I may have missed something, but...

You can put your web site in the AS, or you can do in the linux box a page that reads the data from a "web page" in the AS that will present the data from DB2 in the format that you need.

Mike Cunningham wrote:

It's the other way around. The linux server is running a web site being used by 40-50 people. When they need data for some of the pages the linux server will connect to DB2 and get the data and send the page back. No data will exist on the linux server so no users will be looking there for data. A single user (the server) on the linux box will connect to DB2. I will contact IBM and explain what we are doing and see what licensing is needed

-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Lukas Beeler
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 1:08 AM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: DB2 on Linux to DB2/400 using DRDA

On Wed, Nov 11, 2009 at 22:44, Mike Cunningham <mike.cunningham@xxxxxxx> wrote:

I did see DB2 Connect Personal Edition for Linux for $515. Maybe that will suffice since we are only talking one sever needing to connect.


Personal Edition is licensed for one user, as in person, not as in
"user account". So if there's only one person ever accessing that
Linux machine, personal edition should be okay. But if not, it isn't
sufficient from a licensing point of view.



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