If you do not specify any parameters, all the groups, users, and objects are listed.
If you specify GroupName, only those access control lists relating to that group are listed.
If you specify UserName, only those access control lists relating to that specific user are listed, including any access control lists to which they belong.
If you specify Broker, only those groups, users, or access control lists relating to that broker are listed.
<principal> - <principaltype> - <accesstype> - <objectname> - <objecttype>where
wrkgrp\ali - USER - F - EXE - BROKER\defaultmeans that user "ali" in domain "wrkgrp" has been granted full control over the execution group default in broker "BROKER".
On Linux and UNIX systems this must be the first parameter specified. It is case-sensitive on Linux and UNIX systems. On z/OS this parameter is implicit because you specify the component you want to MODIFY.
The default name on Windows, if this parameter is not specified, is 'ConfigMgr'.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <configmgr host="localhost" listenerPort="1414" queueManager="QNAME" securityExit="test.myExit"/>
<?xml version="1.0"?>and remove the value for the host attribute, to leave the statement as:
<configmgr host="" listenerPort="1414" queueManager="QNAME" securityExit="test.myExit"/>
The user ID used to invoke this command must have full control permissions for the object being changed; see ACL permissions for more information.
When z/OS commands
are run through the console, they effectively run as the Configuration
Manager's
started-task ID. This means that the commands inherit a Full Control root
ACL and you can carry out any operation.
If you submit a console
command to the Configuration
Manager you can change any
ACL for that Configuration
Manager.
mqsilistaclentry CMGR01 -b BROKER01
mqsilistaclentry CMGR01 -e BROKER01\ExeGrp01
mqsilistaclentry CMGR01 -g GROUPA
/f CMGR01, la g='GROUPA'
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