mount_point
Required.
Local device (and optional directory tree) on which to mount the
remote NFS file system. Specify this mount point as one of the
following:
DNFSn:
DNFSn:[dir.subdir]
DNFSn:[dir.subdir]file
where:
n Specifies the unit number. Specify a value from 0 to
9999. Specifying 0 causes the client to choose the next
available unit number. (It does not mount a device named
DNFS0:.)
[dir] Specifies the directory to mount
or (up to eight subdirectories in addition to the [000000]
[dir.subdir]ectory).
file Specifies the individual file to mount.
volume_label
Optional. Default: First 12 characters of the combined values
of the /HOST and /PATH qualifiers. The default label is a
combination of /HOST and /PATH with a dollar sign ($) separating
the two.
Specifies the Files-11 (ODS-2 or ODS-5) volume label to be
associated with the remote path name.
You can use this parameter to provide a unique volume label on
a system where there is a label conflict. The client does the
following:
o Accepts only the first 12 characters for all other entries.
o Applies volume_label only on the first mount of a particular
disk.
o Ignores volume_label with subsequent mounts on that disk.
HP recommends that if you use the SET FILE /STATISTICS command
on a file mounted with DNFS, do not include any colons (:) in the
volume_label.
logical_name
Optional. Default: None.
Specifies the logical name associated with the volume.
The client creates the following logical definitions, depending
on what you specify:
o If you mount DNFSn:[000000], the client defines the logical
name as DNFSn:
o If you mount DNFSn:[dir.dir], the client defines the logical
name as DNFSn:[dir.dir.] The extra dot allows for relative
directory specifications. If you issue the following command:
$ SET DEFAULT logical:[subdir]
The full default definition becomes:
DNFSn:[dir.dir.subdir]
The client places the logical name in the SYSTEM logical name
table, unless you specify the /GROUP or /SHARE qualifier. The
client deletes the logical name from the SYSTEM table when you
dismount the volume. The process must have SYSNAM privilege to
mount a system mount point. Without SYSNAM or GRPNAM privilege,
the user must specify /SHARE for a JOB mount. (See the /SHARE
qualifier for more information.)