1 /ATTRIBUTES
/ATTRIBUTES=(keyword[,...]) Specifies attributes to be associated with the new identifier. The following keywords are valid: DYNAMIC Allows unprivileged holders of the identifier to remove and to restore the identifier from the process rights list by using the DCL command SET RIGHTS_LIST. HOLDER_ Prevents people from getting a list of users who HIDDEN hold an identifier, unless they own the identifier themselves. NAME_HIDDEN Allows holders of an identifier to have it translated, either from binary to ASCII or from ASCII to binary, but prevents unauthorized users from translating the identifier. NOACCESS Makes any access rights of the identifier null and void. If a user is granted an identifier with the No Access attribute, that identifier has no effect on the user's access rights to objects. This attribute is a modifier for an identifier with the Resource or Subsystem attribute. RESOURCE Allows holders of an identifier to charge disk space to the identifier. Used only for file objects. SUBSYSTEM Allows holders of the identifier to create and maintain protected subsystems by assigning the Subsystem ACE to the application images in the subsystem. Used only for file objects. By default, none of these attributes is associated with the new identifier.
2 /USER
/USER=user-spec Scans the UAF record for the specified user and creates the corresponding identifier. Specify user-spec by user name or UIC. You can use the asterisk wildcard to specify multiple user names or UICs. Full use of the asterisk and percent wildcards is permitted for user names; UICs must be in the form [*,*], [n,*], [*,n], or [n,n]. A wildcard user name specification (*) creates identifiers alphabetically by user name; a wildcard UIC specification ([*,*]) creates them in numerical order by UIC.
3 /VALUE
/VALUE=value-specifier Specifies the value to be attached to the identifier. The following formats are valid for the value-specifier: IDENTIFIER:n An integer value in the range of 65,536 to 268,435,455. You can also specify the value in hexadecimal (precede the value with %X) or octal (precede the value with %O). The system displays this type of identifier in hexadecimal. To differentiate general identifiers from UIC identifiers, the system adds %X80000000 to the value you specify. GID:n GID is the POSIX group identifier. It is an integer value in the range 0 to 16,777,215 (%XFFFFFF). The system will add %XA400.0000 to the value you specify and then enter this new value into the system RIGHTSLIST as an identifier. UIC:uic A UIC value in standard UIC format consists of a member name and, optionally, a group name enclosed in brackets. For example, [360,031]. In numeric UICs, the group number is an octal number in the range of 1 to 37776; the member number is an octal number in the range of 0 to 177776. You can omit leading zeros when you are specifying group and member numbers. Regardless of the UIC format you use, the system translates a UIC to a 32-bit numeric value. Alphanumeric UICs are not allowed. Typically, system managers add identifiers as UIC values to represent system users; the system applies identifiers in integer format to system resources.