Wed, 6 Oct 1993 09:12:22 EDT
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On Sun, 3 Oct 1993 17:59:35 -0500 Winship said:
>I probably ought to know this, but I haven't been able to find the
>answer in any of the material I have or know to get.
>
>What does NJE stand for, please? And, since it seems to be a
>standard, who created it and maintains/modifys it? Is it used by
>anyone other that BITNET/EARN/CREN (I'm not even sure all of those
>use it)?
NJE stands for "Network Job Entry" and is an IBM protocol defined as
follows:
"A facility for transmitting jobs (JCL and in-stream datasets),
SYSOUT datasets, (job-oriented) operator commands/messages, and
job accounting information from one computing system to another."
NJE is provided by IBM for the following operating systems:
JES2
JES3
RSCS
POWER
OS/400
Other implementations exist for PC's (BARR/HASP, etc) VAX/VMS (JNET), and
unix (UREP).
The protocol is defined in the IBM Publication "Network Job Entry, Formats
and Protocols", IBM document number SC23-0070.
Hope this helps.
Harold
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