|
It may not be an issue in your environment but applications can wait
(intentionally) on a message queue to perform some action. Most
would probably use data queues now but there are still apps out
there that rely on messaging.
Al,stephen.a.cochran.lists@xxxxxxxxx 11/26/2008 12:17:18 PM >>>
Your last sentence stuck home. I took over the IT team here and general
operations were not stable. I've never worked with an application
that was so high maintenance/needy. I have talked to some other
customers but I'm not sure how "unique" our problems are yet.
We get MSGWs on some kind of job at least once a week. Most often on
jobs
that are communicating with other services (CC processing, etc), but
also a
decent amount of time on some of the async processing jobs that the
application always has running. These can hold up new orders being
processed
into the system and yet everything else still works so we never hear
a complaint about them.
I don't have enough experience with the as400 and other applications
to know how common MSGWs are, the feeling here has been that they
happen and you deal with them and move on. I came in with a very
different attitude and asked why the *ell they keep happening? That
shouldn't be the case.
Steve
On Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 1:32 PM, Al Mac Wheel <macwheel99@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
If the software is well written and managed, getting a MSGW onsomething
other than an interactive job should be extremely rare ... like oncein a
blue year.--
This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L)
mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To
subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit:
http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l or email:
MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment
to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
--
This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L)
mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To
subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit:
http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l or email:
MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment
to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2025 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].
Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.