Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Oracle Executables Explained - Part 3 - Oracle Concurrent Program

Concurrent Program

I did write this earlier on the month, but lost it during a computer crash and put a bit too much faith in the cloud. Looks like it was a cloudless day!

In terms of executables, this screen is used to define the concurrent program that the end user sees when they run the program. Some information comes from the second posting in relation to the eexecutables.



We have the program name, which is what the user sees. The application is the concurrent program's host application and relates to the application must suited to the request.

The executable links to the executable that was registered in the earlier step. Other information will default from the setup in the executable. The request section of the screen will determine if the request can be submittted by concurrent request screen or whether it is a standalone program. The NLS selection shows whether the program is language compliant.

The printing section relates to the style of printing that is related to the concurrent program. This is related to whether or not the program requires extra wide space (ie Landwide) or normal style (landscape, portrait). The number of lines

concurrent program parameters



Incompatible Programs
This contains programs that YOU DO NOT WANT TO RUN AGAINST YOUR PROGRAM. For example you may not want to run a program that could lock the same tables as you are accessing and end up in a deadlock situation or just trying to hit a table hard.



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