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Warm wishes and welcome to all AS400 Administrators and Operators.



This is exclusive blog for iSeries system Administrators working anywhere in the world. Also a place for guys and gals who want to share knowledge pertaining to iSeries. This blog has been designed for exchanging knowledge on AS400 or iSeries server administration and operations.



Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Work Management - Concepts

Work Management Terms

A complex system (shopping mall) is a compilation of many simple systems (stores). These simple systems are called subsystems.

Any piece of work within the business is considered a job. An example of a piece of work might be a customer letter, a telephone call, an order, or nightly cleanup. The same can be said about the System i product. On the system, each job has a unique name.

A job description describes how to handle the work coming into the subsystem. Job descriptions contain pieces of information such as user IDs, job queues, and routing data. Information in the job description might compare to descriptions of jobs in a small business.

What does the business look like?
Every store has blueprints or store plans. These plans are really just descriptions, in varying detail, of the physical makeup of the business. Maybe the business has a store with: 2 floors, 5 doors, 3 mailboxes, and 2 telephones. On your system, a subsystem description contains all the information about the subsystem.
Where does the work come from?
For the carpenter, the work comes from customer calls, from references, and from people that stop in. On your system, the work can come from many places. Examples include job queues, workstations, communications, autostart jobs, and prestart jobs.
Where do they find the space?
Within the mall, each business (subsystem) has a certain amount of floor space. On the system, memory pools allow you to control the main storage (or floor space) each subsystem (business) gets to do its work. The more floor space a store (subsystem) has, the more customers, or jobs, can fit in the store. How does the work come in? Customers that cannot find the store they need may find an information booth to help send them in the right direction. The same is true on your system. Routing entries are similar to store directories or an information booth. After the routing entry is found, it guides the job to its correct place. The routing entry needs to be found first, however. That is done through routing data. Routing data is what the job uses to find the right routing entry.
How is the work treated?
A carpenter needs to place a priority on each job. The chair due at the end of the week should be done before the bookshelf due at the end of the month. On your system, classes provide information about how the job is handled while in the subsystem. This information includes priority while running, maximum storage, maximum CPU time, and time slice. Each of these attributes contribute to how and when a job is processed. Just as there are rules that affect all the stores in the mall, there are rules that affect all the subsystems on your system. An example of these rules is a system value. System values are pieces of information that 4 System i: Systems management Work management apply to the whole system. System values include information such as, date and time, configuration information, signon information, system security and, storage handling.

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