What is the reason for the timing requirement, if you let us know we may be able to provide an alternate solution. Need to understand the need for a built in delay. Most products including MQ are designed to process things as soon as possible.
Regards Tim A "Hill, Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent by: MQSeries cc: List Subject: Re: Queue service-interval-events <MQSERIES@AKH-WIE N.AC.AT> 07/02/2003 01:26 Please respond to MQSeries List Ok ok.... Let say I want to delay the delivery of said MSG from the WIN2000 side. I would rather have the sever on a wait than CICS transactions. Thanks Dave -----Original Message----- From: Chad P. Little [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, February 05, 2003 11:00 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Queue service-interval-events Can't you insert a sleep for 35 seconds at the beginning of the triggered program? If the triggered program is not "yours," create a bat file that first sleeps for the specified time and then calls the destination program. Chad Little MQ Administrator Sara Lee Business Services Direct (336) 519-2887 [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Hill, Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent by: MQSeries cc: List Subject: Re: Queue service-interval-events <MQSERIES@AKH-Wie n.AC.AT> 02/05/2003 10:33 Please respond to MQSeries List Bruce I'm not sure what I'm trying to do either. What I would like to do is get a trigger event timed to say 35 seconds between first arival and trigger. -----Original Message----- From: Bruce Giordano [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, February 05, 2003 10:12 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Queue service-interval-events I'm not sure I understand what you're trying to do. We use the service interval events to generate an alert if messages aren't being read off a queue in a timely fashion. The thing is, you really need to look at the Event Monitoring Guide for an explanation of how the service interval events work. They may not work the way you'd like them to. For example, the service interval is only checked following an MQGET or MQPUT call. This means if there is very low activity on the queue, you might have a message sitting on the queue for hours but you won't get a service interval high event until a second message arrives on the queue. - Bruce Giordano "Hill, Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent by: MQSeries List cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Queue service-interval-events Wednesday February 5, 2003 09:25 AM Please respond to MQSeries List Service timer? I have not used this but feel I may have a need to implement it. Is anyone using this and if so what were the reasons for doing so? I need to delay a trigger event on a WIN2000 server(s) so is this the way to do it? Does anyone have any suggestions? Does anyone know why people try to use PCs as mainframes? TIA Dave Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive Instructions for managing your mailing list subscription are provided in the Listserv General Users Guide available at http://www.lsoft.com Archive: http://vm.akh-wien.ac.at/MQSeries.archive