Customer Case Studies
How do they do it? Case studies explain TCP/IP network management for z/OS…
VitalSigns for IP
Major International Auto Manufacturer
“I’ve been working for this automaker for seven years and I can’t believe the growth of IP traffic…”
Today, manufacturers in every industry increasingly rely on IP networks to communicate with dealers for new orders, inventory, parts, service updates, support bulletins, marketing programs, merchandising promotions, financial management, and more. The IP network has become the critical lifeline between manufacturers and their dealers. In the auto industry the dealer network is essential. The success of an auto manufacturer depends on effective IP communications with its dealer network. That’s why a leading automaker turned to VitalSigns for IP 5.0 on z/OS from Software Diversified Services (SDS) USA to ensure the health of its IP-based dealer network in North America. continued, click here
Major Data-Management Service Provider
24×7 access and bullet-proof dependability — a service provider’s network just has to be up.
The service provider industry has become one of the hottest segments of the economy. Encouraged by management gurus to focus their resources on their core competencies, companies increasingly are turning to service providers to take on wide range of functions, including data management. With business increasingly data driven at every level, from executives to line-of-business managers to rank-and-file information workers, the data management services this international service provider offers have become critically important. These services revolve around the ability to develop and deliver data management capabilities ranging from customer data integration to data services to a wide range of data analytics. Clients typically access their data and these services, which run on the service provider’s mainframe, over the IP network. continued, click here
VitalSigns for VTAM
Customer Success Stories
- Loopy Backup Program
- Adapt to Workload
- See FTP Results
- Security—VSV Provides
- Kill the Bugs Early
- Explain Capacity Issues to Customers
You really can believe what VSV tells you… A customer monitoring an IP network saw some pretty unbelievable numbers in a VitalSigns display—they said his IP interface was running at 100% capacity, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Then at the terminal running that incredible throughput, we found the error. The PC’s backup program was looping, running one backup after the other with no waiting.
VitalSigns for VTAM lead the customer to clear up this application error, allowing the MIS department to serve more customers with the same resources.
Let your system adjust to daily changes in the workload… Your network workload probably varies over the day, the week, the month. VitalSigns for VTAM’s reports on CSM usage let you tune your system to fit those workload patterns.
During business days, a VitalSigns for VTAM customer needed to move large numbers of small FTPs. At night, a few really huge files need to travel. So days required lots of small CSM buffers and nights required more large buffers. Because they knew what CSM buffers were needed, and when, the customer could adjust the system so that users experienced no slowdowns or bottlenecks.
TCPIP has to be flexible if it is to deliver the goods in a timely way. CSM statistics from VitalSigns show you what to do with that flexibility.
Avoid trouble, see your FTP result codes… Every FTP transaction leaves a “Result Code” that can help you see trouble approaching. VitalSigns for VTAM tells you what those codes mean. Just hit PF1 at any FTP display. (Explanations are also available in RFC1213, but who has time to look that up.)
Take the VitalSigns for VTAM customer whose client’s transactions, said the FTP codes, kept asking for a protected record. The customer found an application error that was creating inaccurate bills for customers.
The FTP result code, explained by VitalSigns for VTAM, was the insight that helped to solve this nasty customer-relations problem.
You want security. VSV provides it… Because they had detailed data on FTP traffic, a VitalSigns customer found a hacker violating security and reading internal company revenue flows. VitalSigns for VTAM data enabled the company to confront the snooper and tighten its firewall.
Kill the bugs early. . . A systems programmer was developing a new IP application. He couldn’t see that the application was failing to correctly terminate its IP connections. Had the application gone to production, the entire system would have slowed to a crawl.
But the programmers MIS department had VitalSigns for VTAM and used it to monitor socket state activity at the application’s IP address. Normally, socket state data are boring—TIME WAIT, for example, is almost always zero. This time however, the LPAR that was testing the application showed high numbers under TIME WAIT.
Because of VitalSigns for VTAM, the problem got fixed during testing.
With VitalSigns for VTAM Output Technology Solutions Explains Capacity Issues to Customers
9/1/2000
Output Technology Solutions produces upwards of 130 million pieces of first-class mail a month-bank statements, phone bills, confirmations of on-line stock trades.
Customers send OTS financial data. OTS processes the data, prints the statements, and mails them. A big East Coast bank, for example, sends records regarding the 401K accounts of the employees of an airline and the members of a large labor union. OTS then creates and mails all their individual quarterly statements.
Data arrives at OTS by hundreds of different routes, says Mark Arnaldo, manager of technical services for the company’s Westwood, Mass., facility. “A ‘diverse environment’ is one way to put it,” he laughs. “‘Wild and crazy’ is another.
“We have to be prepared for anything. One customer is dialing into the Internet and doing an FTP to us. A couple others dial directly into us. Then there’s dedicated circuits of 56 K, twenty-some-odd T1s, and now we’re starting to get T3s.
“You name the protocol, we’ve got it coming in. The traditional SNA-type stuff. All sorts of FTP traffic over TCP/IP. There’s practically one of everything,” says Arnaldo. “I’ve got one company—it’s kind of funny—half their group sends data by FTP, half uses NDM, and they both use the same link, a T3.”
To keep track of all that traffic, Arnaldo uses VitalSigns for VTAM.
“It’s the statistics I need VSV for,” says Arnaldo. “VitalSigns is excellent for statistics.
“And now with TCP/IP growing like crazy, I’ve got to be able to provide statistics on that, same as I do on the SNA side. That’s where the new release of VitalSigns for VTAM comes in.
“I need to know how much a circuit is being used, so when a customer asks if we can handle more data, I can say we have plenty of disk space, but I don’t think the customer’s line can handle the traffic,” Arnaldo explains. “And I can’t just say I think they’re going to be in trouble. I have to be able to point to usage statistics and say ‘Here’s your problem. Here’s what will happen.’
“Sometimes a customer will call up and complain that we’re not moving fast enough. ‘Why won’t your computer run any faster?!’ they say. Well it’s not our computer. It’s their line. And it helps having the statistics to prove it. ‘There’s a T1 between us,’ I can tell them, ‘and it sat at 100 percent utilization for four hours. Data’s not going to get here any faster unless you put in a T3.’”
Arnaldo can also tell the story of when VitalSigns for VTAM saved a sale:
An existing customer wanted to send OTS a new batch of data for a new job of work. But the customer worried that OTS couldn’t handle any more. It seemed the line was full already. “They were thinking they were going to need another T1, maybe a T3,” says Arnaldo. “I explained that no, you don’t need to spend that kind of money for this one little job.
“It was just a matter of showing them the statistics. We showed them snapshots: Here, nothing. Here, nothing. Here, the transmission starts, 10:05 in the morning. Now watch. It goes for two hours, and at 12:15 it ends. The line is idle the rest of the time,” Arnaldo explained. “We can take another transmission, just so long as it’s not at the same point in time.”
Arnaldo finds VitalSigns for VTAM easy to install and learn. He says he had to scratch his head a few times during the initial installation, but “it was minor stuff.” Since then, upgrades and maintenance releases “have just slipped right in.”
How does VitalSigns for VTAM compare with the IBM alternative, the NPM utility? “Talk about hard to use. Oh my!” says Arnaldo. “I’ve used NPM in other shops. When I came here I knew better. I don’t want it.”
And Arnaldo admires the tenacity of SDS technical support. “At one point we had what we thought was an IBM problem, then a VitalSigns problem, then an IBM problem—we we’re going back and forth. It was SDS technical support who called IBM and worked it out. It didn’t matter to them who’s problem it was.”

