You should only create or update a configuration file using the dbfhconfig command line utility.
set MFDBFH_CONFIG=<location-and-name-of-file>
If you do not set this variable, a file named MFDBFH.cfg is assumed to be located in the current directory.
dbfhconfig -add -server:<server-name> -provider:ss
where <server-name> is the name of the database server instance. An entry of (local) or localhost is also valid, which defaults to your machine name.
Next you need to specify the databases within the instance.
dbfhconfig -add -server:<server-name> -dsn:<dsn-name> -type:database -name:master [-connect:<connection-string>]
where <dsn-name> is the ODBC data source for the MSSQL master database, or if you are using a connection string (instead of an ODBC data source), it is a unique name within the configuration in which to reference the database; and <connection-string> is the database connection string if you are establishing a database connection without the use of an ODBC data source - see Database Connection Strings for the database-specific syntax.
dbfhconfig -add -server:<server-name> -dsn:<dsn-name> -type:datastore -optio:<opts> -name:<dsname> [-connect:<connection-string>]
where <dsn-name> is the ODBC data source for the datastore, or if you are using a connection string (instead of an ODBC data source), it is a unique name within the configuration in which to reference the datastore; <opts> are the optimizations to be applied to I/O operations; and <dsname> is the actual name of the datastore (as configured in the data source properties).
option | description |
---|---|
all | All optimizations applied, as if +<opt> had been specified for each available option. You can then selectively disable certain options using -<opt>. |
none | No optimizations applied. |
{+|-}oiseq | Enables (+) or disables (-) optimizations for line-sequential files opened for input. |
{+|-}ooseq | Enables (+) or disables (-) optimizations for line-sequential files opened for output. |
{+|-}oi | Enables (+) or disables (-) optimizations for ESDS, KSDS, and RRDS files opened for input. |
{+|-}oo | Enables (+) or disables (-) optimizations for ESDS, KSDS, and RRDS files opened for output. |
The configuration file is written to after each command. The following is an example of a configuration file that contains two datastores, a region database and a cross-region database. The MSSQL server instance is also configured for Windows authentication, hence the omission of the userid and password attributes.
<datastores usevault="false"> <server name="(local)" type="sqlserver" access="odbc"> <dsn name="SS.MYMASTER" type="database" dbname="master"/> <dsn name="SS.VSAM" type="datastore" dsname="VSAM"/> <dsn name="SS.SEQ" type="datastore" dsname="SEQ" optio="all -ooseq"/> <dsn name="SS.CAS.ESDEMO" type="region.cas" region="ESDEMO" feature="all"/> <dsn name="SS.CROSSREGION" type="crossregion.cas"/> </server> </datastores>
Next, you must create the datastores using the dbfhadmin command line utility; after which, you can use the dbfhdeploy command line utility to add files to them.