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Steve And I'm inclined to think it's some key to an internal index, which contains the full path info. But this is a UNIX concept in the first place, anyway, AFAIK. What does it mean in that realm? AFAIK, the st_ino and st_dev together comprise the right-hand 8 bytes of the file ID reported in opt 8 of WRKLNK. That file ID also always has, on our system, what looks like an 8-byte integer = 1. I wonder if it's the ASP - does anyone know? Besides, hashes are not guaranteed to be unique. There IS a GENGUID MI instruction, that is also surfaced for use in HLLs. Vern At 10:37 PM 10/21/02 -0400, you wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-admin@midrange.com [mailto:midrange-l-admin@midrange.com]On Behalf Of Tom Liotta Sent: Monday, October 21, 2002 10:06 PM >With no better info than a guess, we might as well call it a "Hash Number >representation of the path name". It is apparently persistent with the life of >the object. The 16-byte value can be used as input to the Qp0lGetPathFromFileID >API to return the fully-qualified path of the object. Additional fields both >before and after this one (Object File ID) in the audit journal entry formats can >be used for additional supporting info. might be a GUID. that is a 16 byte value that is unique across space, time, ... the world. If so, I would like to know if the system has the facility to store a guid identified variable length string. Steve
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