Dynamic Workload Console
About this task
- IBM Workload Scheduler
- IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS
It is the strategic user interface for the IBM Workload Automation suite of products and includes support for the latest functions and enhancements available with the scheduling engines. It has replaced the Job Scheduling Console, whose functional contents have not been extended beyond those of version 8.4.
The Dynamic Workload Console is a light, powerful and user-friendly single point of operational control for the entire scheduling network. It allows for single sign-on and authentication to one or many schedulers, is highly scalable, and provides real-time monitoring, management and reporting of enterprise workloads. It also greatly simplifies report creation and customization.
- Manage your workload to design objects in the database, handle plans, submit jobs or job streams, and monitor objects in the plan.
- Design and control the topology of your scheduling environment, that is workstations and domains.
- Define and run reports to gather historical data or details about your plans. You can also generate and run customized SQL reports.
- Define and manage logical resources or groups of logical resources for use with dynamic scheduling.
A more simplified web-based user interface is
available for application developers who require control and autonomy
when driving workloads, but that are not required to handle complex
workload automation concepts. The Application Lab connects
to an existing Dynamic Workload Console distributed
engine that is either shared or configured in single sign-on. Application
developers can build and manage simple processes that address real
business needs. For more information see the Application Lab User's Guide.
You can access the Dynamic Workload Console from any computer in your environment using a web browser through both secure HTTPS or HTTP protocol.
- Creating a connection to a scheduling engine (IBM Workload Scheduler or IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS)
- You type the details (such as IP address, user name, and password)
to access a scheduling engine, and, optionally, a database to operate
with objects defined in plans or stored in the database. You can also
define new scheduling objects in the database.
From the Dynamic Workload Console you can access the current plan, a trial plan, a forecast plan, or an archived plan for the distributed environment or the current plan for the z/OS® environment.
You might want to access the database to perform actions against objects stored in it or generate reports showing historical or statistical data.
In addition, working both on the database and on plans, you can create and run event rules to define and trigger actions that you want to run in response to events occurring on IBM Workload Scheduler nodes.
- Creating tasks to manage scheduling objects in the plan
- You specify some filtering criteria to query a list of scheduling objects whose attributes satisfy the criteria you specified. Starting from this list, you can navigate and modify the content of the plan, switching between objects, opening more lists and accessing other plans or other IBM Workload Scheduler or IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS environments.
- Job stream view (for modeling)
- A graphical extension to the Workload Designer that shows graphical representations of job stream definitions in the database. It provides an intuitive way to create and maintain them.
- Plan view (for monitoring)
- A high-level representation of a plan of any type, showing a filtered set of job streams and their mutual dependencies.
- Impact view (for monitoring)
- An expansible graphical representation of job streams and jobs in plan. It provides a straightforward, multilevel analysis of how job and job stream completion affects plan progress.
- Job stream view (for monitoring)
- A graphical representation of a single job stream in plan. It provides a direct way to work with it and its dependencies.
You can also launch short demos (visual helps) directly from some Dynamic Workload Console panels. In fact, by clicking the "camera" icon on the toolbar, you open a menu listing some short demos that help you get rapidly familiar with the main functions available from that panel.