Network Deployment (Distributed operating systems), v8.0 > Administer applications and their environment > Administer Asynchronous beans > Administer timer and work managers


Configure timer managers

A timer manager acts as a thread pool for application components that use asynchronous beans. Use the administrative console to configure timer managers. The timer manager service is enabled by default. If you are not familiar with timer managers, review the conceptual section, Timer managers, in the Asynchronous beans topic. We can define multiple timer managers for each cell. Each timer manager is bound to a unique place in JNDI.

The timer manager service is only supported from within the EJB container or web container. Looking up and using a configured timer manager from a Java EE application client container is not supported.


Procedure

  1. Start the administrative console.

  2. Select Resources > Asynchronous beans > Timer managers.

  3. Specify a Scope value and click New.

  4. Specify the following required properties:

    Scope

    The scope of the configured resource. This value indicates the location for the configuration file.

    Name

    The display name for the timer manager.

    JNDI Name

    The JNDI name for the timer manager. This name is used by asynchronous beans that must look up the timer manager. Each timer manager must have a unique JNDI name within the cell.

    Number of Timer Threads

    The maximum number of threads that are used for timers.
  5. [Optional] Specify a Description and a Category for the timer manager.
  6. [Optional] Select the Service Names (Java EE contexts) on which you want this timer manager to be made available. Any asynchronous beans that use this timer manager then inherit the selected Java EE contexts from the component that creates the bean. The list of selected services also is known as the "sticky" context policy for the timer manager. Selecting more services than required might impede performance.
  7. [Optional] Select Custom Properties > New. Other optional fields include:

    Name

    lateTimerTime

    Value

    Number of seconds

    Description

    Specify a description

    Type

    Select java.lang.String

    The lateTimerTime custom property is the number of seconds beyond which a late-firing timer causes an informational message to be logged. The informational message is logged once per timer manager. The default value is 5 seconds and a value of 0 disables this property.

  8. Save the configuration.


Results

The timer manager is now configured and ready for access by application components that must manage the start of asynchronous code.


Related


Timer manager collection
Asynchronous beans
Configure timer manager custom properties using wsadmin

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