How do we get the current date in a PS file name qualifier using JCL?
Example out put file name: Z000417.BCV.TEST.D120713 (YYMMDD format).
This can be done, but not necessarily in a straightforward manner. The straightforward manner would be to use a system symbol in your JCL. Unfortunately this only works for batch jobs if it has been enabled for the job class on more recent versions of z/OS.
Prior to z/OS v2, IBM's stated reason this didn't work is that your job could be submitted on a machine in London, the JCL could be interpreted on a machine in Sydney, and the job could actually execute on a machine in Chicago. Which date (or time) should be on the dataset? There is no one correct answer, and so we all created our own solutions to the problem that incorporates the answer we believe to be correct for our organization.
If you are able to use system symbols in your batch job JCL, there is a list of valid symbols available to you.
One way to accomplish your goal is to use a job scheduling tool. I am familiar with Control-M, which uses what are called "auto-edit variables." These are special constructs that the product provides. The Control-M solution would be to code your dataset name as Z000417.BCV.TEST.D%%ODATE.
Some shops implement a scheduled job that creates a member in a shared PDS. The member consists of a list of standard JCL SET statements...
// SET YYMMDD=120713
// SET CCYYMMDD=20120713
// SET MMDDYY=071312
...and so on. This member is created once a day, at midnight, by a job scheduled for that purpose. The job executes a program written in that shop to create these SET statements.
Another answer is you could use ISPF file tailoring in batch to accomplish your goal. This would work because the date would be set in the JCL before the job was submitted. While this will work, I don't recommend it unless you're already familiar with file tailoring and executing ISPF in batch in your shop. I think it's kind of complicated for something this simple to accomplish in other ways outlined in this reply.
You could use a GDG instead of a dataset with a date in its name. If what you're looking for is a unique name, that's what GDGs accomplish (among other things).
The last idea that comes to my mind is to create your dataset with a name not containing the date, then use a Unix System Services script to construct an ALTER command (specifying the NEWNAME parameter) for IDCAMS, then execute IDCAMS to rename your dataset.
JOBTRAC/CONTROL-M
schedulers,
getting the date in required format is possibly easy. The format
could be 'OSYMD', which will be replaced by scheduler on the fly
before it loads the job. It has got many formats to pacify the need.DFSORT &DATE commands
. Do lemme know if you need syntax, i prefer to google and handson.