Rules for creating applications

This section outlines the basic rules that govern standard applications and group definitions. The panels prevent you from breaking these rules.

A group definition is the central member in an application group. It groups related applications as a unit, holding common run cycles and calendar information for all applications in the group. The benefits are that you:
  • Can perform modify actions on the group as a single unit within the plan instead of having to perform actions on many individual applications. This makes it simpler to add, delete, and complete many applications at once.
  • Maintain only a single source for run cycle and calendar information. Maintaining your application description database is simpler and less prone to error.
Table 1. Differences between applications and group definitions
Specifications Standard applicationGroup definition
How many operations can it have? From 1 to 255, each with an operation number in the range 001 to 255, all directly or indirectly linked to each other, and in such a way that they do not form a loop. None directly, but it has applications, each of which can have 255 operations
How do you get HCL Workload Automation for Z to schedule it?Specify the calendar name (if you are not using the default calendar) and the run cyclesSpecify the calendar name (if you are not using the default calendar) and the run cycles. The applications that belong to the group must not specify these.
What fields must you specify?

(Values for type, priority, valid-from date, and status are stored in your ISPF profile and are used as default values when you next use the panel.)

  • Application ID
  • Type, which must be A
  • Owner ID
  • Valid-from date
  • Status
  • Priority
  • At least one operation
  • Application ID (the group ID)
  • Type, which must be G
  • Owner ID
  • Valid-from date
  • Status