VMS Help  —  RMU72  Show  Locks  Usage Notes
    o  To use the RMU Show Locks command for a database, you must
       have the OpenVMS WORLD privilege.

    o  When you specify a list of processes or lock identifiers, make
       sure the processes or locks are local to the node on which the
       RMU Show Locks command is issued.

    o  To display the complete list of locks in the OpenVMS locks
       database, do not specify the Mode=Blocking or Waiting
       qualifier. The volume of information from this report can
       be quite large.

    o  If you have entered an Oracle RMU command and there are no
       locks on your node, you receive the following message:

       %RMU-I-NOLOCKSOUT, No locks on this node with the specified
        qualifiers.

    o  When you use the RMU Show Locks command to display locks,
       the "requested" and "granted" modes of the given lock are
       displayed. The definitions for the two fields follow:

       -  Requested

          This is the mode for which the process has requested
          the lock. Valid modes are NL, CR, CW, PR, PW, and EX.
          This mode is not guaranteed to be granted; some locks
          are intentionally held in conflicting modes forever (for
          example, the "termination" lock).

       -  Granted

          This is the mode that the process was last granted for
          the lock. Valid modes are NL, CR, CW, PR, PW, and EX.
          Furthermore, if the lock has never been previously granted,
          the lock mode is displayed as NL mode.

       Lock Mode Compatibility shows the compatibility of requested
       and granted lock modes.

    Table 18 Lock Mode Compatibility

                           Mode of Currently Granted Locks

    Mode of
    Requested
    Lock       NL   CR   CW    PR   PW    EX

    NL         Yes  Yes  Yes   Yes  Yes   Yes
    CR         Yes  Yes  Yes   Yes  Yes   No
    CW         Yes  Yes  Yes   No   No    No
    PR         Yes  Yes  No    Yes  No    No
    PW         Yes  Yes  No    No   No    No
    EX         Yes  No   No    No   No    No
    __________________________________________________________________
    Key to Lock Modes

        NL-Null Lock
        CR-Concurrent Read
        CW-Concurrent Write
        PR-Protected Read
        PW-Protected Write
        EX-Exclusive Lock
        Yes-Locks compatible
        No-Locks not compatible

    o  If the "requested" and "granted" lock modes differ, then the
       lock requested is currently blocked on either the "wait" or
       "conversion" queue. If the modes are the same, then the lock
       has been granted.

    o  The OpenVMS distributed lock manager does not always
       update the requested lock mode. This means that potentially
       conflicting information can be displayed by the RMU Show Locks
       utility.

    o  The requested lock mode is updated only under the following
       situations:

       -  The lock request is for a remote resource.

       -  The lock request is a Nowait request.

       -  The lock request could not be granted due to a lock
          conflict (that is, it was canceled by the application or
          aborted due to lock timeout or deadlock).

       -  The lock request is the first for the resource.

    o  Consider the following RMU Show Locks output:

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 Resource Name: page 533
 Granted Lock Count: 1,  Parent Lock ID: 01000B6C,   Lock Access Mode:
 Executive,
 Resource Type:
       Global,  Lock Value Block: 03000000 00000000 00000000 00000002

   -Master Node Info-  --Lock Mode Information--     -Remote Node Info-
 ProcessID Lock ID  SystemID Requested Granted Queue  Lock ID SystemID
 2040021E  0400136A  00010002  EX      CR      GRANT  0400136A 00010002
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------

       In this example, it is ordinarily difficult to explain how
       such a combination of lock modes could occur. Note that the
       CR (concurrent read) mode is on the Grant queue (not the
       Conversion queue).

       Knowledge of the operating environment is necessary to know
       that there was only one node on this system. It turns out that
       two lock requests actually occurred to generate this output,
       in the opposite order of what appears to have occurred.

       The first lock request was for EX (exclusive), which was
       immediately granted. Thus, the Requested and Granted modes
       were updated according to situation 4. Then, the lock was
       demoted from EX to CR mode, which was also immediately
       granted. However, the Requested field was not updated because
       none of the four preceding rules was true, so the Requested
       mode was never updated to reflect the CR lock request.

    o
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