STORE DEBUG subcommand Use the STORE subcommand to store up to 12 bytes of hexadecimal information in any valid virtual storage location. The format of the STORE subcommand is: +----------+------------------------------------------------------------------+ | STore | symbol hexloc hexinfo [hexinfo [hexinfo] | +----------+------------------------------------------------------------------+ where: symbol is the symbolic name assigned (via the DEFINE subcommand) to the storage address where the first byte of specified information is to be stored. hexloc is the hexadecimal location, relative to the current origin, where the first byte of information is to be stored. hexinfo is the hexadecimal information, four bytes or less in length (that is, two to eight hexadecimal digits), to be stored. Usage Notes: 1. If an operand is less than four bytes long and contains an uneven number of hexadecimal digits (representing half-byte information), the information is right-justified and the left half of the uneven byte is set to zero. If more than eight hexadecimal digits are specified in a single operand, the information is left-justified and truncated on the right after the eighth digit. 2. The STORE subcommand can store a maximum of 12 bytes at one time. By specifying all three information operands, each containing four bytes of information, the maximum 12 bytes can be stored. If less than four bytes are specified in any or all of the operands, the information given is arranged into a string of consecutive bytes, and that string is stored starting at the location derived from the first operand. For example, if you have defined a four-byte symbol named FENCE that currently contains X'FFFFFFFF' and you enter: store fence 0 FENCE contains X'00FFFFFF'.