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Yes. Here's a little from the TCP/IP Reference AnyNet/400: APPC over TCP/IP Advanced program-to-program communication (APPC) over TCP/IP support allows Common Programming Interface (CPI) Communications or Intersystem Communications Function (ICF) applications to run over TCP/IP with no changes. To use the APPC over TCP/IP support, the logical unit (LU) name or the remote location that your application uses must be mapped to an Internet address. For APPC over TCP/IP support, the host table is configured to map Internet addresses to LU names. To do this, you can update the TCP/IP host table using the configuration menus. The format for the host name is: LUNAME.NETID.SNA.IBM.COM It has the disadvantage that it's slow. This is essentially a tunneling technique, one protocol encapsulated in another, ao there's an extra software layer involved. At 08:42 AM 3/26/02 +0700, you wrote: >-- >[ Picked text/plain from multipart/alternative ] >Is it possible to define SNADS over TCP? how? any advantage/disadvantages? >Thank you. > >regards, >Harry D. Angkasa
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