Server Express
Managing Application Server Licenses with AppTrack
Micro Focus®
Issue 2
Ocotber 1998
Copyright © 1998 Micro Focus Limited. All rights
reserved.
This document and the proprietary
marks and names used herein are protected by international law.
Micro Focus has made every effort to ensure that this book is correct and
accurate, but reserves the right to make changes without notice at its sole
discretion at any time. The software described in this document is supplied
under a license and may be used or copied only in accordance with the terms of
such license, and in particular any warranty of fitness of Micro Focus software
products for any particular purpose is expressly excluded and in no event will
Micro Focus be liable for any consequential loss.
Micro Focus® is a registered trademark, and AppTrack, Micro Focus
COBOL and Object COBOL and Server Express are trademarks of
Micro Focus Limited.
UNIX® is a registered trademark of X/Open Company Limited.
Copyright© 1998 Micro Focus
All Rights Reserved.
Preface
This book describes how to use AppTrack to install and maintain Application
Server Licenses.
Audience
This book is for:
- Programmers and system designers using Server Express to create COBOL
applications that are subsequently to be shipped to other UNIX systems
- Users of applications created with Server Express by a third-party (if no
license installation instructions have been provided)
It assumes you are familiar with the general concepts of business computing
and of using and administering UNIX systems.
Related Publications
- The documentation set supplied with Server Express.
Notations and Conventions
- Enter refers to the carriage return or Enter key. Where commands to
be typed are shown, the Enter key is not explicitly shown; it is treated as
implicit that Enter must be pressed at the end of the line.
- Keytops and menu choices are emboldened within the text.
- In some environments, you might notice that what appears on your screen
differs in minor ways (for example, version numbers) from that illustrated in
this book. This will not affect the operation of your software.
- The keys described in this book are not available in all environments. When
there is a reference to use of a key such as a status or function key, this
refers to the logical press and release of this key, rather than physical
keystroke. If your environment does not support the key given, please refer to
your accompanyingRelease Notes for the equivalent key.
- The term "window" refers to a delineated area on the screen,
normally smaller than the full screen. The term "Windows" refers to
Microsoft Windows 3.1 or later.
The notation used to describe the format of command lines is as follows:
- Words printed in italics are generic terms representing names to be devised
by you.
- Material enclosed in square brackets [ ] is optional.
- When material is enclosed in braces { }, you must choose from the options
within them. If there is only one option in the braces, the braces indicate
repetition.
- The ellipsis (. . .) follows { } or [ ] and means you can repeat the
material in the { } or [ ]. The number of repetitions allowed is unlimited
unless otherwise stated. If the ellipsis is used with [ ] the material can be
omitted altogether.
- If a command line does not fit across the page, it is continued on the next
line; the continuation line is indented.
- Command line options can be specified as /option or -option.