Pathway Application Programming I (COBOL) Training in New Zealand

  • Learn via: Classroom
  • Duration: 5 Days
  • Level: Fundamentals
  • Price: From €4,550+VAT
We can host this training at your preferred location. Contact us!

Acquire the skills you need to develop Pathway applications quickly and efficiently. Through classroom discussion and hands-on programming exercises with an HP NonStop™ server, you will advance your application programming skills in the Pathway environment. You will have the choice of performing lab exercises using either the Enscribe or the NonStop SQL/MP database. After completing this 5-day course, you will understand how Pathway applications utilize the features of the system architecture and operating system, and you will be able to apply what you have learned to your own application programs.

  • Concepts and Facilities course
  • Six months of COBOL programming experience

Recommended:

  • Knowledge of ANSI-standard SQL, if you plan to perform the NonStop SQL labs


Audience

  • Application programmers who will be developing applications using the Pathway product.

Pathway introduction · Online transaction processing (OLTP) in the NonStop server environment

  • Requester-server approach to online transaction processing
  • Pathway application and its role in online transaction processing
  • Components of a Pathway environment
  • Starting PATHMON and PATHCOM
  • Client/server options available in the Pathway environment

Pathway configuration and operation

  • Starting PATHMON and PATHCOM
  • Difference between global and object-specific configuration parameters
  • Configuring global and object-specific parameters
  • Cold starting and cool starting a Pathway system
  • Starting the Pathway objects individually
  • Monitoring and maintaining a Pathway system
  • Shutting down a Pathway system
  • Capturing the configuration specifications for the current Pathway environment

Lab Exercise (30 minutes):

  • Establish your individual lab environment and practice starting and shutting down a Pathway application environment

Lab Exercise (1 hour):

  • Create, start, and exit from a Pathway application environment
  • Configure Pathway TCP, TERM, PROGRAM, and SERVER objects
  • Display Pathway object attributes and information
  • Shut down a Pathway application environment

Lab Exercise (1 hour):

  • Manage and monitor a Pathway application environment
  • Capture the current Pathway configuration parameters

SCREEN COBOL requesters · Steps a programmer performs to develop a SCREEN COBOL requester

  • Several functions of SCREEN COBOL
  • Similarities and differences between SCREEN COBOL and COBOL
  • Components of a basic SCREEN COBOL program
  • Writing basic SCREEN COBOL statements to display and accept data
  • Writing basic SCREEN COBOL statements to communicate with other requester programs
  • Using the SCREEN COBOL Utility Program (SCUP) to maintain pseudo-object libraries

Lab Exercise (1 hour):

  • Lay out and use a SCREEN COBOL screen
  • Define fields and attributes that make up a SCREEN COBOL screen additional SCREEN COBOL topics
  • Writing basic SCREEN COBOL statements to communicate with server programs
  • Coding SCREEN COBOL verbs to enhance screen displays
  • Basic functions of TM/MP (Transaction Monitoring Facility, TMF) software
  • Writing SCREEN COBOL statements for a requester to operate in a TM/MP environment
  • Defining and using overlay screens in SCREEN COBOL

Lab Exercise (1.5 hours):

  • Code SCREEN COBOL requester programs
  • Code ACCEPT, PERFORM ONE, and CALL statements

Inspect debugging · Basic syntax and use of common Inspect commands used to debug programs

  • Necessary steps to debug a stand-alone process
  • Necessary steps to debug a SCREEN COBOL requester
  • Necessary steps to debug a Pathway server

Lab Exercise (2 hours):

  • Gain experience in enabling a database to be protected by the TM/MP facility
  • Demonstrate the difference between audited and nonaudited databases

Lab Exercise (2 hours):

  • Code overlay screens

server fundamentals · Basic function of a server

  • Function of $RECEIVE in interprocess communication
  • Steps that make up the basic structure of a server program
  • Coding the COBOL85 server program to use $RECEIVE properly
  • How server programs can utilize the enhanced capabilities of the D.xx versions of the NonStop Kernel operating system
  • Why servers should be context-free
  • Problems that can occur when servers have concurrent access to a database

Lab Exercise (1 hour):

  • Code a Pathway server to use $RECEIVE

Lab Exercise (1 hour):

  • Establish an Inspect session in a Pathway application environment
  • Use Inspect to examine the message passed between a requester and server in the Pathway application environment server programs—Enscribe database access
  • Coding SELECT statements to associate logical file names to physical file names
  • Coding statements to open the database files in the correct mode for server access
  • Using the NonStop server extension to solve positioning problems
  • Coding file access statements to read, update, and delete database records
  • Locking implications when accessing Enscribe files
  • Establishing a Declaratives Section in a server to handle I/O errors
  • Compiling a server program that accesses Enscribe files server programs—NonStop SQL/MP database access
  • Identifying and defining a host variable
  • Coding an SQL/MP SELECT statement that accesses a single row of a NonStop SQL table
  • Writing a variety of Data Manipulation Language (DML) statements to insert, update, and delete records in an SQL/MP database
  • Operation of a cursor
  • Constructing a series of statements that use a cursor
  • Writing statements to report SQL/MP run-time errors
  • Process used to compile a COBOL85 program with embedded SQL/MP statements
  • Writing statements to compile a COBOL85 server program that accesses a NonStop SQL/MP database

Lab Exercise (1.5 hours):

  • Code simple server programs to access an Enscribe or SQL/MP database
  • Code a variety of statements and then compile and test your server program

Lab Exercise (2 hours):

  • Code slightly more advanced statements to access an Enscribe or NonStop SQL/MP database to include the insertion of new information based on screen input

Lab Exercise (5 hours)—Optional:

  • Put into practice some of the advanced concepts learned about SCREEN COBOL

Lab Exercise (3 hours)—Optional:

  • Gain a complete picture of a Pathway requester server pair
  • Design and build copy libraries, the DDL source, and a simple database


Contact us for more detail about our trainings and for all other enquiries!

Upcoming Trainings

Join our public courses in our New Zealand facilities. Private class trainings will be organized at the location of your preference, according to your schedule.

Classroom / Virtual Classroom
08 August 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
17 August 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
16 August 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
26 August 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
03 September 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
07 September 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
16 September 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
€4,550 +VAT Book Now
Classroom / Virtual Classroom
23 September 2024
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
5 Days
Pathway Application Programming I (COBOL) Training Course in New Zealand

New Zealand is an island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean and it consists of two main islands and 700 smaller islands. Two main islands are the North Island and the South Island. The capital city of New Zealand is Wellington and the most popular city of the island country is Auckland. English, Māori and New Zealand Sign Language are the official languages of New Zealand. As of January 2022, the population of the country is about 5,138,120. 70% of the population are of European descent, 16.5% are indigenous Māori, 15.1% Asian and 8.1% non-Māori Pacific Islanders.

Since most of the country lies close to the coast, mild temperatures are observed year-round. January and February are the warmest months while July is the coldest month of the year. Fiordland, the first national park of New Zealand Tongariro

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