KeatonInCo
Member
Hi. I apologize ahead of time for asking a stupid question, if this indeed is a stupid question. But, I do need clarification on this, so any explanation you can provide would be appreciated. Thanks!
We are experiencing strange issues with our JDE client software. All of a sudden JITI activity is taking place and users are receiving windows file locking errors as a result. We have people developing reports and report versions who can't perform check-out/check-in operations, but they could yesterday morning. I have a hunch about something, but without more core knowledge of JDE I can't validate my assumption. If you could provide some clarity to this that would be very helpful to me.
Here is our scenario.
We have a single PC-Server (Terminal Server, several users) running the JDE client in our configuration. The JDE client is a full package build based on the PD7333 code stream. The deployment was a full developer version, so all of the code was copied down to the TS as well.
After I deployed the package I ran R92CRTGL and R92TAM to copy down the complete specs for the global tables and for the data dictionary to D:\B7\PD7333\SPEC. Everything seemed to run fine after this.
Now, our production users all run in PROD environments which point to PD databases and PD objects. When they are using the system, creating new reports and report versions, everything they do is associated with PD7333. When they check-in and check out reports the path code is always PD7333, so when the local specs are updated they are always from the same PD environment.
A developer from our VAR has been performing development on the same terminal server. When he works, he uses a DATA environment which is associated with DV databases and DV objects. He is writing new programs, reports and report versions on the same machine that our production users are on. He is performing the work under the JDE account. I logged in as JDE and launched OMW. I noticed that several of the reports/versions that he has been working on is associated with the DV7333 path code. He has been checking-in/checking-out these reports as he works on them.
Here is my question: If the product build on the Terminal Server is from the production path code (PD7333), and the spec (TAM) files that are in use there are all from the PD7333 path code, if on the same terminal server the developer is working with DV7333 objects, updating the local TAMs with specs out of development, will that potentially corrupt the local TAMs since the specs are from two different path codes? Would this explain why we are beginning to experience check-in/check-out and JITI issues in production? Is JDE attempting to refresh potentially stale/corrupted PD7333 TAMs because of overwrites out of the DV7333 environment?
My current thought process is that performing development work on the same PC where production work is taking place is a very bad idea (duh). I was given the impression early on by our VAR that both a production package AND a development package could be deployed to the same PC at once. Then, when you select an environment to work in, JDE would know which set of local files/programs/specs to work off of.
It is only as of a couple weeks ago that I discovered that this is NOT the case at all. That if you want to have both, only one can be active at a time with the other sitting in a dormant stage, using snapshot.exe to switch back and forth between the two.
If our VAR needs to develop in our environment then my new assumption is that to prevent TAM corruption on the production Terminal Server, I need to deploy a different TS where a build from DV7333 is located, so that when they do development the local package and TAM specs match the databases and objects they are working on. Then, when they promote an object to PD7333 I build either a full or update package in PD7333 and then deploy this to the user's Terminal Server.
Let me know if I'm on the mark or not with this, especially about potential spec file corruption on the TS.
Thanks!
Keaton
We are experiencing strange issues with our JDE client software. All of a sudden JITI activity is taking place and users are receiving windows file locking errors as a result. We have people developing reports and report versions who can't perform check-out/check-in operations, but they could yesterday morning. I have a hunch about something, but without more core knowledge of JDE I can't validate my assumption. If you could provide some clarity to this that would be very helpful to me.
Here is our scenario.
We have a single PC-Server (Terminal Server, several users) running the JDE client in our configuration. The JDE client is a full package build based on the PD7333 code stream. The deployment was a full developer version, so all of the code was copied down to the TS as well.
After I deployed the package I ran R92CRTGL and R92TAM to copy down the complete specs for the global tables and for the data dictionary to D:\B7\PD7333\SPEC. Everything seemed to run fine after this.
Now, our production users all run in PROD environments which point to PD databases and PD objects. When they are using the system, creating new reports and report versions, everything they do is associated with PD7333. When they check-in and check out reports the path code is always PD7333, so when the local specs are updated they are always from the same PD environment.
A developer from our VAR has been performing development on the same terminal server. When he works, he uses a DATA environment which is associated with DV databases and DV objects. He is writing new programs, reports and report versions on the same machine that our production users are on. He is performing the work under the JDE account. I logged in as JDE and launched OMW. I noticed that several of the reports/versions that he has been working on is associated with the DV7333 path code. He has been checking-in/checking-out these reports as he works on them.
Here is my question: If the product build on the Terminal Server is from the production path code (PD7333), and the spec (TAM) files that are in use there are all from the PD7333 path code, if on the same terminal server the developer is working with DV7333 objects, updating the local TAMs with specs out of development, will that potentially corrupt the local TAMs since the specs are from two different path codes? Would this explain why we are beginning to experience check-in/check-out and JITI issues in production? Is JDE attempting to refresh potentially stale/corrupted PD7333 TAMs because of overwrites out of the DV7333 environment?
My current thought process is that performing development work on the same PC where production work is taking place is a very bad idea (duh). I was given the impression early on by our VAR that both a production package AND a development package could be deployed to the same PC at once. Then, when you select an environment to work in, JDE would know which set of local files/programs/specs to work off of.
It is only as of a couple weeks ago that I discovered that this is NOT the case at all. That if you want to have both, only one can be active at a time with the other sitting in a dormant stage, using snapshot.exe to switch back and forth between the two.
If our VAR needs to develop in our environment then my new assumption is that to prevent TAM corruption on the production Terminal Server, I need to deploy a different TS where a build from DV7333 is located, so that when they do development the local package and TAM specs match the databases and objects they are working on. Then, when they promote an object to PD7333 I build either a full or update package in PD7333 and then deploy this to the user's Terminal Server.
Let me know if I'm on the mark or not with this, especially about potential spec file corruption on the TS.
Thanks!
Keaton