, if any of the
characteristics associated with the job are not associated with the
queue, the job remains pending until one or more of the following
occurs:
- The characteristics specified with the queue are changed to make
the job's characteristics a subset of the queue's characteristics
(using, for example, the SET QUEUE/CHARACTERISTICS command).
- The characteristics specified with the job are changed to make the
job's characteristics a subset of the queue's characteristics (using,
for example, the SET ENTRY/CHARACTERISTICS command).
- The job is moved to a queue on which all the job's characteristics
have been specified (using, for example, the SET ENTRY/REQUEUE command).
- The job is deleted (using, for example, the DELETE/ENTRY command).
/CLI=filename
Specifies the name of a command language interpreter (CLI) to use in
processing the batch job. The file name specifies that the CLI be
SYS$SYSTEM:filename.EXE. If you do not specify the /CLI qualifier, the
job is run by the CLI specified in the user authorization file (UAF),
or whatever CLI was specified when the job was originally submitted to
the queue.
/COPIES=n
Specifies the number of copies to print. The value of n can be
any number from 1 to 255. When you use the /COPIES qualifier with the
SET ENTRY command, the number of copies can apply only to the entire
print job. You cannot use this qualifier to specify different numbers
of copies for individual files within a multifile job.
/CPUTIME=time
Specifies a CPU time limit for the batch job. You can specify the
time parameter as delta time, the value 0, INFINITE, or NONE.
If the queue on which the job executes has a defined CPUMAXIMUM value,
the smaller of the specified job and queue values is used. If the queue
on which the job executes does not have a specified maximum CPU time
limit, the smaller of the SUBMIT command and user authorization file
(UAF) values is used. If the queue on which the job executes does not
have a specified maximum CPU time limit and the UAF has a specified CPU
time limit of NONE, either the value 0 or the keyword INFINITE allows
unlimited CPU time. If you specify NONE, the specified queue or UAF
value is used. CPU time values must be greater than or equal to the
number specified by the system parameter PQL_MCPULM.
For more information on specifying CPU time limits, see the CPU Time
Limit Specifications and Actions table for the INITIALIZE/QUEUE
command. For information on specifying time values, refer to the
OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.
/FEED
/NOFEED
Controls whether form feeds are inserted into the print job when the
printer reaches the bottom margin of the form in use. You can suppress
this automatic form feed (without affecting any of the other carriage
control functions that are in place) by using the /NOFEED qualifier.
When you use the /FEED qualifier with the SET ENTRY command, the
qualifier applies to all files in the print job. You cannot use this
qualifier to specify form feeds for individual files within a multifile
job.
/FLAG
/NOFLAG
Controls whether a flag page is printed preceding each file in a print
job. The flag page contains the name of the user submitting the job,
the job entry number, and other information about the file being
printed.
Use the /[NO]FLAG qualifier to override the installation-defined
defaults that have been set for the output queue you are using or to
override the qualifier specified in the PRINT command that queued the
job.
/FORM=form
Specifies the name or number of the form to be associated with the
print job. If you omit the /FORM qualifier, the default form for the
execution queue is associated with the job.
Forms have attributes such as print image width and length or paper
stock, which the print symbiont associates with a job when the job is
processed. To see which forms have been defined for your system, use
the SHOW QUEUE/FORM command. To find out which form is mounted
currently on a particular queue and which form is specified as that
queue's default form, use the SHOW QUEUE/FULL command.
The stock of the form associated with the job must match the stock of
the form mounted on the execution queue on which you want the job to be
processed. If the stocks do not match, the job remains pending until
one or more of the following occurs:
- A form with the same stock as the job's form is mounted on the
queue (using, for example, the SET QUEUE/FORM_MOUNTED command).
- A form with the same stock as the queue's mounted form is specified
with the job (using, for example, the SET ENTRY/FORM command).
- The job is moved to a queue on which the stock of the mounted form
matches the stock of the job's form (using, for example, the SET
ENTRY/REQUEUE command).
- The job is deleted (using, for example, the DELETE/ENTRY command).
/HEADER
/NOHEADER
Controls whether a heading line is printed at the top of each output
page in a print job.
/HOLD
/NOHOLD
Controls whether the job is to be made available for processing or held
for processing later. If you specify the /HOLD qualifier, the job is
not released for processing until you enter SET ENTRY/NOHOLD or SET
ENTRY/RELEASE.
You can use the /NOHOLD qualifier to release jobs that have been held
for the following reasons:
- A job was submitted with the /HOLD qualifier.
- A completed job is being retained in a queue.
- A user-written symbiont has refused a job.
Note
Releasing or rescheduling a job before its submission time is not
supported for security reasons. Therefore, if you set the system time
to a future time and submit a job on a node where the queue manager is
running, you cannot release or reschedule that job back to the present
time if you reset the system time.
For example, you can set the system time to a future time of January 1,
2020 and submit a job to run on January 9, 2020; however, if you set
the system time back to the present time and try to release the job to
the present time, the job will be released to January 1, 2020.
This situation impacts the following qualifiers: /AFTER, /NOHOLD, and
/RELEASE.
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/JOB_COUNT=n
Requests that an entire print job be printed n times, where n
is a decimal integer from 1 to 255. This qualifier overrides the
/JOB_COUNT qualifier with the PRINT command.
/KEEP
/NOKEEP
Controls whether the batch job log file is deleted after it is printed.
/LOG_FILE[=filespec]
/NOLOG_FILE
Creates a log file with the specified file specification. You can
specify a different device name, as long as the process executing the
batch job has access to the device on which the log file will reside.
Logical names in the file specification are translated in the context
of the process that executes the SET ENTRY command.
If you omit the /LOG_FILE qualifier and specify the /NAME qualifier,
the log file is written to a file having the same file name as that
specified by the /NAME qualifier; the file type is .LOG. When you omit
the /LOG_FILE qualifier, the job-name value used with the /NAME
qualifier must be a valid file name.
/LOWERCASE
/NOLOWERCASE
Indicates whether the print job must be printed on a printer that can
print both uppercase and lowercase letters. The /NOLOWERCASE qualifier
means that files can be printed on printers that print only uppercase
letters. If all available printers can print both uppercase and
lowercase letters, you do not need to specify the /LOWERCASE qualifier.
/NAME=job-name
Names the job. The job name must be 1 to 39 alphanumeric characters.
The SHOW ENTRY and SHOW QUEUE commands display the job name. For batch
jobs, the job name is also used for the batch job log file. For print
jobs, the job name is also used on the flag page of the printed output.
The default job name is the name of the first file in the job.
/NOCHECKPOINT
For a batch job, erases the value established by the most recently
executed SET RESTART_VALUE command. For a print job, clears the stored
checkpoint so that the job will restart from the beginning.
/NODELETE
Cancels file deletion for a job that was submitted with the /DELETE
qualifier. If you did not specify the /DELETE qualifier when the job
was originally submitted to the queue, you cannot use the SET ENTRY
command to establish file deletion at a later time. You cannot use the
/NODELETE qualifier to cancel deletion of individual files in a
multifile job.
/NOTE=string
Specifies a message of up to 255 characters to appear on the flag page
of the print job. Enclose messages containing lowercase letters,
blanks, or other nonalphanumeric characters (including spaces) in
quotation marks (" ").
/NOTIFY
/NONOTIFY
Controls whether a message notifies you when your job has been
completed or aborted. Notification is sent to any terminal session on
the same OpenVMS Cluster system to which you are logged in.
/OPERATOR=string
Specifies a message string of up to 255 characters to be sent to the
operator just before the print job begins to print. Enclose the message
in quotation marks (" ") if it contains spaces, special
characters, or lowercase characters.
/PAGES=([lowlim,]uplim)
Specifies the number of pages to print for the specified job. You can
use the /PAGES qualifier to print portions of long files. By default,
all pages of the file are printed. When you use the /PAGES qualifier
with the SET ENTRY command, the qualifier can apply only to an entire
job. You cannot use this qualifier to specify different numbers of
pages to be printed for individual files within a multifile job.
The lowlim specifier refers to the first page of the file that
you want to print. If you omit the lowlim specifier, the
printing starts on the first page of the file.
The uplim specifier refers to the last page of the file that
you want to print. When you want to print to the end of the file but do
not know how many pages are in the file, use quotation marks ("
") as the uplim specifier.
You can omit the parentheses when you specify only a value for the
uplim specifier. For example, /PAGES=10 prints the first 10
pages of the file; /PAGES=(5,10) prints pages 5 to 10; /PAGES=(5,"")
starts printing at page 5 and continues until the end of the file is
reached.
/PARAMETERS=(parameter[,...])
Specifies from one to eight optional parameters to be passed to the
job. Each parameter can have as many as 255 characters. If you specify
only one parameter, you can omit the parentheses. To specify a
parameter that contains any special characters or delimiters, enclose
the parameter in quotation marks.
For batch jobs, the parameters define values to be equated to the
symbols named P1 to P8 in each command procedure in the job. The
symbols are local to the specified command procedures.
/PASSALL
/NOPASSALL
Specifies whether the symbiont bypasses all formatting of the print job
and sends the output QIO to the driver with format suppressed. All
qualifiers affecting formatting, as well as the /HEADER, /PAGES, and
/PAGE_SETUP qualifiers, are ignored.
When you use the /PASSALL qualifier with the SET ENTRY command, the
qualifier applies to the entire job. You cannot use this qualifier to
specify PASSALL mode for individual files within a multifile job.
/PRINTER[=queue-name]
/NOPRINTER
Queues the batch job log file for printing when the job is completed.
The default output queue for the log file is SYS$PRINT. The /PRINTER
qualifier allows you to specify an output queue. The /NOPRINTER
qualifier assumes the /KEEP qualifier.
/PRIORITY=n
Requires OPER (operator) or ALTPRI (alter priority) privilege
to raise the priority above the value of the queue's maximum scheduling
priority.
Specifies the job-scheduling priority of the job. The value of
n is an integer in the range of 0 to 255, where 0 is the
lowest priority and 255 is the highest.
The default value for the /PRIORITY qualifier is the value of the
system parameter DEFQUEPRI. No privilege is needed to set the priority
lower than the queue's maximum scheduling priority.
/RAD=n (Alpha/I64 only)
Specifies the RAD number on which the submitted batch job is to execute.
When a job is submitted to a batch queue that does not have a RAD
setting, the job will execute using the RAD specified. If the batch
queue has a RAD setting, the job will execute using the RAD specified
on the queue.
Supported only on AlphaServer GS series systems.
/RELEASE
You can use the /RELEASE qualifier to release jobs that have been held
for the following reasons:
- A job was submitted with the /AFTER qualifier.
- A job was submitted with the /HOLD qualifier.
- A completed job is being retained in a queue.
- A user-written symbiont has refused a job.
Note
Releasing or rescheduling a job before its submission time is not
supported for security reasons. Therefore, if you set the system time
to a future time and submit a job on a node where the queue manager is
running, you cannot release or reschedule that job back to the present
time if you reset the system time.
For example, you can set the system time to a future time of January 1,
2020 and submit a job to run on January 9, 2020; however, if you set
the system time back to the present time and try to release the job to
the present time, the job will be released to January 1, 2020.
This situation impacts the following qualifiers: /AFTER, /NOHOLD, and
/RELEASE.
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/REQUEUE=queue-name[:]
Requests that the job be moved from the original queue to the specified
queue.
/RESTART
/NORESTART
Specifies whether a batch or print job is restarted after a system
failure or a STOP/QUEUE/REQUEUE command.
/RETAIN=option
Specifies the circumstances under which you want your jobs to be
retained in a queue. When a job is retained in the queue, you can issue
the SHOW QUEUE command after the job completes to see the status of the
job. Without job retention, no record of a job is left in a queue after
a job completes.
Use the following options to specify job retention:
- ALWAYS---Holds the job in the queue regardless of the job's
completion status.
- DEFAULT---Holds the job in the queue as specified by the queue's
retention policy.
- ERROR---Holds the job in the queue only if the job completes
unsuccessfully.
- UNTIL=time-value----Holds the job in the queue for the
specified length of time, regardless of the job's completion status.
Note
You cannot specify a /NORETAIN qualifier with the SET ENTRY command (as
system managers can with the commands INITIALIZE/QUEUE, START/QUEUE,
and SET QUEUE); however, you can specify /RETAIN=DEFAULT with the SET
ENTRY command. The default option holds the job in the queue as
specified by the queue's retention policy. If the system manager has
not specified retention for the queue, the job is not retained.
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How Job Retention Is Determined
Although you can specify job retention options for your own jobs, the
job retention option you specify may be overridden by the job retention
option of the queue on which your job executed. If you submit or print
a job to a generic queue, the generic queue's job retention setting may
also override the job retention option you specify. This section
describes how job retention is determined.
An execution queue's job retention setting takes precedence over a
generic queue's job retention setting; however, if the job's completion
status does not match the job retention setting (if any) on the
execution queue, then the generic queue's job retention setting
attempts to control job retention. If the job's completion status does
not match the job retention setting (if any) on the generic queue, then
the user-specified job retention setting is used. Jobs submitted
directly to execution queues are not affected by job retention settings
on generic queues.
If the execution queue's retention setting applies, the job is retained
on the execution queue. Likewise, if the generic queue's retention
setting applies, the job is retained on the generic queue. If the
user-specified setting applies, the job is retained in the queue to
which it was submitted.
The following example illustrates how the queue manager determines job
retention:
Suppose you submit a job to a generic queue and specify /RETAIN=ALWAYS,
and the job completes successfully.
First, the queue manager compares the job's completion status to the
execution queue's retention setting. Suppose the queue is set with
/RETAIN=ERROR (retains only jobs that complete unsuccessfully). The job
is not retained in the execution queue because the error condition was
not met.
Second, the queue manager compares the job's completion status to the
generic queue's retention setting. Suppose the generic queue has no
retention setting. The queue manager's comparison again fails to retain
the job.
Finally, the queue manager compares the job's completion status to the
retention setting you specified for the job. This comparison reveals
that the job should be retained. Because the user-specified setting
leads the queue manager to retain the job, the job is held in the queue
to which the job was submitted---in this case, the generic queue.
For more information on types of queues, see the INITIALIZE/QUEUE
command. For more information on setting retention options for queues,
see the INITIALIZE/QUEUE, START/QUEUE, or SET QUEUE command.
Timed Retention
Timed retention, which you specify using the UNTIL=time-value
option, allows you to retain a job in the queue only as long as you
need it. This eliminates the need to delete the job from the queue
later.
For example, the following command retains job 172 in the queue until
7:31 on April 19, when the job will automatically be deleted from the
queue.
$ SET ENTRY/RETAIN=UNTIL=19-APR-2001:07:31:0.0 172
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However, depending on the queue's job retention policy, the job might
be retained indefinitely. The job retention policy set on the queue
takes precedence over the user-specified job retention setting. Because
system managers cannot specify timed job retention for a queue, any
jobs retained as a result of a queue's setting are retained
indefinitely.
If you specify the /RETAIN=UNTIL=time-value option, you must
supply a time value. The time value is first interpreted as a delta
time, then as a combination time, and finally as absolute time. If you
specify a delta time, the delta begins when the job completes. For
example, if you specify SET ENTRY/RETAIN=UNTIL="+3:00", the job will be
retained for three hours after the job completes. For information on
specifying time values, refer to the OpenVMS User's Manual.
/SETUP=module[,...]
Extracts the specified modules from the device control library
(containing escape sequence modules for programmable printers) and
copies the modules to the printer before each file in a print job is
printed.
When you use the /SETUP qualifier with the SET ENTRY command, the
qualifier applies to the entire print job. You cannot use this
qualifier to specify different setup modules for individual files
within a multifile job.
/SPACE
/NOSPACE
Controls whether the output of a print job is double-spaced. Specifying
the /NOSPACE qualifier causes the output to be single-spaced. When you
use the /SPACE qualifier with the SET ENTRY command, the qualifier
applies to the entire job. You cannot use this qualifier to specify
different spacing for individual files within a multifile job.
/TRAILER
/NOTRAILER
Controls whether a trailer page is printed at the end of each file in a
print job. The trailer page displays the entry number, as well as
information about the user submitting the job and the files being
printed.
When you use the /TRAILER qualifier with the SET ENTRY command, trailer
pages are placed at the end of each file in a multifile job.
Use the /[NO]TRAILER qualifier to override the installation-defined
defaults that have been set for the output queue you are using or the
qualifier specified in the PRINT command that queued the job.
/WSDEFAULT=n
Defines, for a batch job, a working set default, which is the default
number of physical pages that the job can use.
If the queue on which the job executes has a nonzero default working
set, the smaller of the specified job and queue values is used. If the
queue on which the job executes has a working set default of zero, the
smaller of the specified job value and the value established in the
user authorization file (UAF) is used.
Specify the value of n as a number of 512-byte pagelets on
Alpha or 512-byte pages on VAX. Note that the operating system rounds
up this value to the nearest CPU-specific page so that the actual
amount of physical memory allowed may be larger than the specified
amount on Alpha. If you specify zero or NONE, the specified queue or
UAF value is used. Working set default values must range between the
numbers specified by the system parameters PQL_MWSDEFAULT and WSMAX.
/WSEXTENT=n
Defines, for the batch job, a working set extent, which is the maximum
amount of physical memory that the job can use. The job uses the
maximum amount of physical memory only when the system has excess free
pages. If the queue on which the job executes has a nonzero working set
extent, the smaller of the specified job and queue values is used. If
the queue on which the job executes has a working set extent of zero,
the smaller of the specified job value and the value established in the
user authorization file (UAF) is used.
Specify the value of n as a number of 512-byte pagelets on
Alpha or 512-byte pages on VAX. Note that the operating system rounds
up this value to the nearest CPU-specific page so that the actual
amount of physical memory allowed may be larger than the specified
amount on Alpha. If you specify zero or NONE, the specified queue or
UAF value is used. Working set extent values must range between the
numbers specified by the system parameters PQL_MWSEXTENT and WSMAX.
/WSQUOTA=n
Defines, for the batch job, a working set quota, which is the amount of
physical memory that the job is guaranteed. If the queue on which the
job executes has a nonzero working set quota, the smaller of the
specified job and queue values is used. If the queue on which the job
executes has a working set quota of zero, the smaller of the specified
job value or the value established in the user authorization file (UAF)
is used.
Specify the value of n as a number of 512-byte pagelets on
Alpha or 512-byte pages on VAX. Note that the operating system rounds
up this value to the nearest CPU-specific page so that the actual
amount of physical memory allowed may be larger than the specified
amount on Alpha. If you specify zero or NONE, the specified queue or
UAF value is used. Working set quota values must range between the
numbers specified by the system parameters PQL_MWSQUOTA and WSMAX.