TCP/IP and Data Communications Administration Guide

System-job-grade Field

This field contains a one-character job grade to which User-job-grade is mapped. The valid list of characters is A-Z, a-z, with A having the highest priority and z the lowest.

Relationship Between User and System Job Grades

The user job grade can be bound to more than one system job grade. It is important to note that the Grades file is searched sequentially for occurrences of a user job grade. Therefore, any multiple occurrences of a system job grade should be listed according to the restriction on the maximum job size.

While there is no maximum number for the user job grades, the maximum number of system job grades allowed is 52. The reason is that more than one User-job-grade can be mapped to a System-job-grade, but each User-job-grade must be on a separate line in the file. Here is an example:


mail N Any User Any netnews N Any User Any 

Given this configuration in a Grades file, these two User-job-grade will share the same System-job-grade. Since the permissions for a Job-grade are associated with a User-job-grade and not a System-job-grade, two User-job-grades can share the same System-job-grades and have two different sets of permissions.

Default Grade

You can define the binding of a default User-job-grade to a system job grade. You must use the keyword default as user job grade in the User-job-grade field of the Grades file and the system job grade that it is bound to. The Restrictions and ID fields should be defined as Any so that any user and any size job can be queued to this grade. Here is an example:


default a Any User Any 

If you do not define the default user job grade, then the built-in default grade Z is used. Because the restriction field default is Any, multiple occurrences of the default grade are not checked.