Lindy

One customer I have assisted in the past supported two organisations in one 
production environment and so had separate instances of the IP component of 
Communications Server for that reason. I was involved in combining the two in 
order to create a more manageable environment.

At another customer I detected that there had been multiple instances  - since 
I was obliged to specify the name of the address space in VTAM for Enterprise 
Extender use even though only one instance was active. I'm afraid I wasn't 
given any details on *why* there had been multiple instances.

The other list which it was suggested you use is found as follows:

For IBMTCP-L subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to 
[email protected] with the message: INFO IBMTCP-L

Incidentally, you will need to find higher level discussion of how to employ 
the IP component of Communications Server than is found in the regular IBM 
manuals. These later will only tell you it can be done and *how* it can be 
done, not *why* you might like to do it. 

Chris Mason

On Mon, 19 Sep 2011 18:59:02 +0200, Lindy Mayfield <[email protected]> 
wrote:

>Hello
>
>I would like to find out or understand why multiple TCP/IP stacks are used on 
>some machines.  I've read through some of the IBM documentation, but I still 
>don't get it.
>
>Thanks
>Lindy

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