by steve-myers » Sat 15 Jun 2013, 17:19
Someone using RPGUHA submitted a batch job (or that specified USER=RPGUHA) that attempted to execute a JCL specified operator command. The admins regard this as an attempt to damage the system, even if the command had been allowed to execute. Users that attempt to damage the system are more or less automatically banned.
I grant a D T command is basically harmless; in fact, had the command been entered through SDSF it would have been allowed and it would have executed. I do not know where the output would have been displayed had it executed. Perhaps the MVS JCL Reference manual for z/OS V1R6 will tell you; I don't recall what happened in a previous gig where I had the authority to try this foolishness and actually did it a couple of times.
For your future use - if you have a future in this trade - running an operator command through JCL is not a very smart idea. The command, if allowed, executes when the job is being "converted," which just means the JCL is being syntax checked and translated for later use. In the real world - as opposed to the Fandezhi system - conversion may not be done on the system where the job will subsequently execute, and it may be done hours before the job actually executes.
As for the command you tried to execute, you can easily determine the date and time the job executes by examining the JESMSGLG data set; there was no real value in trying to run a D T command. Many programs display the current system date and time in their output, too.