Google
 

Trailing-Edge - PDP-10 Archives - BB-JR93N-BB_1990 - 10,7/sysdpy/sysdpy.rnm
There are 5 other files named sysdpy.rnm in the archive. Click here to see a list.
.;SYSDPY %704(654) users manual			RDH  --  3-Aug-88
.;
.;This file produces SYSDPY.MAN, a general manual for the use and
.;enjoyment of the various flavours of the TOPS-10 SYSDPY programme
.;
.;The current variations of SYSDPY available are:
.;
.;	SYSDPY		VT06 (Datapoint 3300)
.;	SYSDPA		VT05
.;	SYSDPB		VT05B
.;	SYSVBX		VB10C
.;	SYSV50		VT50 (sans cursor addressing)
.;	SYSV52		VT52
.;	SYSV61		VT61 (^A and ^R commands)
.;	SYSANS		VT100 (ANSI terminals)
.;	SYSDLT		Delta Data Telterm
.;	SYSHZL		Hazeltine 2000
.;
.;
.;
.PS 59,80
.LM 0
.RM 80
.PAGING
.NUMBER PAGE 0
.TITLE SYSDPY %704(654) Users Reference Manual
.SUBTTL
.;Copyright
.BLANK 10
.CENTER
SYSDPY %704(654) users reference manual
.SKIP 20
Copyright (C) 1984, 1989.
.BREAK
Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
.SKIP
This software is furnished under a license and may be used and copyed only
in accordance with the terms of such license and with the inclusion of the
above copyright notice.  This software or any other copies thereof may not
be provided or otherwise made available to any other person.   No title to
and ownership of the software is hereby transferred.
.SKIP
The information in this software is subject to change  without  notice and
should not be construed as a commitment by Digital Equipment Corporation.
.SKIP
Digital  assumes  no  responsibility  for  the  use  or reliability of its
software on equipment which is not supplied by Digital.
.SUBTTL Introduction
.PAGE
.AUTOP

SYSDPY is a program which runs under the DECsystem-10 (TOPS-10)
monitor. It displays various job and/or system statistics on a
video terminal. Unlike SYSTAT, SYSDPY dynamically updates the
video screen, changing only the characters that have changed since
the last display update. In addition, the ability to "scroll"
through a display which is larger than the screen size is
provided.

SYSDPY is available in ten different flavours (i.e., ten
different programs) to run on each of ten
different types of terminals. Each different flavour is assembled
to run only on its particular type of terminal (or any compatible
terminal). The ten flavours of SYSDPY currently available are:
.SKIP
SYSDPA	SYSDPY for a Digital VT05A terminal.
.BREAK
SYSDPB	SYSDPY for a Digital VT05B (2400 baud VT05) terminal.
.BREAK
SYSDPY	SYSDPY for a digital VT06 (Datapoint 3300) terminal.
.BREAK
SYSVBX	SYSDPY for a Digital VB10C graphics display.
.BREAK
SYSV50	SYSDPY for a Digital VT50 terminal.
.BREAK
SYSV52	SYSDPY for a Digital VT52 terminal.
.BREAK
SYSV61	SYSDPY for a Digital VT61 terminal.
.BREAK
SYSANS	SYSDPY for a Digital VT100 or other ANSI terminals.
.BREAK
SYSDLT	SYSDPY for a Delta Data Telterm terminal.
.BREAK
SYSHZL	SYSDPY for a Hazeltine 2000 terminal.

Although no privileges are generally required to run SYSDPY in
the normal mode, certain statistics are available only by PEEKing
or SPYing on the monitor, which requires some privileges (e.g.,
SYSDPY running with the JACCT bit set or under an account with
PEEK or SPY privileges). SYSDPY will run *MUCH* more efficiently
if it has SPY privileges.

The following discussions presuppose SYSDPY running under a
7.03 or 7.04 monitor.
.SUBTTL Commands
.PAGE

When SYSDPY is first run it will by default start the normal job
display. While SYSDPY is running it is always listening for
commands.

A SYSDPY command is generally a single letter ("N", for example,
selects the normal job display which is the default on startup).
No carriage return line feed sequence is needed to terminate the
command.
.NOAUTOP
.SKIP 1
.CENTER
SYSDPY commands
.SKIP 1
.LM 8
.I -8
A	Toggle auto-roll of all jobs. Normally SYSDPY will scroll
through the entire display available, advancing by approximately
one screenful each update pass. The "A" command will toggle the
current scroll or no-scroll setting (see also the "+" and "-"
commands).
.skip
.I -8
C	Displays the DECnet link status for all open links on the
system.
.skip
.I -8
E	Display Ethernet status. All Ethernet channels are shown, as
are all KLNI kontrollers, and enabled protocol types. Datagram traffic
is summarized, as are the "Free Queue Errors".
.SKIP
.I -8
F	List file system statistics. The "F" command changes the
display to one which lists, for each disk unit in the system, I/O
counts, error summaries, structure membership, etc. In addition
a summary of swapping units is provided. This command requires
PEEK or SPY privileges.
.SKIP
.I -8
H	List help text. If the file HLP:SYSDPY.HLP exists then read
and display the file. Otherwise a quick summary of all available
commands will be displayed.
.SKIP
.I -8
I	List incremental statistics (where applicable). The "I"
command tells SYSDPY to, rather than simply listing the usual
total since system startup value, list the incremental value, i.e.,
the change in the value since the last update cycle. This
incremental facility applies only to certain values: the system
uptime (except on "N" display where uptime is always total);
job runtimes; job disk reads and writes ("S" command);
all cpu statistics; network I/O (byte) counts;
TTY I/O counts; and network message counts (the "_\" command).
Incremental mode is generally indicated by a "(+)"
immediately preceding the uptime value (except on the "N"
display where it immediately precedes the first cpu column
header). The "J" display and the "N" display in "S" mode do not
display the incremental mode indicator.
.SKIP
.I -8
J	List only jobs (in multiple columns). The "J" command
is similar to the "N" command but restricted to displaying only
jobs (no system statistics). As many columns of jobs will be
displayed as will fit on the screen (each column requres 40
spaces).
.skip
.I -8
"K"	Displays CI network information.
The "K" command lists open paths to nodes on the CI network,
packet transmission and reception counts, ACKing statistics,
and Port Recoverable Error counts.
.SKIP
.I -8
L	Log screens into file LPT:SYSDPY.LOG[-] (close on _^Z). The
"L" command instructs SYSDPY to, each time the screen is updated,
write the entire contents of the screen into the "log" file. If the
file already exists the new data is appended to the already extant
file. Each screen is separated with a form feed. The file is CLOSEd
on a "_^Z" command to SYSDPY.
.SKIP
.I -8
M	List memory data. The "M" command displays the normal job
data but with an expanded memory summary showing both virtual and
physical job memory usage. No system statistics are displayed in
the "M" job display.
.SKIP
.I -8
N	List normal (some of everything) status. The "N" command
lists a column of job status information
(same as "J" display) and a column of system status information such
as cpu idle and lost time, available disk structures, etc. This
is the default state when SYSDPY is first started.
.SKIP
.I -8
O	Toggle suppression of [OPR] jobs in "J", "N", and "M" displays.
Normally SYSDPY will display all jobs under all ppns. The "O"
command will instruct SYSDPY to suppress display of jobs running
under the [1,2] ([OPR]) ppn. A second "O" command "toggles" back
to displaying [OPR] jobs.
.SKIP
.I -8
Q	List the system queues. The "Q" command displays the system's
queues just as the QUEUE program would, but in "DPY" mode. This
command requires GALAXY version 4.
.SKIP
.I -8
R	Refresh entire screen immediately. The "R" command forces
an immediate screen refresh cycle (a refresh cycle re-writes the
entire screen rather than just updating only the portions of the
screen that changed). By default, SYSDPY will automatically refresh
the screen every so often anyway (every 100 update cycles for VT06's,
1000 update cycles for VT05's, or 10000 update cycles for any other
type of terminal supported). The "R" command resets the auto-refresh
counter. All screen refreshes are made in normal video regardless of
the state of the reverse video update mode ("_^R" command).
.SKIP
.I -8
S	Toggle system or expanded job statistics in "N" display.
The "S" command will cause SYSDPY to display the disk reads, disk
writes, and the user name for jobs in the "N" display rather than
the usual system statistics. A second "S" command toggles back to
showing the system statistics.
.SKIP
.I -8
T	Topology for network display. The "T" command changes the
display to show the ANF network topology and message numbers (NOT the
number of messages but the NCL message numbers). This display
requires PEEK or SPY privileges.
.SKIP
.I -8
V	Toggle cpu and core priority. The "V" command requests
SYSDPY to attempt to lock in memory and run in a high priority run
queue. If SYSDPY was entered in an HPQ state (a .SET HPQ command is
in effect for the job) then SYSDPY will not change the HPQ setting.
In addition, if no "W" command has been issued the update time is
reduced to one second. A second "V" command will clear the lock
and HPQ setting (except that if a .SET HPQ command is in effect
HPQ is not cleared) and restore the update time to the default
ten seconds (if no "W" command has been issued). After 1000
update cycles SYSDPY automatically clears the "V" state.
The "Q" command also automatically clears the "V" state (since it
must do IPCF to QUASAR, and IPCF is illegal if the job is locked in
memory). No error
message is issued if SYSDPY fails either to lock or run in HPQ.
This command requires LOCK and/or HPQ privileges.
.SKIP
.I -8
nW	Set wait time to "n" decimal seconds. The
"W" command is used to select the wait time between screen updates.
The default update time is ten seconds (one second if in "V" mode).
The update interval may range from zero to sixty seconds. Note that
a value of zero means one clock tick, not infinite run state. If "n"
is not typed SYSDPY will revert to the default wait time.
.SKIP
.I -8
Z	List the LAT service counters. The "Z" command selects the
LAT service display, which shows all known LAT servers. Some LAT
traffic statistics are also shown.
.SKIP
.I -8
_\	Display ANF network statistics. The "_\" command selects the
ANF network statistics display. The number of network messages sent
and received is shown, broken down by message type (e.g., DATA
or NEIGHBORS). In addition, a histogram is shown of the data
messages sent and received as a function (log base 2) of the
data message size. Also, network free core usage is shown.
.SKIP
.I -8
*	Displays the DECnet node status for all nodes in the DECnet
network.  Using the A command allows you to toggle between all network
nodes and just those nodes with active links open to them.
Using the "_^" option
allows you to toggle between all known nodes and only those
nodes with which the local node has had contact (ie: for which
there is an active delay field).
.SKIP
.I -8
n+	Advance screen by "n" or approximately one screen-full
if "n" is not specified. The "+" command scrolls the screen
forward by "n" lines or jobs (depending on the display) or,
if "n" is not specified, by slightly less than a full screen.
If the end of the display is reached SYSDPY will "bottom"
justify the display to put as much of the display as possible
onto the screen. The issuance of the "+" command clears
auto-roll (see the "A" command).
.SKIP
.I -8
n-	Retreat screen by "n" or approximately one screen-full
if "n" is not specified. The "-" command scrolls the screen
backwards by "n" lines or jobs (depending on the display) or,
if "n" is not specified, by slightly less than a full screen.
If the end of the display is reached SYSDPY will "top" justify
the display to put as much of the display as possible onto the
screen. The issuance of the "-" command clears auto-roll (see
the "A" command).
.SKIP
.I -8
_!	Toggle display of "idle" jobs. The "!" command toggles
whether "idle" jobs are displayed in the job displays; or "idle"
nodes in the DECnet display.
.SKIP
.I -8
_#	Toggle PTY number or controlling job number. The "_#" command
toggles whether the "Where" column (of the job display) shows the
PTY number or the controlling job number for a job which is being
controlled by another job.
.SKIP
.I -8
%	Toggle runtime or percentage of cpu. The "%" command
toggles whether the "Runtime" column (of the job display) shows
the actual runtime in hours, minutes, seconds, and hundredths,
or the percentage of the cpu that the runtime represents.
NOTE: on KL-10 based systems which calculate the user program
runtime from EBOX/MBOX ticks the runtime figure can vary
tremendously depending on the cache hit rate. For a totally
compute bound job (no monitor calls) the runtime can vary from
approximately 12% of elapsed time with a 0% cache hit ratio
to over 110% of elapsed time with a 100% cache hit ratio.
.SKIP
.I -8
_^	Toggle skipping system statistics. The "_^" command
toggles skipping the first part of the system statistics display
in the "N" display (and starting directly with the structure
display, then the device display); or skipping "non-valid delay time"
nodes in the DECnet display; or skipping error summary information
in the "F" display.
.SKIP
.I -8
_^A	Toggle alarm (flashing) mode (if applicable). The "_^A"
command causes the entire screen to enter alarm mode (VT61's only).
A second "_^A" command clears alarm mode. SYSDPY will also clear alarm
mode on exit.
.SKIP
.I -8
_^C	Terminate SYSDPY execution. The "_^C" command will cause
SYSDPY to exit at the end of the current update pass if one is in
progress, or immediately if an update is not in progress. SYSDPY will
close any log file being written, clear alarm and reverse video modes,
and position the cursor to the bottom of the screen before exiting.
.SKIP
.I -8
_^R	Toggle reverse video updating (if applicable). The "_^R"
command causes all subsequent screen updates to be made in reverse
video (VT61's only). A second "_^R" command clears reverse video update
mode. SYSDPY will also clear reverse video update mode on exit. All
screen refreshes (always implied when a new display is started)
are made in normal video regardless of the setting
of the reverse video update mode.
.SKIP
.I -8
_^Z	Terminate SYSDPY execution. The "_^Z" command will cause
SYSDPY to exit at the end of the current update pass if one is in
progress, or immediately if an update is not in progress. SYSDPY will
close any log file being written, clear alarm and reverse video modes,
and position the cursor to the bottom of the screen before exiting.
.SKIP
.I -8
_<ESC_>	Freeze screen as is (any subsequent command will thaw). The
_<ESC_> command will cause SYSDPY to cease updating the screen until
another command is typed. Any command typed (except of course another
_<ESC_> command) will enable SYSDPY to resume screen updating.
.SKIP
.I -8
SPACE	Update screen display immediately. SYSDPY will always update
the screen display after issuance of any command (except _<ESC_>). SPACE
will force an update cycle without changing any SYSDPY parameters.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL C Display - DECnet link status display
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "C" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
  DECnet Link Status for System RL171C DEC10 Development 08-Dec-83 14:19:59
Job         Node    Chn  State    XMIT    RCVD  DOBJ  SOBJ  Seg  XFLOW RFLOW
1            --       1   CW                    FAL    255  561   Seg   Seg
4            --       1   CW                    ERCV  NICE  561   Seg   Seg
4            --       2   CW                    LBM   NICE  561   Seg   Seg
4            --       3   CW                    NICE  NICE  561   Seg   Seg
17         AMBER      1   RN         8       7  VPMU  VPMU  561   None  Seg
17           --       2   CW                    MAIL  MAIL  561   Seg   Seg
18           --       1   CW                    PST   ANY   561   Seg   Seg
24           --       1   CW                    FAL    255  561   Seg   Seg
25           --       1   CW                    FAL    255  561   Seg   Seg
26           --       1   CW                    DTR   DTR   561   Seg   Seg
32         MENTOR     1   RN       155     109  NRT   ANY   100   None  Seg
38         KL2137     1   RN       395     113  NRT   ANY    64   Seg   Seg
47         KL2137     1   RN        29      25  NRT   ANY    64   Seg   Seg
57         KL2102     1   RN        44      26  NRT   ANY   500   None  Seg
58         MRVAX      1   RN        10      11  FAL    229  561   None  Seg
64         KL2102     1   RN         7       6  NRT   ANY   500   None  Seg
65         KL2102     1   RN        99     189  FAL    229  561   Seg   Seg
66         SPAGS      1   CS                 1  NRT   ANY   561   Seg   Seg
68         MRVAX      1   RN        60      93  FAL    229  561   None  Seg
69         KL2137     1   RN        46     100  FAL    229  256   Seg   Seg
NRTSER       --       2   CW                    NRT   NRT   561   Seg   Seg
NRTSER_52  MRFORT     3   RN      9252    8162  NRT   NRT    64   Seg   None
.END LITERAL

	The first line of the display identifies the system on which the
information is being obtained.
.br
	The second line is the header line which tells you to what each column
in the display corresponds.
.lm 8
.skip
.i -8
Job	This column is the job information associated with the link.  It has
one of two formats.  For outgoing links, it identifies the job by which this
link has been opened.  For incoming links, it identifies the NRTSER line
number which is connected to the system.
.BR
.skip
.I -8
Node	This column identifies the node name to which the link 
is opened. Please note that if pass-through is being used it is the node 
whose pass-through task is connected.  If there is no node name 
(CW state), two dashes (--) are typed instead of the node name.
.BR
.skip
.I -8
Chn	Is the DECnet channel on which this connection is open.
.br
.skip
.i -8
State	This is the DECnet state of the link and can have one of the
following values.
.skip
.lit
CW	Connect Wait - the link is waiting for a connect initiate.
CR	Connect Received - a connect has been received on this link.
CS	Connect Sent - a connect initiate has been sent on this circuit.
RJ	Remote Rejected Connect Init.
RN	Link is up and Running.
DR	Disconnect Received.
DS	Disconnect Sent.
DC	Disconnect Confirmed.
CF	No Confidence - the system has lost confidence in this link.
LK	No Link -the link is no longer valid.
CM	No Communication
NR	No Resources.
.end literal
.skip
.i -8 
XMIT	The number of messages transmitted.
.skip
.i -8
RCVD	The number of messages received.
.skip
.i -8
DOBJ	The destination object type.  Certain of these
are predefined and will type out as alpha symbols to represent them.  If they
are not, then they will type out as the decimal object type which is found in
the object type field.
.SKIP
.I -8
SOBJ	The source object type.
.skip
Object types may be one of the following:
.skip
.literal
ANY	Any task
FAL	File Access Listner
URD	Unit Record Devices
ATS	Application terminal service
CTS	Command terminal Services
TCV	RSX-11M Task control Version 1
OSI	Operator Services Interface
NRM	Node Resources Manager
70G	IMB 3270-BSC Gateway
80G	IBM 2780-BSC Gateway
90G	10 IBM 3790-BSC Gateway
TPS	TPS Application
RDA	RT-11 DIBOL Application
T2TH	TOPS-20 Terminal Handler
T2RS	TOPS-20 Remote Spooler
TCV2	RSX-11M Task control version 2
TLK	TLK Utility
RTL	RSX-11M Remote Task Loader
NICE	NICE process
MTP	RSTS/E Media Transfer Program
HNCT	RSTS/E Homogeneous Network CTH
MAIL	Mail Listener
NRT	NRT program
CTH	Concentrator Terminal Handler
LBM	Loop back mirror
ERCV	Event Receiver
VPMU	VAX/VMS Personal Message Utility
FTS	FTS
PHON	PHONE utility
DDMF	Distributed Data Management Facility
X25G	X.25 Gateway server
UETP	UETP
VMAI	VAX/VMS MAIL service
X29S	X.29 Terminal Server
CAL	Calendar system
X25A	X.25 Gateway Access
SNAG	SNA Gateway access
SNAR	SNA RJE utility
CTRM	CTERM terminal protocol
DTR	DTR test propram
DTS	DTR/DTS test program
PST	Pass-Through task
.end literal
.skip
.I -8
Seg	Is the segment size being used to communicate with this node.
.skip
.i -8
XFLOW	The transmit flow control option.
.SKIP
.I -8
RFLOW	The receive flow control option.
.SKIP
Flow control options are one of the following:
.skip
.LIT
None	No flow control is being used
Seg	Segment flow control is being used
Msg	Message flow control is being used
.end lit
.SUBTTL * display - DECnet node status
.lm 0
.PAGE

Following is a sample SYSDPY "*" display:
.skip
.literal
  DECnet Node Status for System RL211A DEC10 Development 08-Jun-85 14:09:18
Node     Delay  Hops  Cost  Links  Address     Circuit
ISHTAR            1     2           7.  95  ETH-0
MENTOR            1     2           7.  96  ETH-0
SUBA              1     2           7.  97  ETH-0
DEMILO           31   1023          7.  98
D2244A           31   1023          7.  99
RONCO             1     2           7. 107  ETH-0
RNCODN           31   1023          7. 108
WFR1A2           31   1023          7. 109
KL1026    5000    0     0           7. 110  local
JINX      1000    1     2           7. 111  DTE-0-3
IO                1     2           7. 112  ETH-0
KL2137            3     8           7. 113  ETH-0
IODN             31   1023          7. 114
IBOX              3     8           7. 115  ETH-0
KL2116            3     8           7. 116  ETH-0
CLOYD     1000   31   1023          7. 140
CLYDDN            3    11           7. 141  ETH-0
GIDNEY            1     2           7. 142  ETH-0
GIDDN             2     3           7. 143  DTE-0-3
MRCHIP           31   1023          7. 144
CHIPDN           31   1023          7. 145
.end literal
.lm 8
.skip
.I-8
Node	Is the name of the node.
.skip
.i -8
Delay	Is the milli-second  delay to the node.
If there is none specified, then
this node is either not reachable or we have not transfered any
data to it.
.skip
.i -8
Hops	This is the number of hops away that the node is.
.skip
.i -8
Cost	This is the cost to the node.
.skip
.i -8
Links	This is the number of active links to the node.  If there are no
active links, then this field will be left blank.  If the "!" option
is used, then only nodes with active links will be displayed.
If the "^" option is used then only nodes with valid delay times
will be displayed.
.skip
.I -8
Circuit	This is the circuit currently being used to get to this node.  The
word local means that this is the local node.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL E Display - Ethernet status
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "E" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
Ethernet Status of RL226A DEC10 Development 21-Aug-85 17:01:29 UP:05:00:46

Chan/Kont          State      E-Net Address          DgmXmt     DgmRcv
ETH-0              Online   AA-00-04-00-6E-1C         35048     107327
  NI-0             Online   AA-00-03-03-00-22         34395     100269
  NI-1             Online   AA-00-03-03-00-13           653       7058

Protocol           State    Kont      User           DgmXmt     DgmRcv    FQE
  60-04 LAT        Online   NI-0   System             34365      97026      5
  90-00 Loopback   Online   NI-0   System                 0          2      0
  60-02 RmtCon     Online   NI-0   System                30       3239      0
  -Inf-            Online          Job 17 Ctx 1           0          0      0
  60-01 DNA/MOP    Online   NI-0   Job 17 Ctx 1           0          2      0
  60-03 DECnet     Online   NI-1   System               653       7058      3
  -Inf-            Online          Job 23 Ctx 1           0          0      0
.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2
The Ethernet display comes with two basic sub-displays: the Channel and
Kontroller display; and the Protocol display.

The Channel and Kontroller display provides information about each
Ethernet "channel" in service on the system, and all the "kontrollers"
(or "KLNI"s) associated with that channel. The display columns are
as follows:
.SKIP 1
.NOAUTOP
.LM 8
.I -8
Chan/Kont###This column identifies first the Ethernet Channel, and
on subsequent lines indented by two spaces each Ethernet Kontroller
(e.g., a "KLNI") associated with that channel. Although the names
are the same, these channels and kontrollers are nonetheless distinct
entities from DECnet "circuits" and "lines".
.BREAK
.I -8
State	The "State" column indicates whether the specified channel or
kontroller is "online" or "offline".
.BREAK
.I -8
E-Net#Address###This column lists the physical Ethernet Address of the
specified channel or kontroller. In keeping with Ethernet conventions,
this address is displayed in hexadecimal, with "-" characters between
each byte's worth of address value.
.BREAK
.I -8
DgmXmt	The "DgmXmt" column shows the count of "datagrams" (or messages)
transmitted through the specified channel or kontroller.
.BREAK
.I -8
DgmRcv	The "DgmRcv" column shows the count of "datagrams" (or messages)
received through the specified channel or kontroller.
.LM 0
.AUTOP
.SKIP
The Protocol display shows the Ethernet protocols enabled for the
previous Channel and Kontroller list, as follows:
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.SKIP
.I -8
Protocol###The "Protocol" column shows each Ethernet protocol enabled.
The protocol is displayed in typical Ethernet fashion as a two-byte
hexadecimal value with a "-" separating the two bytes. After each
protocol is displayed numerically, it is identified by name:
.LM 16
.SKIP
.BR;.I -8;60-01##DNA/MOP - the MOP dump and load maintenance protocol
.BR;.I -8;60-02##RmtCon - the MOP remote console protocol
.BR;.I -8;60-03##DECnet - the DECnet/NSP routing protocol
.BR;.I -8;60-04##LAT - the Local Area Terminal protocol
.BR;.I -8;60-05##Diag's - reserved for diagnostic usage
.BR;.I -8;60-06##Customer - a protocol reserved for customer usage
.BR;.I -8;60-07##SCA - the System Communication Architecture protocol
.BR;.I -8;90-00##Loopback - the loopback protocol
.LM 8
.SKIP
There are also several "pseudo-protocols" available for user programs
to utilize:
.LM 16
.SKIP
.BR;.I -8;-Inf-##Info protocol. The "info" protocol is not a true
Ethernet protocol,
but rather a software handle via which user programs can obtain
Ethernet information. Internally to the monitor, the "info" protocol
uses the same data structures as a "real" protocol, and so appears
in the protocol display.
.BR;.I -8;-Prm-##Promiscuous protocol. The promiscuous protocol
is a "catch-all" that signifies that all protocol types are to be
received.
.BR;.I -8;-Unk-##Unknown protocol. The "unknown" protocol
is another "catch-all" that signifies any protocol type not
otherwise explicitly enabled (in effect, a "wastebucket").
.LM 8
.SKIP
.BREAK
.I -8
State	The "State" column indicates whether the associated kontroller
is "online" or "offline".
.BREAK
.I -8
Kont	The "Kont" column identifies the Ethernet Kontroller associated
with the specified protocol.
.BREAK
.I -8
User	The "User" column identifies the logical "user" of a given
protocol, either the system (for such as DECnet) or a particular user
job (such as NML for the MOP dump and load protocol).
.BREAK
.I -8
DgmXmt	The "DgmXmt" column displays the count of datagrams that have
been transmitted for the specified protocol and kontroller.
.BREAK
.I -8
DgmRcv	The "DgmRcv" column displays the count of datagrams that have
been received for the specified protocol and kontroller.
.BREAK
.I -8
FQE	The "FQE" column shows the number of "Free Queue Errors" which
have occurred for the specified protocol and kontroller. A free queue
error occurs when a message is received for the specified protocol, but
there are no message buffers available ("free") to hold the message.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL F display - file system statistics
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "F" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
Disk Status for RN212A DEC10 TRISMP 04-Jun-85 13:18:39 (+) UP:00:05.10
Unit or F/S    Free     BR       BW       DR       DW       MR       MW
BLKK Mnt:13    111140
 RNA3(BLKK0)   111140   3528     2556     6508     4381     491      996
 RNC3(.....)            9205     5954     8573     604      635      1341
   SWP   Errors: SDEV:1 RETRIES:1 LBN:537706711 1CONI:540100,222615
     2CONI:500000,2415 1DATAI:7000,600 2DATAI:6000,0
DSKR Mnt:1     191120
 RNA8(DSKR0)   191120   1        31       20       0        44       41
 RNC8(.....)            3        117      70       0        55       167
   SWP
BLKY Mnt:8     101535
 RPG0(BLKY0)   101535   0        0        12323    1        45       0
DSKT Mnt:10    584880
 RAI0(DSKT0)   291190   475      533      534      447      116      77
 RAH2(DSKT1)   293690   545      622      1233     649      107      136
DSKB Mnt:18    40310
 RAI23(DSKB0)  40310    381      430      3093     563      522      737
POOF Mnt:0     251910
 RAH47(POOF0)  251910   0        0        0        0        70       0

Swap Unit      SR       SW       PR       PW       Used(P)
RPA3(DSKA0)    41148    36416    108      624      1026/8190 = 13%
RPF3(.....)    5460     3112     36       40
RNA3(BLKK0)    39300    38320    188      552      419/4096 = 10%
RNC3(.....)    2344     184      36       0
RNA8(DSKR0)    48712    36292    184      436      388/8190 = 5%
RNC8(.....)    2856     952      32       0
.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2

The first line is the standard SYSDPY "ID" line, containing the name
of the system (preceded by the header "This is"), the current date
and time, and finally the system uptime.

The "F" display is divided into two sub-displays: disk file structure
and unit information, and swapping unit information. The first portion of
the display is devoted to disk file structures.
Each structure is first identified:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
<str>	The disk file structure is first identified by name (in the
sample screen shown above the first structure name is "BLKK", the
second structure name is "DSKR", and so on.
.BREAK
.I -8
Mnt:n	The total mount count for the structure (note that being in
the active swapping list counts as a "mount", as does being in the system
search list).
.BREAK
.I -8
<free>	The total free blocks for the entire structure (i.e., the sum of
free blocks for all units combined within the file structure).
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Next, each disk unit in the file structure is summarized. First the
count of I/O operations for that unit is listed in columns
as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Unit or F/S	This column identifies first the physical disk unit or
drive and second the logical disk unit ID (enclosed within parenthesis)
within a file structure which is mounted on that physical drive.
A disk unit ID of "....." indicates that this physical unit is an
alternate port for the immediately preceding disk unit or drive.
The unit name is indented to distinguish the physical unit from the
preceding logical file structure (not indented) to which the unit belongs.
.BREAK
.I -8
Free	Free count. The number of free blocks available on the
specific unit (as opposed to the entire file structure). For alternate
ports of a multi-ported disk the free count is blank (since the free
count is dependent on the pack mounted, not the access port).
.BREAK
.I -8
BR	Buffered Reads. The count of user-mode buffered I/O reads
(i.e., disk reads done in ASCII,
ASCII line, byte, image, image binary, or binary I/O mode) for that
unit in disk blocks.
.BREAK
.I -8
BW	Buffered Writes. The count of user-mode buffered I/O writes
(i.e., disk writes done in ASCII,
ASCII line, byte, image, image binary, or binary I/O mode) for that
unit in disk blocks.
.BREAK
.I -8
DR	Dump Reads. The count of user-mode dump I/O reads
(i.e., disk reads done in image dump,
dump records, or dump record I/O mode) for that unit in disk blocks.
.BREAK
.I -8
DW	Dump Writes. The count of user-mode dump I/O writes
(i.e., disk writes done in image dump,
dump records, or dump record I/O mode) for that unit in disk blocks.
.BREAK
.I -8
MR	Monitor Reads. The count of monitor reads
(i.e., disk blocks read by the
monitor on behalf of a user, as in reading directories or RIBs) for
that unit in disk blocks.
.BREAK
.I -8
MW	Monitor Writes. The count of monitor writes
(i.e., disk blocks written by the
monitor on behalf of a user, as in updating SATs) for that unit in
disk blocks.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Following the I/O operation counts for each unit, the status of each
unit is detailed as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
RHB	Re-read Home Blocks. The unit has gone offline or unsafe and
the monitor must read the disk pack home blocks again in order to
verify that the correct disk pack is still mounted on that unit
.BREAK
.I -8
OFL	OFfLine. The unit is currently offline (although the monitor
thinks there should be a disk mounted and accessible on that unit).
.BREAK
.I -8
HWP	Hardware Write Protect. The unit is write protected by hardware
rather than software. The monitor is totally unable to write onto disk
unit (e.g., for swapping).
.BREAK
.I -8
SWP	Software Write Protect. The unit is write protected by software
for this job. The monitor is able to write onto the disk unit
(e.g., for updating file access dates), and other jobs are able to
write onto the unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
SAF	Single Access File structure. The unit is part of a
single-access file structure (i.e., only one job is allowed to access
the disk unit).
.BREAK
.I -8
PRF	PRivate File structure. The unit is part of a "private"
file structure. A private file structure is one that can be mounted
only by its owner's project group or by a privileged job.
.BREAK
.I -8
NNA	No New Accesses. The unit is "locked" by the operator
(i.e., no new file accesses by users are allowed). Typically this
is done prior to the removal of a file structure in order to let
file accesses "wind down" and gracefully terminate before the
file structure is actually removed from the system.
.BREAK
.I -8
AWL	Write Locked for All. The unit is write locked for all jobs
in the system (unlike SWP above which applies only to this job).
.BREAK
.I -8
HDEV	Hard DEVice errors. This is the total count of non-recoverable
errors other than data errors (i.e., the hardware is at fault (such as
a power supply failure), not the data).
.BREAK
.I -8
HDAT	Hard DATa errors. This is the total count of non-recoverable
errors in the data itself (i.e., the hardware is functioning correctly
but the data (or data media) is at fault).
.BREAK
.I -8
SDEV	Soft DEVice errors. This is the total count of recoverable
errors other than data errors.
.BREAK
.I -8
SDAT	Soft DATa errors. This is the total count of recoverable
errors in the data itself.
.BREAK
.I -8
RETRIES	The number of times the monitor tried the last operation
before it finally succeeded (soft error condition) or failed
(hard error condition).
.BREAK
.I -8
SER	SAT ERrors. This is the count of the number of times that
a disk SAT block disagreed with the monitor's main memory count of
the number of free blocks on the disk unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
RER	RIB ERrors. This is the count of RIB (Retrieval Information
Block) errors encountered in files on the disk unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
CER	Checksum ERrors. This is the count of checksum errors
encountered in files on the disk unit. A checksum error occurs when
the checksum field in a RIB pointer does not match the calculated
checksum of the first word pointed to by the RIB pointer.
.BREAK
.I -8
PHUNG	Position HUNG count. This is the count of the number of times
the disk unit "hung" during a positioning operation.
.BREAK
.I -8
THUNG	Transfer HUNG count. This is the count of the number of times
the disk unit "hung" during a transfer operation but the monitor
managed to recover (i.e., get the unit going again and complete the
transfer operation) by stopping the unit in transfer state.
.BREAK
.I -8
NTHUNG	Non-recoverable Transfer HUNG count. This is the count of the
number of times the disk unit "hung" during a transfer operation and
the monitor was unable to recover and complete the transfer.
.BREAK
.I -8
SHUNG	 Software HUNG count. This is the count of the number of times
the monitor itself got confused (e.g., disk unit and channel idle but
in transfer wait state) but noticed and recovered anyway.
.BREAK
.I -8
LBN	Logical Block Number. This is the logical block number
(within the disk unit) for which the last error occurred.
.BREAK
.I -8
1CONI	This is the disk unit status (CONI) after the last initial
error occurred and before any recovery was attempted.
.BREAK
.I -8
2CONI	This is the disk unit status (CONI) after the last soft error
recovery or hard error fatality.
.BREAK
.I -8
1DATAI	This is the disk unit status (DATAI) after the last initial
error occurred and before and recovery was attempted.
.BREAK
.I -8
2DATAI	This is the disk unit status (DATAI) after the last soft error
recovery or hard error fatality.
.BREAK
.I -8
.LM 0
.SKIP 2
.AUTOP

After all file structures have been listed a summary is given
of the swapping units as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Swap Unit	As in the "Unit or F/S" column above this column
identifies both the physical and logical disk unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
SR	The total count of swap reads (in blocks) for this unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
SW	The total count of swap writes (in blocks) for this unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
PR	The total count of pageing reads (in blocks) for this unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
PW	The total count of pageing writes (in blocks) for this unit.
.BREAK
.I -8
Used (P)	The amount of space currently in use on the
swapping unit and the total swapping space available on that
unit (separated by a "/"). Note that this includes any dormant
high segments residing on that unit (which is not included in
the SWP field of the "N" display). This field is left blank
for alternate ports as, like the free count above, the space
used is dependent on the pack itself and not on the ports.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Finally, if there have been any swapping I/O errors a line is printed
summarizing the errors:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Swap errors	The total number of swap I/O errors.
.BREAK
.I -8
CHK	At least one checksum error occured.
.BREAK
.I -8
DEV	At least one device error occured. 
.BREAK
.I -8
DAT	At least one data error occured.
.BREAK
.I -8
Lost	Total swapping space lost due to I/O errors.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL K Display - CI network information
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "K" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
CI Status of RL226A DEC10 Development 21-Aug-85 17:01:27 UP:05:00:45

Open Paths:
CI Node  00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15
CPU0     --                   AB          AB
CPU1     AB                   AB          --

Packet counts:
            XMT   Avg/sec       RCV   Avg/sec  Discarded     Node
CPU0     107498     5.96     248884    13.79           0      ALL
CPU1     113200     6.27     158556     8.79           1      ALL

Statistics:
          A ACK     A NAK     A NRS     B ACK     B NAK     B NRS
CPU0      52208        46      9297     51641         6      9502
CPU1      54900        69     35744     45219        58     35655

Errors:
CPU0  CRC:37
CPU1  CRC:69
.END LITERAL
.AUTOP
.SKIP 2
The CI network display is broken into several columnar sub-displays,
each replicated once per CI (or KLIPA) channel per CPU.

First is the basic CI topology under the heading "Open Paths:". There
is a column for each of the 16 possible CI node addresses. Each CPU
or CI channel is then displayed. A "--" indicates that the specified
CPU or channel is assigned to that CI node address. An "A" or "B"
indicates which of the two redundant CI paths to a node are usable.

Second is the display of traffic counters under the heading "Packet#counts:"
with the following columns (again replicated once per CPU or channel):
.SKIP
.NOAUTOP
.LM 8
.I -8
XMT	The "XMT" column shows the number of CI packets (datagrams or messages)
transmitted on that CPU or channel.
.BREAK
.I -8
Avg/sec	This column then displays the preceding "XMT" count as a
"per second" statistic (i.e., average packets per second transmitted).
.BREAK
.I -8
RCV	The "RCV" column shows the number of CI packets (datagrams or messages)
received by the CPU or channel.
.BREAK
.I -8
Avg/sec	This column then displays the preceding "RCV" count as a
"per second" statistic (i.e., average packets per second received).
.BREAK
.I -8
Discarded###The "Discarded" column shows the number of datagrams
that were discarded for the specified CPU or channel because the software
did not supply enough receive buffers.
.BREAK
.I -8
Node	The "Node" column shows the CI node(s) for which the port is
recording traffic information.
The default is all nodes unless changed by the
"CICTRS" utility.
.LM 0
.SKIP
.AUTOP
Next is a display of packet ACKing information under the heading
"Statistics:". The displayed statistics are:
.LM 8
.SKIP
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
A#ACK	The "A#ACK" column shows the number of packets which were
acknowledged by the remote node (successfully transmitted) on CI path A.
.BREAK
.I -8
A#NAK	The "A#NAK" column shows the number of packets for which transmission
failed on CI path A because the remote node returned a negative acknowledgement.
.BREAK
.I -8
A#NRS	The "A#NRS" column shows the number of packets for which transmission
failed on CI path A because the remote node did not respond
with an acknowledgement in a
sufficient amount of time.
.BREAK
.I -8
B#ACK	The "B#ACK" column shows the number of packets which were
acknowledged by the remote node (successfully transmitted) on CI path B.
.BREAK
.I -8
B#NAK	The "B#NAK" column shows the number of packets for which transmission
failed on CI path B because the remote node returned a negative acknowledgement.
.BREAK
.I -8
B#NRS	The "B#NRS" column shows the number of packets for which transmission
failed on CI path B because the remote node did not respond
with an acknowledgement in a
sufficient amount of time.
.LM 0
.AUTOP
.SKIP
Finally, a list of error counts is displayed under the heading "Errors:"
for each CPU or channel.The types of error are:
.LM 8
.SKIP
.I -8
CRC	CRC checksum errors detected in received packets
.BREAK
.I -8
MVR#PAR	Parity errors detected by the "data mover"
.BREAK
.I -8
CBUS#PAR###CBUS parity errors
.BREAK
.I -8
REG#PLIPE###Register parity errors
.BREAK
.I -8
DATA#PLIPE###Data parity errors
.BREAK
.I -8
CHN	Errors detected by the KL-10 internal channel interface
.BREAK
.I -8
EBUS#PAR###EBUS parity errors
.BREAK
.I -8
SPR#CHN	Spurious channel errors
.BREAK
.I -8
CBUS#AVL#TMO###CBUS timeout ("busy-too-long") errors
.BREAK
.I -8
SPR#RCV#ATTN###Spurious receive attention interrupts
.BREAK
.I -8
SPR#XMT#ATTN###Spurious transmit attention interrupts
.BREAK
.I -8
XMT#BFR#PAR###Parity errors detected in the transmit buffer
.BREAK
.I -8
XMT#TMO	Packet transmission timeouts
.LM 0
.SUBTTL M display - job and memory statistics
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "M" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
This is RN212A DEC10 TRISMP 04-Jun-85 13:17:35 (+) UP:00:10.98
VM(MAX=37862,USED=2394) PGR.USER=10.0 PFC:NIW=3194 IW=24484
Job  Who  Where What     Virtual          Physical       PGR   State Runtime
15 10,701  117 DTECO  83+35(511)       83+35+5(511)      0.00  TI    00:00.03
16 [OPR]  D424 LPTSPL 46+39(512)       25+39+4(512)      0.55  HB V  00:00.00
17 10,6016 114 SEARCH 2+12(511)        2+12+4(511)       0.00  ^C    00:01.10
18 [OPR]   J4  FAL    139+39(512)      139+39+3(512)     0.00  HS    00:00.00
19 [OPR]  D424 NML    40+128(512)      26+128+3(512)     8.81  HB V  00:00.00
20 [OPR]  D424 NETMAI 43+11(512)       43+11+4(512)      0.00  ED    00:00.00
21 [OPR]   31  OPR    55+39(512)       55+39+3(512)      6.77  HB    00:00.00
22 [OPR]  D424 PSTHRU 4+7(512)         4+7+3(512)        0.00  HB S  00:00.00
23 [OPR]  D424 MIC    2+16(512)        2+16+3(512)       0.00  HS    00:00.00
24 [OPR]  D424 MIC    2+15(512)        2+15+4(512)       0.00  HS#   00:00.00
25 30,5570 120 DIRECT 6+47(1024)       6+47+5(512)       0.00  ^C    00:00.00
26 [OPR]  D424 DTELDR 6+8(512)         6+8+3(512)        0.00  HS    00:00.00
27 [OPR]   J4  FAL    143+39(512)      143+39+3(512)     0.00  HS    00:00.00
28 10,6026 124 RL211A 229+272(2000)    229+272+4(1000)   0.00  ^C S  00:00.00
29 [SELF]  123 MS     240+80(10000)    240+80+6(1000)    0.00  HB S  00:00.00
30 [SELF]  126 SYSANS 18+0(10000)      18+0+6(1000)      0.00  RN+   00:00.31
31 30,6003 125 D6TQ3  80+0(511)        80+0+4(511)       0.00  ^C S  00:00.00
32 10,6026 127 DIP    5+27(2000)       5+27+5(1000)      0.00  ^C S  00:00.00
33 30,5730 32  DTECO  2015+35(16384)   415+35+5(512)   117.78  TINV  00:00.06
34 10,6062 121 DIRECT 14+47(511)       14+47+5(511)      0.00  ^C S  00:00.00
35 10,701  J13 MACRO  132+25(511)      132+25+5(511)     0.00  RN    00:04.08
.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2

The first line is the standard SYSDPY "ID" line, containing the name
of the system (preceded by the header "This is"), the current date
and time, and finally the system uptime.

The second line summarizes general virtual memory usage as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
VM	System-wide virtual memory usage as follows:
.BREAK
.LM 16
.I -8
MAX	The amount of virtual memory still available for all users
(i.e., total swapping space available minus the amount of virtual
memory currently being used).
.BREAK
.I -8
USED	The amount of virtual memory currently in use by all jobs.
.BREAK
.LM 8
.I -8
PGR.USER	The total system-wide paging rate for all users.
.BREAK
.I -8
PFC	Page Fault Class. This is the class of page fault which
caused paging operations.
.BREAK
.LM 16
.I -8
NIW	Not In Working set. This class of page fault occurs for
pages which are not in the job's working set, i.e., those pages
which are paged out to the swapping media (this includes allocated
but zero pages).
.BREAK
.I -8
IW	In Working set. This class of page faults occurs for pages
which are in the job's working set but which have access allowed
turned off, i.e., those pages which do not require being read in
from the swapping space.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

The remainder of the screen is devoted to job display.

The "Job", "Who", "Where", "What", "State", and "Runtime" columns
are the same as for the "N" display.

The memory statistics are broken down into two major columns
(each with several fields) to describe the job's virtual and
physical (working set) memory usage as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Virtual	This column first lists the job's low segment virtual
size, followed by the job's high segment virtual size,
followed by the job's virtual memory limit (enclosed in parenthesis).
.I -8
Physical	This column lists first the job's low segment physical
size, followed by the job's high segment physical size, followed by
the job's "monitor's per-process" size (which includes the job's page
map ("UPT") and section maps,
disk DDBs, TMPCOR, pathological name definitions, and so on), and
finally the job's physical memory limit (enclosed in parenthesis).
The first three fields comprise the job's working set (but note that the
"per process" pages are not counted against the job's physical limit).
.LM 0
.SUBTTL N display - job and system statistics
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "N" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
Job  Who  Where What  #P State Runtime  This is RL366A DEC10 Development
16 10,6016 114 STECO  100 RN   00:00.80 02-Aug-88 11:13:49 UP:01:04:29
17 [OPR]   J4  FAL    181 HS S 00:00.00  (+) ID OV LS  UPTIME   CTX UUO DBL CSH
18 [OPR]  D424 NML    157 HB V 00:00.00 CPU0  0 47  0 00:11.36   11 139   0  12
19 [OPR]  D424 MX     185 ED   00:00.00 CPU1  0 16  0 00:11.35    4  54   0   4
20 [OPR]   31  OPR    96 HB S  00:00.00 CPU2 (Not Running)
21 [OPR]  D424 PSTHRU 14 HB S  00:00.00      DSKI DSKO SWPI SWPO MTAI MTAO
22 [OPR]  D424 MIC    21 HS    00:00.00 CPU0  103   21  260   58    0    0
23 [OPR]  D424 MIC    21 HS#   00:00.00 CPU1   47    0   78  317  144    0
24 30,5570 120 NETWOR 28 ^C S  00:00.00 ANF In:167  Out:787  Cor:2603
25 [OPR]  D424 DTELDR 17 HS    00:00.00 DCN In:248  Out:199  Blk:10/80=13%
26 [OPR]   J4  FAL    185 HS   00:00.00 ETH In:1178 Out:151  Dgm:12/2
27 10,6026 124 RL366A 505 ^C S 00:00.00 TTY In:6    Out:498  Cnk:1775/2660=67%
28 [SELF]  123 MS     326 HB   00:00.00 IPCF S:0    Out:3    W/P:0/0
29 [SELF]  126 SYSANS 24 RN+   00:00.20 Mem:512/1965 Shr:550 JRN:5/5/32
30 30,6003 125 D6TQ3  84 ^C S  00:00.00 Use:3052/4741 Swp:2756/39468 ASR:.24
31 10,6030 102 SED    65 HB    00:24.30 FRU:25568/70272=36.38%
32 10,6026 127 DIP    37 ^C S  00:00.00 KSYS:+1D10:45 HDE:19 POK:41/8
33 30,5730 32  DTECO 455 TINV  00:00.26 Job:39/100 Det:16
34 10,6062 121 DIRECT 66 ^C S  00:00.00 Struc  Mnt  Free    Struc  Mnt  Free
35 10,701  J13 MACRO  137 RN   00:04.88 BLKX   10  16905    RENG   2   142420
37 10,6062 132 DTECO  123 ^CNS 00:00.00 DSKA   12  7580     DSKP   3   205510
38 10,6036 4   STECO  171 RN   00:00.21 AP10   1   120165   DSKC   16  74240
52 [OPR]   115 SYSANS 19 HS+   00:00.25 BLKK   13  111930   DSKR   1   191120
53 [OPR]   116 OPR    96 HB S  00:00.00 DSKZ   0   554173   BLKY   8   101535
.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2

This display has two completely independent componets - a job display
(the left half of the screen) and the system display (the right half
of the screen). If "S" mode is in effect then the system display is
not shown (the job display is expanded to fill the screen).
.SKIP 2

The job display shows all the jobs in use, by whom, doing what, etc. The
job information displayed is as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Job	The job number.
.BREAK
.I -8
Who	The user account running in that job slot. Normally the
user ppn is listed. There are two special cases:
.SKIP
.LM 16
.I -8
[OPR]	The "user" is the privileged operator account (usually [1,2]).
.BREAK
.I -8
[SELF]	The "user" is running under the same account under which
SYSDPY is running.
.SKIP
.LM 8
.I -8
Where	The terminal which is controlling the job, if any. This field
has several possible representations:
.SKIP
.LM 16
.I -8
CTY	The terminal is the system CTY.
.BREAK
.I -8
DET	There is no terminal attached to that job. If the job has
PEEK or SPY privileges this will be expanded to include the terminal
to which the job was last attached.
.BREAK
.I -8
Dnn	There is no terminal currently attached to that job. The
job was last attached to TTYnn. This format requires PEEK or SPY
privileges.
.BREAK
.I -8
Jnn	The job is being controlled by job nn (i.e., the job is
attached to a PTY owned by job nn). This is the normal display for
a controlled job but it may be changed by the "_#" command to
display the PTY number instead.
.BREAK
.I -8
Pnn	The job is attached to PTYnn (i.e., the job is being controlled
by another job). The "_#" command may be used to display the
controlling job number instead.
.BREAK
.I -8
nn	The job is attached to TTYnn.
.SKIP
.LM 8
.I -8
What	The job's logical program name. Although usually the name of the
program last run by that job, the job may have issued a SETNAM
monitor call to change the program name.
.BREAK
.I -8
_#P	The total user working set size (including "monitor per process"
pages such as the page map).
.BREAK
.I -8
State	The state of the job. This column consists of the basic
state code (two letters and/or digits) plus
assorted flags. The basic state code (running, in I/O wait, etc.) is
shown first. Although nominally the state code names are the same as
the names of the actual monitor job queues some of the state names
are "SYSDPY Specials" which are intended to convey more information
about the job than just the job queue in which the job currently
resides:
.SKIP
.LM 16
.I -8
AU	Alter UFD (or SFD) wait. The AU "resource" is essentially
the monitor's file directory interlock. In order to change a file
directory (e.g., create or delete files) the job must have the
file directory interlock. The directory interlock is on a per
directory per structure basis. Note that this file directory
interlock is NOT the same as the STRUUO UFD interlock.
.BREAK
.I -8
CA	Core Allocation wait. The job is attempting to lock in
physically contiguous memory but must wait for the monitor to
move (swap) other jobs out of the way first.
.BREAK
.I -8
CB	Core Block wait. The CB "resource" is essentially the
monitor's file system interlock based on the monitor's file
system database in monitor free core - hence the name "Core Block".
Only one job may have the CB resource at any time, all other jobs
must queue up for it to become available.
.BREAK
.I -8
CX	ConteXt resource wait.
The CX "resource" interlocks PDB creation, deletion, and context
block scanning.  It is a job-wide resource which may be gotten
at UUO level or clock level by any job or CPU wishing to modify
a PDB or context block for another job.  In particular, the CX
resource sees the most use during job creation/destruction, IPCF
packet/page manipulations, and of course all command or UUO
context related operations.
.BREAK
.I -8
CW	Command Wait. Although the user program is still running
(i.e., it is not in _^C state) the user typed a command which is
still pending on the
job's controlling terminal. This is
a SYSDPY Special state, the job can be in any of the
queues except the ST queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
DA	Disk Allocation wait. The DA "resource" is essentially
the monitor's disk unit SAT (Storage Allocation Table) interlock.
Only one job may have the DA resource for any specific disk unit
at any time, all other jobs must queue up for it to become available.
.BREAK
.I -8
DC	Data Control wait.
.BREAK
.I -8
DI	Disk Input wait. The job is blocked waiting its turn to
read from a disk unit. This is a SYSDPY Special state which
requires PEEK or SPY privileges, the job is actually in the DI queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
DO	Disk Output wait. The job is blocked waiting its turn to
write to a disk unit. This is a SYSDPY Special state which
requires PEEK or SPY privileges, the job is actually in the DI queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
DS	Disk I/O wait Satisfied. Formerly in DI/DO/DW state, the job's
disk I/O request has been completed at disk interrupt level. The
job is waiting for the scheduler to requeue the job into the run
queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
DW	Disk I/O wait. The job is blocked waiting its turn to either
read or write form or to a disk unit. This is a SYSDPY Special
state, the job is actually in the DI queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
D1	DECtape controller number 1 wait. The job is waiting for
the first DECtape controller to become available for some sort of
I/O operation.
.BREAK
.I -8
D2	DECtape controller number 2 wait. The job is waiting for
for the second DECtape controller to become available for some sort
of I/O operation.
.BREAK
.I -8
E6	Event DN60 wait. The job is waiting for a DN60-class
front end operation to complete. This is a SYSDPY Special state,
the job is actually in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
EF	Event Front-end wait. The job is performing some sort of
operation involving a "front-end" processor and is waiting for
the operation to complete. This is a SYSDPY Special state, the
job is actually in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
EK	Event Kontroller wait. The job is requesting the monitor
to perform some magnetic tape operation which is blocked pending
the availability of the tape kontroller. This is a SYSDPY Special
state, the job is actually in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
EL	Event Label wait. The job is performing some sort of
magnetic tape operation which requires the intervention of the
tape label processor. This is a SYSDPY Special state, the job is
actually in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
EN	Event Network wait. The job is performing some sort of
operation with an ANF network device which is blocked pending completion.
This is a SYSPDY Special state, the job is actually in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
ER	Event Rewind wait. The job is waiting for a magnetic tape
rewind operation. This is a SYSDPY Special state, the job is actually
in the EW queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
ES	Event wait Satisfied. Formerly in some sort of event wait,
the job is now ready to run again, and is waiting for the monitor
to reschedule the job into the run queues. This is a SYSDPY Special
state, the job is actually in the EW queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
EV	EVM (Exec Virtual Memory) wait. The job is attempting some
(probably I/O) operation which requires some part of the job's
address space to be mapped into the monitor's address space,
(such as DECtape I/O). The job must wait until other jobs free up
sufficient EVM for the monitor to honor the job's request.
.BREAK
.I -8
EW	Event Wait. This wait state covers a wide
range of conditions, such as waiting for a magnetic tape to
rewind or a network task channel connection. This is sort of a
catch-all wait state for any type of wait condition which does not
deserve a monitor queue all to itself (such as the "DI/DO/DS"
state above).
.BREAK
.I -8
Hn	The job is in the run queue(s) and is running
in high priority run queue "n". This is a SYSDPY Special state, the
job is actually in the RN queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
HB	HiBernate. The job has suspended execution pending some sort of
external awakening condition, such as I/O completion or reception of
an IPCF packet (a HIBER with a zero (infinite) SLEEP time). This is
a SYSDPY Special state, the job is actually in the SL queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
HS	Hibernate with Sleep. The job has suspended execution
pending either some sort of external awakening condition or the
passage of a specified time interval (a HIBER with a non-zero SLEEP
time). This is a SYSDPY Special state, the job is actually in the
SL queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
IN	INput wait. The job is waiting for some sort of input
operation to complete. This is a SYSDPY Special state which requires
PEEK or SPY privileges, the job is actually in the IO queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
IO	I/O wait. The job is waiting for some sort of currently
active I/O operation to complete,
or possibly the monitor has stopped the job and is
waiting for the job's I/O to complete so the job can be swapped.
.BREAK
.I -8
JD	Job DAEMON wait. The job has issued a DAEMON
monitor call but DAEMON has not finished servicing the request yet.
.BREAK
.I -8
MM	Memory Management wait. The MM "resource" is essentially
the monitor's main memory interlock. A program must "own" the MM
resource before it can change its main memory image (e.g., allocate
more memory via a CORE or PAGE. monitor call). Only one job may
own the MM resource, all other jobs must queue up for it to become
available.
.BREAK
.I -8
NA	NAp. The job has temporarily suspended active execution
(SLEEP or HIBER) for a very short interval (less than one second).
.BREAK
.I -8
NU	NUll. The NU queue contains all the jobs which are not
in use. Since SYSDPY does not display jobs which are not in use
this state should never appear.
.BREAK
.I -8
OU	OUtput wait. The job is waiting for some sort of output
operation to complete. This is a SYSDPY special state which
requires PEEK or SPY privileges, the job is actually in the IO queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
OW	Operator Wait. The job is in a _^C state due to a device
error, and is waiting to be continued (by the operator). This is a
SYSDPY special state, the job is actually in the ST queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
PI	Paging I/O wait. The job has requested the monitor to
change the job's working set in a manner which requires either
reading or writing pages to or from the swapping space.
.BREAK
.I -8
PS	Paging I/O wait Satisfied. Formerly in PI state, the job's
paging I/O request has been completed at disk interrupt level. The
job is waiting for the scheduler to requeue the job into the run
queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
RU	RUN or GETSEG or MERGE in progress. The job is in the
process of performing a GET command, a GETSEG monitor call,
a MERGE command or monitor call, or a RUN (or R) command or monitor
call. This is a SYSDPY special state, the job can actually be
in one of several different job queues.
.BREAK
.I -8
RN	RuN. The job is in the run queue(s), either actively
running or awaiting its turn to run on some cpu.
.BREAK
.I -8
SL	SLeep. The job has temporarily suspended active execution
(SLEEP) for a fairly long (one second or more) interval.
This is a SYSDPY Special state, the job is actually in the SL
queue (see the "HS" state above).
.BREAK
.I -8
ST	STopped. The job is HALTed. The program may have executed
a HALT instruction or EXIT monitor call, the user may have manually
stopped the program (_^C or .HALT monitor command), or the monitor
may have stopped the program due to some error condition. SYSDPY
will never display this state but will attempt to SYSDPY Special
the state into _^C, _^W, OW, etc., states.
.BREAK
.I -8
TI	Terminal Input wait. The job is blocked waiting for input
from a terminal (usually the job's controlling or command terminal).
This is a SYSDPY Special state which requires PEEK or SPY privileges,
the job is actually in the TI queue (see the "TO" state below).
.BREAK
.I -8
TO	Terminal Output wait. The job is blocked waiting for terminal
output to complete (actually, since all terminal I/O is buffered
through the monitor the job is waiting for the terminal to accept
sufficient output that the monitor can finish copying the job's
terminal output into the monitor's internal buffers). This is a
SYSDPY Special state which requires PEEK or SPY privileges, the
job is actually in the TI queue (see the "TI" state above).
.BREAK
.I -8
TS	Terminal I/O wait Satisfied. Formerly in either TI or TO
state, the job's terminal I/O request has been completed at terminal
interrupt level. The job is waiting for the scheduler to requeue
the job into the run queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
TW	Terminal I/O Wait. The job is blocked waiting for terminal
input or output to complete. This is a SYSDPY Special state, the job
is actually in the TI queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
WS	Wait Satisfied. Formerly in an I/O wait state, the job's
I/O request has been completed at interrupt level. The
job is waiting for the scheduler to requeue the job into the run
queue(s).
.BREAK
.I -8
_^C	The job is HALTed and completely idle. This is a SYSDPY
Special state, the job is actually in the ST queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
_^D	The job is HALTed but a DAEMON request is being serviced for
the job (e.g., a "DCORE" command). This is a SYSDPY Special state,
the job is actually in the ST queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
_^W	The job is HALTed but waiting for a command to be processed
(such as an "E" command but the program is swapped out). This is a
SYSDPY Special state, the job is actually in the ST queue.
.BREAK
.I -8
nn	The job is in the run queue(s) and is running
in high priority run queue "nn". This is a SYSDPY Special state,
the job is actually in the RN queue(s).
.BREAK
.LM 8
.SKIP

After the basic job state is shown the following flags may appear:
.SKIP
.LM 16
.I -8
N	The job's high segment is a sharable high segment which comes
from the NEW: device (usually [1,5]).
.BREAK
.I -8
O	The job's high segment is a sharable high segment which comes
from the OLD: device (usually [1,3]).
.BREAK
.I -8
_#	The job's high segment is a sharable high segment which comes
from a non-system directory (i.e., neither OLD:, STD:, or NEW:).
.BREAK
.I -8
_@	The job's high segment has been obsoleted (i.e., the disk file
from which the high segment originated has been deleted or superceded).
.BREAK
.I -8
_+	The job's high segment is actually a SPY segment.
.BREAK
.I -8
_&	The job's low segment is locked in physical memory.
.BREAK
.I -8
S	The job's working set is swapped out to secondary storage.
.BREAK
.I -8
F	The job's working set is swapped out to secondary storage in
a non-contiguous fashion - i.e., the job's working set is swapped and
fragmented. If not preceded by an "S" (indicating a swapped working
set) then the working set is in main memory but the swapping copy
of the high segment is fragmented.
.BREAK
.I -8
V	The job is Virtual (i.e., the job's working set is only a
part of the job's total virtual memory image).
.BREAK
.LM 8
.I -8
.SKIP

Runtime	The job's program execution time in one of two forms: if
the runtime is at least one hour then
in the form hh:mm:ss (hours, minutes, and seconds); if the runtime
is less than an hour then in the form mm:ss.cc (minutes, seconds, and
hundredths). If the "%" command is in effect than the runtime
itself will be converted to a percentage of cpu figure instead of
a straight elapsed time value.
.BREAK
.I -8
Reads	The total disk reads (in blocks) performed by the job. This
column is available only in "S" mode.
.BREAK
.I -8
Writes	The total disk writes (in blocks) performed by the job. This
column is available only in "S" mode.
.BREAK
.I -8
User	The user name. This column is available only in "S" mode.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.SKIP 2
.AUTOP

The system display is as follows:

The first line identifies the name of the monitor currently running.

The second line lists the current date, time, and system uptime.

Next is the first of four per-cpu statistics blocks as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
ID	Idle time (percent). The idle time is the time during
which the cpu has no user job which wants to run.
.BREAK
.I -8
OV	Overhead time (percent). The overhead time is the time
spent doing monitor processing which cannot be readily attributed
to a specific job (e.g., scheduling jobs or servicing interrupts).
.BREAK
.I -8
LS	Lost time (percent). The lost time is the time that the
monitor wanted to run a user job but couldn't because (e.g.,) another
job had to be swapped out in order to make room to swap in the runnable
user job AND there were no other user jobs runnable in the interim.
.BREAK
.I -8
UPTIME	Uptime (either hh:mm:ss or mm:ss.cc). The cpu uptime is
how long the cpu has been running. Note that this figure is completely
independent of the system uptime.
.BREAK
.I -8
CTX	Context switches per second. A context switch is switching from
one user job to run another user job.
.BREAK
.I -8
UUO	Monitor calls per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
DBL	Cpu doorbells per second (multi-cpu systems only). A cpu
doorbell is a notification from another cpu that something has
happened which might have caused a job to become runnable on this
cpu. A doorbell counts only if the cpu is idle (i.e., running the
null job).
.BREAK
.I -8
CSH	Cache sweeps per second (KL-10 cpus only).
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Following the general cpu statistics block is a disk/tape I/O
statistics block. This block summarizes the total disk/tape I/O
which has passed through each cpu:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
DSKI	DiSK Inputs. This is the total number of disk blocks
read (other than swapping) per second by this cpu.
.BREAK
.I -8
DSKO	DiSK Outputs. This is the total number of disk blocks
written (other than swapping) per second by this cpu.
.BREAK
.I -8
SWPI	SWaP Inputs. This is the total number of disk blocks
read for swapping per second by this cpu.
.BREAK
.I -8
SWPO	SWaP Outputs. This is the total number of disk blocks
written for swapping per second by this cpu.
.BREAK
.I -8
MTAI	MagTApe Inputs. This is the total number of "blocks"
read for magtapes per second by this cpu. A "block" is defined
as 640 "frames" (i.e., typically how a disk block would be written
onto the tape by programs such as BACKUP).
.BREAK
.I -8
MTAO	MagTApe Outputs. This is the total number of "blocks"
written for magtapes per second by this cpu.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Following the cpu disk statistics block is the internal channel and PI
usage block. This block is available only on KL-10 processors, and
only if the monitor's "background performance analysis" facility is
turned on (PERF. function .PMBPN).

The first set of figures are the RH20 internal channel usages,
in percent (11. is eleven percent, 1.1 is one and one one-tenth
percent, .11 is eleven-hundredths of one percent).
These percentages represent the time that the RH20 has
data for the MBOX, as opposed to the time the RH20 is actually busy.
As such the values can vary widely (easily a factor of ten to one) for
a given RH20 usage - the heavier the system (MBOX) load (other RH20s,
cpu cache sweeps, etc.) the higher the channel percentages will be.

The second set of figures are the PI usages, again in percent (as
above). PI0 is a DTE20 cycle-stealing from the cpu,
and PI7 is the scheduler and friends.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

Following the cpu statistics blocks is the ANF network I/O count summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
In	ANF network bytes received and processed per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Out	ANF network bytes processed and transmitted per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Cor	Amount of monitor free core in use by NETSER.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

Following the ANF network I/O count summary is the DECnet I/O count summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
In	DECnet network bytes received and processed per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Out	DECnet network bytes processed and transmitted per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Blk	DECnet message-block usage in two fields - first is the current
number of message blocks in use, followed by the total available allotment
of message blocks. The percentage of blocks in use is then displayed.
.SKIP
It should be noted that the DECnet I/O count summary is not available on
KS/DECnet systems due to the way the monitor is structured. Only KL/DECnet
systems will display the DECnet I/O counts.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

After the DECnet I/O count summary comes the Ethernet summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
In	Ethernet bytes received and processed per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Out	Ethernet bytes transmitted per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Dgm	Ethernet "datagrams" received/transmitted per second.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

Next is a TTY I/O count summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
In	TTY characters received (typed by users, not MIC) per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Out	TTY characters output (by programs or echoed, includes fill) per second.
.BREAK
.I -8
Cnk	The number of TTY chunks in use, and the number of TTY chunks
available, then the percentage of chunks in use.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

Following the TTY I/O counts is an IPCF summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.I -8
S	The number of IPCF packets transferred per minute
.BREAK
.I -8
Out	The number of IPCF packets currently outstanding.
.BREAK
.I -8
W/P	The number of IPCF words/pages per minute for word-mode and
page-mode packets respectively.
.BREAK
.AUTOP
.LM 0

Next are the memory and job loading statistics:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Mem	The amount of physical system memory available for all users.
There are three fields: maximum single user (CORMAX); maximum for all
users combined (MAXMAX); and the maximum possible MAXMAX (PHYMAX),
i.e., the amount of memory for which the system is configured.
If all three values are the same, only CORMAX is typed. If MAXMAX
and PHYMAX are the same but CORMAX is different then only CORMAX
and MAXMAX are typed. If CORMAX and MAXMAX are the same but PHYMAX is
different (i.e., some memory is locked by user programs or is offline)
then only CORMAX and PHYMAX are typed (MAXMAX is left blank). If all
three are different then all three are typed.
.BREAK
.I -8
Shr	The amount of virtual memory saved by sharing high segments.
.BREAK
.I -8
JRN	The number of Jobs RuNning. There are three fields: the number
of running jobs (i.e., in the RN queue(s)), the number of jobs running or
I/O blocked (i.e., neither stopped nor one of SL or HB or TI or EW
states), and the number of jobs doing anything (i.e., not stopped).
.BREAK
.I -8
Use	The total user memory space used by all users. There are two
fields: working set user memory, and virtual user memory.
Only if the two are different are both fields typed.
.BREAK
.I -8
Swp	The total swapping space used. There are two fields: total user
space used by all jobs, and total space available to all jobs.
.BREAK
.I -8
ASR	Active Swapping Ratio. The ratio of total active user working set
memory space (active defined as second field of JRN above) to
MAXMAX (i.e., the ratio of how much active program memory is in use to how
much room is available for it in physical system memory).
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

The next line shows the amount of Monitor section 0 free core in use (in words),
total available free core and the percentage.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Next is a line of system shutdown timer, current scheduling, and
error counts as follows:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
KSYS	Time remaining until system shutdown, expressed in the form:
+-ddDhh:mm where "dd" is days, "hh" is hours, and "mm" is minutes.
The leading "+" indicates that the KSYS is set for a future time,
a "-" indicates that the KSYS timer has expired.
.BREAK
.I -8
HDE	Total hardware error count.
.BREAK
.I -8
STP	Stopcode count in two fields: job stopcodes; debug stopcodes.
.BREAK
.I -8
MPE	Total memory parity errors.
.BREAK
.I -8
RIB	Total file system RIB errors.
.BREAK
.I -8
POK	This field shows first the total number of POKE.'s performed
and second the job number of the last job to perform a POKE.
.BREAK
.I -8
SCH	Current SCHEDule value (see the DECsystem-10 Operating Systems
Command Manual under the SCHED command).
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Next is a job summary:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Jobs	Job totals in three fields: total jobs in use (expressed as number
of logged-in jobs "+" number of not-logged-in jobs); total timesharing
job capacity (LOGMAX); and total job capacity (JOBMAX). If LOGMAX and JOBMAX
are the same only one value is printed.
.BREAK
.I -8
Det	Total number of jobs running detached (logged in or not).
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Next, in as many columns as will fit (20 characters per column) is
listed the available disk file structures:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Struc	The name of the disk file structure
.BREAK
.I -8
Mnt	The structure mount count
.BREAK
.I -8
Free	The total disk blocks free for that structure.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

Finally the rest of the system display is devoted to I/O devices
in use in as many columns as will fit across the screen (at 13 characters
per column). Disks are not shown; magtape label dummy DDBs are not
shown; and job command terminals are not shown:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Dev	The name of the device in use.
.BREAK
.I -8
By	The job number which owns the device.
.BREAK
.I -8
How	"A" if assigned to job; "I" if OPENed (or INITed) for I/O.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL T display - network topology and message numbers
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "T" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
ANF Topology for RW340A KL10 SYS#1279 01-Mar-79 04:13:41 UP:29:33:39
 Node       Neighbors                   OPR  CTL  LAR  LAP  LMS  LMA  LMR  LMP
KL1279(10)    3,  2,                    72        0    0    0    0    0    0
KL1026(26)   27,                                  15   15   15   15   15   15
CYNIC(66)    76,                                  3    3    3    3    3    3
KS4101(76)   66, 27,                              11   11   15   15   245  245
CTCH22(22)   27,                                  3    3    3    3    3    3
NEXT(27)     26, 22,  2, 76,                      3    3    3    3    4    4
RSX45(53)                                         2    2    2    2    7    7
DS401B(2)    10, 27,                              101  101  101  101  211  211
DN87CP(3)    10, 53,                              110  110  110  110  180  180
.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2

The first line is the standard SYSDPY "ID" line, containing the name
of the system (preceded by the header "This is"), the current date
and time, and finally the system uptime.

Following are the nodes currently up in the ANF network:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
Node	The name of the node, and the node number in parenthesis.
.BREAK
.I -8
Neighbors	The numbers of that node's immediate neighbors. If the node
is listed without any neighbors then it is a "sequential" node such
as a DN92 or an RSX-11M/DECnet node linked to the ANF network through
a DECnet compatible port.
.BREAK
.I -8
OPR	The TTY line number of the node's OPR terminal.
.BREAK
.I -8
CTL	The job number doing station ConTroL.
.BREAK
.I -8
LAR	Last ACK Received (NCL message number).
.BREAK
.I -8
LAP	Last ACK Processed (NCL message number).
.BREAK
.I -8
LMS	Last Message Sent (NCL message number).
.BREAK
.I -8
LMA	Last Message ACKed (NCL message number).
.BREAK
.I -8
LMR	Last Message Received (NCL message number).
.BREAK
.I -8
LMP	Last Message Processed (NCL message number).
.LM 0
.SUBTTL _\ display - network statistics
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "_\" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
ANF Statistics for RW340A KL10 SYS#1279 01-Mar-79 04:13:53 UP:00:33:51
NTCOR= 3500    NTMAX=  4176    NTBAD=  5
Unnumbered CTL  XMIT'ed  RECV'ed       Numbered CTL    XMIT'ed  RECV'ed
0 DAP/DATA      17637    14628         1 CONNECT       38       26
1 ACK           7707     5417          2 DISCONNECT    5        17
2 NAK           5        0             3 NEIGHBORS     8        8
3 REP           0        5             4 REQ CONFIG    8        7
4 START         6        3             5 CONFIG        7        14
5 STACK         3        5             6 DATA REQUEST  8        8425
6 NODE ID       2        2             7 STATION CTL   0        0
XMIT'ed=25360 Average=12.48/sec           RECV'ed=20060 Average=9.87/sec
 2**N  0%   20%  40%  60%  80%  99%     2**N  0%   20%  40%  60%  80%  99%
1 00%                                  1 00%
2 01%  *                               2 25%  *******
3 34%  *********                       3 68%  *****************
4 05%  **                              4 04%  *
5 01%  *                               5 01%  *
6 02%  *                               6 00%
7 25%  *******                         7 00%
8 00%                                  8 00%
9 29%  ********                        9 00%

.END LITERAL
.SKIP 2

The first line is the standard SYSDPY "ID" line, containing the name
of the system (preceded by the header "This is"), the current date
and time, and finally the system uptime.

The second line is general network values:
.SKIP
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.I -8
NTCOR	Total monitor free core in use by NETSER.
.BREAK
.I -8
NTMAX	Maximum-so-far value of NTCOR.
.BREAK
.I -8
NTBAD	Number of bad network messages received.
.BREAK
.LM 0
.AUTOP

The next portion of the display is devoted to the total number of
network messages received and transmitted, broken down by message
type. Note that the "Numbered CTL" messages are also counted in the
"Unnumbered CTL" DAP/DATA messages (they are the DAP messages). The
total number of data messages can be found by subtracting the total
Numbered CTL messages from the DAP/DATA Unnumbered CTL messages.

The next line summarizes total messages received and transmitted.

The last portion of the screen is a histogram of the data messages
received and transmitted, broken down as a function (log base 2) of
the data message size.

Note - This display does not scroll, and in particular, on terminals
with less than 20 (decimal) lines on the screen (e.g., VT50's)
the histogram is not displayed.
.LM 0
.SUBTTL Z Display - LAT service counters
.PAGE
.AUTOPARAGRAPH

Following is a sample of the SYSDPY "Z" display:
.SKIP
.LITERAL
LAT Status on RL226A DEC10 Development 21-Aug-85 17:01:21 UP:05:00:39
Server      Received     Xmitted  Re-Xmitted   Seq error     Ill msg    Ill slot

*LAT1(Software Eng. MRO1-2 Pole M14)
               1675        1765          13           0           0           0
*LAT9(MR01-2/L5)
              23900       28177          65          10           0           0
*LAT3(MRO1-2 LM18.5)
               2545        2646           8           0           0           0
 LAT21(MRO1-2 Pole P8)
               1095        1037           7         128           0           0
.END LITERAL
.AUTOP
.SKIP 2
The LAT display shows the names of all known LAT servers, and LAT protocol
statistics associated with each LAT server, as follows:
.LM 8
.NOAUTOP
.SKIP
.I -8
Server	The "Server" column displays first the name of the LAT server,
followed by the "location" string of the LAT server, enclosed in parenthesis.
If the specified LAT server is currently connected to the host, the name
is prefixed with a "*" character.
.BREAK
.I -8
Received###The "Received" column (starting the second line of display for
each LAT server) shows the count of LAT protocol messages received
by the host from
the specified LAT server.
.BREAK
.I -8
Xmitted	The "Xmitted" column shows the count of LAT protocol
messages transmitted
by the host to the specified LAT server.
.BREAK
.I -8
Re-Xmitted###This column shows the number of LAT protocol messages which
were re-transmitted to the specified LAT server.
.BREAK
.I -8
Seq#error###The "Seq#error" column show the number of LAT protocol
messages received out of order.
.BREAK
.I -8
Ill#msg	The "Ill#msg" column shows the number of "illegal" LAT protocol
messages received from the specified LAT server.
.BREAK
.I -8
Ill#slot###The "Ill#slot" column shows the number of LAT protocol
messages received from the specified LAT server but for a terminal
slot (or "connection") not in use.