The page is divided into five sections:
Click this to view a system trace for the SEP.
Click this to kill the SEP while a task is running.
Click this to stop the SEP when the current task completes.
This column shows the process ID, the time at which the service was started, and the service or transaction ID (where available).
This column shows the type of service and the amount of time the service has been running. The type can be:
This column shows the task number for the service, the process ID (pid) of the client using this server, and the function. You can see which clients are associated with a process ID by displaying the Clients page; click Clients to do this.
This column shows the number of transactions performed by this SEP, the wait ID and user ID. The wait ID indicates, for suspended services, the ID of the process that is waiting to complete and the amount of time the process has been waiting. The user ID displays the ID of the signed-on client that is currently being processed.
This column shows the process ID and the time at which the service was started.
This column shows the classes that the batch initiator SEP handles and the amount of time the SEP has been running.
This column shows the job number and the job name of the JCL job that the SEP is handling.
This column shows the number of jobs this SEP has run since it was started, the step name currently being executed and the user ID under which the job is running. If you did not specify a USER on the JOB card, the user ID is the name of the enterprise server.
This column shows the classes that the batch printer SEP handles and the amount of time the SEP has been running.
This column shows the number of jobs this SEP has run since it was started, and the DD name of the file being printed.
Shows the name of the printer being used.
Shows the pathname of the printer exit program that this batch printer SEP uses when it prints jobs, if any.