There
is a way as of 5.3 to get the RQSTR in an INACTIVE state, ready for incoming
traffic.
As of
5.3, when you STOP a channel, you can select what state you want. INACTIVE is
one of the states, which would be the same as a RCVR that is "enabled" I
suppose.
-----Original Message-----
From: Russell Finn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 11:49 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: RCVR versus RQSTR channels
If for some reason you want to stop a running RCVR or RQSTR channel, then it goes into STOPPED state. If you now START the RCVR, it just becomes ENABLED. If you START the RQSTR, and it is fully qualified, then you will actually start the channel running again.
I'm not sure if this would affect anyone's choice on which type of channel to use, but it is an example of a difference.
Russell
Russell Finn
MQSeries System Test
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Wyatt, T. Rob" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: MQSeries List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>12/03/2004 15:12
Please respond to
MQSeries List
To[EMAIL PROTECTED] cc SubjectRe: RCVR versus RQSTR channels
Never figured that one out myself. I suspect there was some difference
early on that no longer applies.
-- T.Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: Potkay, Peter M (PLC, IT) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 8:10 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: RCVR versus RQSTR channels
So if I had to give a one sentence description of RQSTR channels, would I be
accurate in saying:
"RQSTRs are exactly like RCVRs, except that RQSTRs give you the added
benefit of starting the SNDR from the RQSTR side."
If this is true, what's the point of RCVRs? What do you lose by always
having RQSTRs? Which is the point of this thread I believe. Seems like
nothing but pros for switching to RQSTRs and abandoning RCVRs.
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