NETMGR@NSSDCA.GSFC.NASA.GOV (SPAN Network Info Center 286-7251, 301) (08/05/88)
From: NCF::SYSTEM 3-AUG-1988 20:34 To: POSTMASTER Subj: Mail error notification Erros found during delivery: %MAIL-E-SYNTAX, error parsing '<"Newcomer, Don" <NEWCOMER%DICKINSN.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>>' No recipient specified in mail message. *** Original message follows: *** Received: by nssdca id <20E01A2D031@nssdca.GSFC.NASA.GOV> ; Wed, 3 Aug 88 20:34:02 EST Date: Wed, 3 Aug 88 20:28:01 EST From: postmaster@nssdca.GSFC.NASA.GOV Subject: Location Of a Running Program... To: (<"Newcomer, Don" <NEWCOMER%DICKINSN.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>>) X-VMS-Mail-To: EXOS!<"Newcomer, Don" <NEWCOMER%DICKINSN.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>> Message-ID: <880803202801.20E01A2D031@nssdca.GSFC.NASA.GOV> *** VMS error in delivery mail, error message follows *** EXOS Mail server: delivery error: %MAIL-E-OPENOUT, error opening $1$DUA3:[DECNET]MAIL.TXT; as output EXOS Mail server: delivery error: -RMS-E-CRE, ACP file create failedDUA3:[DECNET]MAIL.TXT; as output EXOS Mail server: delivery error: -SYSTEM-F-EXDISKQUOTA, disk quota exceededCNET]MAIL.TXT; as output EXOS Mail server: delivery error: %MAIL-E-OPENOUT, error opening $1$DUA3:[DECNET]MAIL.TXT; as output -RMS-E-CRE, ACP file create failed -SYSTEM-F-EXDISKQUOTA, disk quota exceeded *** Original message follows *** From : "Newcomer, Don" <NEWCOMER%DICKINSN.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU> Subject: Location Of a Running Program... Return-path: <@GIZMO.SRI.COM,@KL.SRI.COM:info-vax-RELAY@KL.SRI.COM> Received: from GIZMO.SRI.COM by nssdca.GSFC.NASA.GOV id 20E01A28002 ; Wed, 3 Aug 88 20:27:21 EST Received: From KL.SRI.COM by CRVAX.SRI.COM with TCP; Wed, 3 AUG 88 06:37:33 PDT Received: from CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU by KL.SRI.COM with TCP; Fri, 15 Jul 88 10:08:27 PDT Received: from DICKINSN.Bitnet by CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU (IBM VM SMTP R1.1) with BSMTP id 1780; Fri, 15 Jul 88 12:59:59 EDT Date: Fri, 15 Jul 88 13:00:31 est To: CS117030@YUSOL.BITNET, info-vax@kl.sri.com CS117030@YUSOL.BITNET writes: > I would like to know if there is any way that you could find > the location of a running program on the disk, because i would > like to put this code in a high level language program, and when > I run the program, it should give me the location where the > actual program is been stored, regardless of my default location. Using SYS$GETJPI and the item JPI$_IMAGNAME will give you the full name of the image being executed by any process. That should do just what you want. Don Newcomer Dickinson College Carlisle PA USA NEWCOMER@DICKINSN.BITNET