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Cancels wakeup requests for a specified process, including wakeup requests scheduled with either the RUN command or the $SCHDWK system service.Requires one of the following:
- Ownership of the process
- GROUP privilege to cancel scheduled wakeup requests for processes in the same group but not owned by you
- WORLD privilege to cancel scheduled wakeup requests for any process in the system
CANCEL [[node-name::]process-name]
node-name::
The name of the node on which the specified process is running.You cannot specify a node name on a different OpenVMS Cluster system from the current process.
process-name
The name of the process for which wakeup requests are to be canceled. The process name can have up to 15 alphanumeric characters.The specified process must be in the same group as the current process.
The CANCEL command cancels scheduled wakeup requests for the specified process.The CANCEL command does not delete the specified process. If the process is executing an image when the CANCEL command is issued for it, the process hibernates instead of exiting after the image completes execution.
To delete a hibernating process for which wakeup requests have been canceled, use the STOP command. You can determine whether a subprocess has been deleted by entering the SHOW PROCESS command with the /SUBPROCESSES qualifier.
A local process name can look like a remote process name. Therefore, if you specify ATHENS::SMITH, the system checks for a process named ATHENS::SMITH on the local node before checking node ATHENS for a process named SMITH.
You also can use the /IDENTIFICATION=pid qualifier to specify a process name. If you use the /IDENTIFICATION qualifier and the process-name parameter together, the qualifier overrides the parameter. If you do not specify either the process-name parameter or the /IDENTIFICATION qualifier, the CANCEL command cancels scheduled wakeup requests for the current (that is, the issuing) process.
/IDENTIFICATION=pid
Identifies the process by its process identification (PID). You can omit leading zeros when you specify the PID.
#1 |
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$ CANCEL CALENDAR |
The CANCEL command in this example cancels a wakeup request for a process named CALENDAR (which continues to hibernate until it is deleted with the STOP command).
#2 |
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$ RUN/SCHEDULE=14:00 STATUS %RUN-S-PROC_ID, identification of created process is 0013012A . . . $ CANCEL/IDENTIFICATION=13012A |
The RUN command in this example creates a process to execute the image STATUS. The process hibernates and is scheduled to be awakened at 14:00. Before the process is awakened, the CANCEL command cancels the wakeup request.
#3 |
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$ RUN/PROCESS_NAME=LIBRA/INTERVAL=1:00 LIBRA %RUN-S-PROC_ID, identification of created process is 00130027 . . . $ CANCEL LIBRA $ STOP LIBRA |
The RUN command in this example creates a subprocess named LIBRA to execute the image LIBRA.EXE at hourly intervals.
Subsequently, the CANCEL command cancels the wakeup request. The process continues to exist, but in a state of hibernation, until the STOP command deletes it.
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