
G&R
-TS points to a TS (Transport Station) directive somewhere else in the file. If
you omit the option the default TS is used.
rsc is2b
rsc en3e -addr 54:62
rsc is2b -ii 15 -ts fep1_wan
To set up backup routes you just specify multiple -ts routes:
rsc -ts route1 route2 route3
These are then tried in order until a connection succeeds or the end of the list is
reached.
Alternatively to configure load balancing you use:
rsc -ts route1 route2 route3 -lb 60 20 20
In this example route1 gets 60% of the load, route2 20% and route3
20%. If the first priority route has a connect failure the second priority is tried
etc. until a connection succeeds or the last priority is reached. A total of 8
routes can be specified.
The software remembers when a transport disconnection or time-out happens
while trying to connect, and the node is suspended to avoid repeated connection
attempts using a route that is down. The suspension time may be configured
with the -si parameter to the ts directive.
If all routes to a given remote session control ID are marked as down then a
connection is tried using the first priority route. If the connection succeeds that
route is marked as being up again.
TS - Transport Station
TS name -CLASS x -NS xxxx [-TPDU x] [-X25CALL xxxx]
[-X25FAC xxxx] [-EXP] [-NOEXP] [-SI nn] [-DFLT] [-TP tprovider]
Describes how to open a transport connection to reach remote session control
entities (DSA nodes). You need one for each remote transport station to which
you will be connecting. A transport station is the transport service access point,
which can reside in a FEP (Front End Processor) or in the mainframes that have
a direct connect capability, such as GCOS6, GCOS7 with ISL, GCOS7 or
GCOS8 with FCP cards (FDDI adapters), GCOS8 GNSP or GCOS7 Diane.
Gline Line Handlers and Configuration
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