Introduction to the New Mainframe: z/OS Basics
by Bill Ogden; Mike Ebbers; Wayne O'Brien; Rama Ayyar; Myriam Duhamel; Per Fremstad; Luis Martinez Fuentes; Miriam Gelinski; Michael Grossmann; Olegario Hernandez; Roberto Yuiti Hiratzuka; John Kettner; Georg Müller; Rod Neufeld; Paul Newton; Bill Seubert; Henrik Thorsen; Andy R. Wilkinson
DB2 for z/OS Stored Procedures: Through the CALL and Beyond
by Paolo Bruni; Bhaskar Achanti; Suneel Konidala; Glenn McGeoch; Martin Packer; Peggy Rader; Suresh Sane; Bonni Taylor; Peter Wansch
Cúram Business Application Suite on IBM System Z
by Abbas Birjandi; Gaurav Bhagat; Helene Grosch; Guillaume Hoareau; Hank Kehlbeck; Yannick Le Floch; Daniel Moraru; Eamonn Moriarty; Robert O'Brien; William Walsh
DB2 UDB for z/OS Version 8: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know, ... and More
by Bart Steegmans; Rafael Garcia; Sabine Kaschta; Ravi Kumar; Michael Parbs
Patterns: Service-Oriented Architecture and Web Services
by Mark Endrei; Jenny Ang; Ali Arsanjani; Sook Chua; Philippe Comte; PŒl Krogdahl; Dr Min Luo; Tony Newling
The z/OS System Logger is a function provided by the operating system to exploiters running on z/OS. The number of exploiters of this component is increasing, as is its importance in relation to system performance and availability. This IBM Redbook provides system programmers with a solid understanding of the System Logger component and guidance about how it should be set up for optimum performance with each of the exploiters.
System Logger is an MVS component that provides a logging facility for applications running in a single-system or multi-system sysplex. The advantage of using System Logger is that the responsibility for tasks such as saving the log data (with the requested persistence), retrieving the data (potentially from any system in the sysplex), archiving the data, and expiring the data is removed from the creator of the log records. In addition, Logger provides the ability to have a single, merged, log, containing log data from multiple instances of an application within the sysplex.
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