Path definitions relocate the files used for active management of the component.
A path definition has the following statements in the order given below:
Note: The symbolic name can be assigned a value later in the attribute definition indicating whether it should be retrieved or set by invoking the callable function.
The operating system identifiers are DOS, MacOS, OS2, UNIX, win16, and win32. This is case-insensitive. When the code provides the component instrumentation that connects to the Service Layer (SL), use the keyword direct-interface. Contrarily, if the SL starts the code at request time, specify the path name of the callable program.
Example: Path Definition
start path
name = "Performance Info Instrumentation Code"
win16 = "C:\\someplace\\wincode.dll"
os2 = direct-interface
dos = "C:\\someplace\\doscode.com"
unix = "/someplace/unixcode"
end path
Many path definitions may appear in the component definition; one for each callable function. The path name must be unique among all other path names in a component definition.
See the sample MIF (at the end of this chapter) for examples on the use of the symbols defined in the path definition.
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