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  1. Preface
  2. Command Line Programs and Utilities
  3. Installing and Configuring Command Line Utilities
  4. Using the Command Line Programs
  5. Environment Variables for Command Line Programs
  6. Using infacmd
  7. infacmd as Command Reference
  8. infacmd aud Command Reference
  9. infacmd autotune Command Reference
  10. Infacmd bg Command Reference
  11. infacmd ccps Command Reference
  12. infacmd cluster Command Reference
  13. infacmd cms Command Reference
  14. infacmd dis Command Reference
  15. infacmd dp Command Reference
  16. infacmd idp Command Reference
  17. infacmd edp Command Reference
  18. Infacmd es Command Reference
  19. infacmd ihs Command Reference
  20. infacmd ipc Command Reference
  21. infacmd isp Command Reference
  22. infacmd ldm Command Reference
  23. infacmd mas Command Reference
  24. infacmd mi Command Reference
  25. infacmd mrs Command Reference
  26. infacmd ms Command Reference
  27. infacmd oie Command Reference
  28. infacmd ps Command Reference
  29. infacmd pwx Command Reference
  30. infacmd roh Command Reference
  31. infacmd rms Command Reference
  32. infacmd rtm Command Reference
  33. infacmd sch Command Reference
  34. infacmd search Command Reference
  35. infacmd sql Command Reference
  36. infacmd tdm Command Reference
  37. infacmd tools Command Reference
  38. infacmd wfs Command Reference
  39. infacmd ws Command Reference
  40. infacmd xrf Command Reference
  41. infacmd Control Files
  42. infasetup Command Reference
  43. pmcmd Command Reference
  44. pmrep Command Reference
  45. Working with pmrep Files

Command Reference

Command Reference

FindCheckout

FindCheckout

Displays a list of checked out objects in the repository. The listing contains the checked-out items unless you enter “all users.”
If you choose an object type, then you can list checked-out objects in a specific folder or across all folders. If you do not specify an object type,
pmrep
returns all the checked-out objects in the repository.
The FindCheckout command uses the following syntax:
findcheckout [-o <object_type>] [-f <folder_name>] [-u (all_users)] [-c <column_separator>] [-r <end-of-record_separator>] [-l <end-of-listing_indicator>] [-b (verbose)] [-y (print database type)] [-s <dbd_separator>]
The following table describes
pmrep
FindCheckout options and arguments:
Option
Argument
Description
-o
object_type
Object type you want to list. You can specify source, target, transformation, mapping, session, worklet, workflow, scheduler, session config, task, cube, or dimension. If you do not use this option,
pmrep
ignores the -f and -u options and the command returns all checked-out objects in the repository.
-f
folder_name
Optional if you specify an object type. Return a list of checked out objects for the object type in the specified folder. The default is to list objects for the object type across folders.
-u
-
Optional. List the checked out objects by all users. The default is to list checked out objects by the current user.
-c
column_separator
Optional. Character or set of characters used to separate object metadata columns.
Use a character or set of characters that is not used in repository object names. If any repository object name contains spaces, you might want to avoid using a space as a column separator.
If you omit this option,
pmrep
uses a single space.
-r
end-of-record_separator
Optional. Character or set of characters used to specify the end of the object metadata. Use a character or set of characters that is not used in repository object names. Default is newline /n.
-l
end-of-listing_indicator
Optional. Character or set of characters used to specify the end of the object list. Use a character or set of characters that is not used in repository object names. If you omit this option,
pmrep
uses a period.
-b
-
Optional. Verbose. Displays more than the minimum information about the objects. If you omit this option,
pmrep
prints a shorter format including the object type, the word reusable or non-reusable, the object name and path. Verbose format includes the version number and folder name.
The short format for global objects such as label, query, deployment group, and connection, includes the object type and object name. Verbose format includes the creator name and creation time.
-y
-
Optional. Displays the database type of sources and targets.
-s
dbd_separator
Optional. If an ODBC source has a period (.) in the name, define a different separator character when you define the source object. For example, instead of database_name.source_name, define the source object as database_name\source_name, and define the dbd_separator as backslash (\).

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