Book Image

BMC Control-M 7: A Journey from Traditional Batch Scheduling to Workload Automation

By : Qiang Ding
Book Image

BMC Control-M 7: A Journey from Traditional Batch Scheduling to Workload Automation

By: Qiang Ding

Overview of this book

Control-M is one of the most widely used enterprise class batch workload automation platform. With a strong knowledge of Control-M, you will be able to use the tool to meet ever growing batch needs. There has been no book that can guide you to implement and manage this powerful tool successfully... until now. With this book you will quickly master Control-M and be able to call yourself "a Control-M" specialist! "BMC Control-M 7: A Journey from Traditional Batch Scheduling to Workload Automation" will lead you into the world of Control-M and guide you to implement and maintain a Control-M environment successfully. By mastering this workload automation tool, you will see new opportunities opening up before you. With this book you will be able to take away and put into practice knowledge from every aspect of Control-M ñ implementation, administration, design and management of Control-M job flows, and more importantly how to move into workload automation and let batch processing utilize the cloud. You will start off with batch processing and workload automation, and then get an understanding of how Control-M meets these needs. Then we will look more in depth at the technical details of Control-M, and finally look at how to work with it to meet critical business needs. Throughout the book, you will learn important concepts and features, as well as learn from the Author's experience, accumulated over many years. By the end of the book you will be set up to work efficiently with this tool and also understand how to utilize the latest features of Control-M.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
BMC Control-M 7: A Journey from Traditional Batch Scheduling to Workload Automation
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

The Control-M way — continued


Earlier in Chapter 2, Exploring Control-M, we briefly introduced some basic Control-M terminologies such as, what is a "job", the purpose of "job condition" and "resource", and the meaning of "post-processing", as well as how Control-M handles job submission.

In this chapter, before we start to define and schedule jobs in Control-M, let's spend some extra time to continue expanding our mind with the "Control-M way of thinking" by looking into more details of the following key concept:

  • Contents of a job definition

  • Lifecycle of a job

  • New Day Procedure (NDP)

  • User Daily

Contents of a job definition

"Job" is the smallest element in a Control-M batch environment. Each job has its own set of definitions. By interrupting the definition, the Control-M/Server would know which machine to submit the job to, when to submit, what to trigger, and what other actions to take after the job is completed. These job definitions are stored in the Control-M's database for Control-M itself...