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From: Charles Wilt
Do you generally have one or more job queues per location?

I have one customer that hosts eight business units on one server - running several thousand jobs in more than 100 subsystems. I'm not sure what criteria they use for defining new job queues and subsystems. But it seems to me that organizing the workloads by business unit and workload type would make sense.

We actually discussed, just this week how they might change their Web workloads. They indicated that they'd like to run separate HTTP server instances, separate communication server instances, and separate portal server instances for each business unit.

Under my architecture, Web applications run in subsystems, separate from HTTP servers, and I asked whether they would like to run applications in eight separate subsystems. They indicated that they would discuss that.

Any time you're dealing with thousands of concurrently running jobs, I think it makes sense to organize the workloads.

Nathan.




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