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I install on our development machine and let them run 4-6 weeks. Then install on production. Besides that, I always wait for the cume PTF's to be "seasoned" - I never order right them right away. Not an option with HIPERS, but that's just life. If you don't do a *perm apply, you can back them out. I have to agree with the statement about the focus of the auditors on this. It's ridiculous beyond the extreme. Our policy has a statement to the effect that it is not feasible or cost effective to do QA on vendor supplied software and we will rely on their testing. Have you shown them a list of PTF's included in a cume? That may be a reality check for them - or make your situation even worse!
Larry.Ketzes@xxxxxxx 09/07/2006 11:12:33 AM >>>
I am getting pounded by auditors on an issue, and I would like to know what other admin's are doing about this. Our auditors are asking to see testing resulting from installing ptf's from IBM on our Production Servers. Although I do have a test partition, I do not install every ptf I need on that partition first. I do not have enough space on that partition for all testing of all applications just because I put on some ptf's! What are other folks doing? We do go through a change process procedure that includes management approving the install of the ptf's. Thanks, Larry ====================== Larry Ketzes iSeries Senior System Administrator American Life Insurance Company One ALICO Plaza 600 King Street Wilmington, DE 19801 Phone: 302-594-2146 Mobile: 302-559-1631 Fax: 302-830-4524 Email: larry.ketzes@xxxxxxx -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Scott Klement Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 2:06 PM To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Subject: RE: Verifying Existence of a File on a Server
I was afraid of that. There's no way I'm going to ask my overworked system administrator to ensure everybody that can use this function
has
an i.d. on the Windows server.
Ask your administrator for a single account on the Windows server -- one that has access to the files you need to check for. Create an iSeries profile with the same name and password as the Windows account. When you need to check existence, use the profile handle APIs to swap to that particular iSeries account, then check access, then swap back. This way all access to the Windows server is from that one particular ID.
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