
Appendix C
347
Configuring an Invokable TP Using snaptpinstall
File Format for snaptpinstall
The TP is a queued TP. Any incoming Allocate requests
arriving while the TP is running are queued until the
TP issues another Receive_Allocate, or until it finishes
running and can be restarted. An incoming Allocate
request is routed to this TP only if it is received by an
LU that is configured to route incoming Allocate
requests to this computer.
QUEUED-BROADCAST
The TP is a broadcast queued TP. Any incoming
Allocate requests arriving while the TP is running are
queued until the TP issues another Receive_Allocate,
or until it finishes running and can be restarted. When
the TP is started, information about the TP is
broadcast to all servers on the LAN; if an LU on
another computer receives an incoming Allocate
request and has no routing information configured, it
can dynamically locate the TP and route the Allocate
request to it.
Using
QUEUED-BROADCAST
instead of
QUEUED
avoids
having to configure explicit routing information for
LUs, and enables load-balancing by running more than
one copy of the same TP on different computers.
However, if you want to avoid broadcasting information
in order to reduce LAN traffic, or if you need to ensure
that incoming Allocate requests arriving at a particular
LU are always routed to the same copy of the TP, you
should use
QUEUED
.
NON-QUEUED
The TP is a nonqueued TP. SNAplus2 starts a new copy
of the TP each time an incoming Allocate request
arrives for it. Do not specify the TIMEOUT parameter
for a nonqueued TP.
A TP defined as nonqueued cannot be started by an
operator; it is always started automatically by
SNAplus2. Do not specify
NON-QUEUED
if the TP is to
be operator-started. If a user attempts to start a
nonqueued TP, SNAplus2 rejects the
RECEIVE_ALLOCATE verb because no incoming
Allocate request is waiting for it.
Summary of Contents for HP-UX SNAplus2
Page 4: ...4 ...
Page 14: ...14 Contents ...
Page 22: ...22 ...
Page 23: ...23 1 SNA Terms and Concepts ...
Page 65: ...65 2 Introduction to SNAplus2 ...
Page 107: ...107 3 Administering SNAplus2 ...
Page 132: ...132 Chapter3 Administering SNAplus2 Using the Command Line Administration Program ...
Page 133: ...133 4 Basic Configuration Tasks ...
Page 142: ...142 Chapter4 Basic Configuration Tasks Configuring Logging ...
Page 143: ...143 5 Defining Connectivity Components ...
Page 167: ...167 6 Configuring Dependent LUs ...
Page 174: ...174 Chapter6 Configuring Dependent LUs Defining LU Pools ...
Page 175: ...175 7 Configuring APPC Communication ...
Page 208: ...208 Chapter7 Configuring APPC Communication Configuring APPC Security ...
Page 209: ...209 8 Configuring User Applications ...
Page 222: ...222 Chapter8 Configuring User Applications Configuring RJE Workstations ...
Page 223: ...223 9 Configuring Passthrough Services ...
Page 235: ...235 10 Managing SNAplus2 from NetView ...
Page 248: ...248 Chapter10 Managing SNAplus2 from NetView Using UCF ...
Page 249: ...249 11 Managing SNAplus2 Clients ...
Page 300: ...300 Chapter11 Managing SNAplus2 Clients Managing HP UX Clients ...
Page 301: ...301 A Configuration Planning Worksheets ...
Page 337: ...337 B APPN Network Management Using the Simple Network Management Protocol ...
Page 343: ...343 C Configuring an Invokable TP Using snaptpinstall ...
Page 353: ...353 D Using SNAplus2 in a High Availability Environment ...