/PROCESS[=(process-spec)]
/NOPROCESS (default)
Used only when debugging multiprocess programs (kept debugger
only). Controls whether the specified display is process specific
(that is, whether the specified display is associated only with a
particular process). The contents of a process-specific display
are generated and modified in the context of that process. You
can make any display process specific, except the PROMPT display.
The /PROCESS=(process-spec) qualifier causes the specified
display to be associated with the specified process. You must
include the parentheses. Use any of the following process-spec
forms:
[%PROCESS_NAME] proc- The process name, if that name contains
name no space or lowercase characters. The
process name can include the asterisk
(*) wildcard character.
[%PROCESS_NAME] "proc- The process name, if that name contains
name" space or lowercase characters. You can
also use apostrophes (') instead of
quotation marks (").
%PROCESS_PID proc-id The process identifier (PID, a
hexadecimal number).
%PROCESS_NUMBER proc- The number assigned to a process when
number it comes under debugger control.
(or %PROC proc-number) Process numbers appear in a SHOW
PROCESS display.
proc-group-name A symbol defined with the
DEFINE/PROCESS_GROUP command to
represent a group of processes. Do not
specify a recursive symbol definition.
%NEXT_PROCESS The process after the visible process
in the debugger's circular process
list.
%PREVIOUS_PROCESS The process previous to the visible
process in the debugger's circular
process list.
%VISIBLE_PROCESS The process whose call stack, register
set, and images are the current context
for looking up symbols, register
values, routine calls, breakpoints,
and so on.
The /PROCESS qualifier causes the specified display to be
associated with the process that was the visible process when
the DISPLAY/PROCESS command was executed.
The /NOPROCESS qualifier (which is the default) causes the
specified display to be associated with the visible process,
which might change during program execution.
If you do not specify /PROCESS, the current process-specific
behavior (if any) of the specified display remains unchanged.