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I wouldn't expect it to end. Usually, PJ jobs are like "listeners," waiting
for a connection request (in other words, most server functions are probably
PJ on i). It would be a negative impact on performance to end a job just
because someone disconnected.

If this is your own PJ, and if it's designed to end on disconnection then
that is a different matter, and PJ is probably not the right implementation
for your job.

Which side are you trying to debug? Server (PJ) or client?

Dennis Lovelady
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady
--
"A pun is the lowest form of humor -- when you don't think of it first."
-- Oscar Levant


you expect the prestarted jobs to end - is that right? - Yes Once we
close
the connection I expect the job also will get ended (But it is not)

Chamara



On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 4:46 PM, Dennis Lovelady
<iseries@xxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:

I am not sure I understand your question.

So you are connecting to some system using Java, and when you end
your
connection you expect the prestarted jobs to end - is that right? So
that
you know, PJ are prestart jobs, and those are automatically restarted
by
the
system if they end. You can DSPSBSD for the subsystem in which those
jobs
are running, and use option 10 to see the PJ entries. Does that help?

Dennis Lovelady
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady
--
"A problem well stated is a problem half solved."
-- Charles F. Kettering


We are connecting to our IBM i from Java an reading/writing to SB2
files,
even the Java job ends (Closed the connection) we can see some PJ
type
jobs
in the system remains. How to overcome this?

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--
Regards,

Chamara Withanachchi
IBM Certified Power System Expert
RPG Programmer
(owner of www.rpgiv.info)

WWW.RPGIV.INFO
Mob: +94 77 1678646
chamaraw@xxxxxxxxxx

i want to be future ready. i want control. i want an i.
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