We are on BPCS 405 CD which being mixed mode is very different from your
reality in how the 400 talks to the desk top clients. When we last did the
questionnairre we were going from an older BPCS so we had good information
on the volume of transactions, numbers of items, customers and so
forth. Our problems were with the features of the operating system that we
had not used in the past and were interested in using in the future, and
then there was the issue of how many users.
We have 40 users, which is a different world of existence than what you
describe. About 2/3 of our users are on PCs and 1/3 on dumb
terminals. The 15 odd dumb terminals have on the average 1 1/2 to 2
sessions each. The 25 odd PC users have on the average 3 sessions
each. We also have some excess work stations for the roving work force
that does not stay at one office, but then wherever they are they might
want to plug in.
This latter needs to be figured out for two reasons - sizing, and licensing.
Example ... in each of our shipping and receiving departments of each of
several facilities there is only one work station, but there is a crew of
people working that department. Only one can use the work station at a
time, to identify material moving in or out. In an average day, the work
station in shipping sits idle 2/3 to 3/4 of the day. For software license
purposes, we have assigned a group-user sign-on (e.g. MAT for Material at a
Stock Room work station).
A performance issue is drain on the system. We have users who are hunkered
down, data entry update for many hours of every day ... engineers adding
new parts, customer service maintaining customer orders. We have people
working the JOBQ overtime ... I have tuned that a good bit so that we have
several JOBQ for different kinds of jobs. Call those people power users
who demand a lot from the system. But they are in the minority. We also
have a lot of users in which their work station sits on INV300 BOM300
SFC300 MRP300 etc. INQUIRY tasks ... the screen sits untouched for 1/4
hour, they go to it, key in item # or whatever, get what they want, it
takes them all of 1/2 minute, then they leave the workstation sitting again
in that inquiry program for another 14. hour. Their demand on the system
is totally different than the person who has 7 sessions open at one PC and
is energetically working all of them as close to concurrently as is humanly
possible.
Once upon a time (earlier versions of BPCS) SSA GT had what was known as a
Sizing Questionairre. Filling it out can be a pain.
Into it you put statistics like the size of your business
(how many transactions a day of various kinds)
(how many years you need to store history of transactions)
(how many invoices, average lines on invoices)
(how many customers ... various metrics)
what BPCS applications will you be running
how many different languages needed - do that on partitions by country or
what - because that can mean multiple copies of OS/400 and BPCS software
how many different environments needed, because there may be tailoring
needed differently for different divisions of the company
average number of concurrent sessions per user
how fast you want your performance
(subsecond response)
what IBM features you need to be using
what other stuff you want on your system OTHER than or in addition to BPCS
Then from the results of the Questionnairre, SSA and GT and any number of
intermediate consultants could tell you how fast a processor you needed on
what model 400.
Good afternoon:
I am attempting to obtain information regarding iSeries system sizing for
BPCS release 8.X
IBM suggested that we have 65 arms [DASD] and that a 825 3 way processor
would be enough power to operate over 500 users.
any thoughts
Thanks
Jerry Karth
Systems Engineer
Hart & Cooley
500 East 8th Street
Holland, Michigan 49423
616 395 2809
-
Al Macintyre
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Al Macintyre
BPCS/400 Computer Janitor at http://www.globalwiretechnologies.com/
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