Author: Robert Sample
Posted: Wed Sep 21, 2016 8:02 pm (GMT 5.5)
Sigh. Another post where the information provided is TOTALLY INADEQUARE in allowing any kind of response. Is the Confluence tool JIRA running on the same mainframe (and LPAR) you're wanting the "REXX or batch" to run on? What do you mean by "REXX or batch" -- batch REXX? batch COBOL? batch Java? a batch utility like DFSORT or IEBGENER? something else entirely? If Confluence JIRA is not running on the same LPAR as your batch REXX (or whatever), what interface will you use between the machines? Does Confluence JIRA support such interfaces?
Presumably you would use the Confluence JIRA tool API. Have you contacted the vendor to see what Confluence JIRA allows you to do? If not, why not -- the vendor should be your FIRST point of contact on product questions, not a forum.
I suspect you're not going to get very many answers since Confluence JIRA is not something I'd heard of before your post, so there's not a lot of activity on this (or any) forum in regards to the product.
_________________
TANSTAAFL
The first rule of code reuse is that the code needs to be worth re-using.
"We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: premature optimization is the root of all evil." -- Donald Knuth
Posted: Wed Sep 21, 2016 8:02 pm (GMT 5.5)
Sigh. Another post where the information provided is TOTALLY INADEQUARE in allowing any kind of response. Is the Confluence tool JIRA running on the same mainframe (and LPAR) you're wanting the "REXX or batch" to run on? What do you mean by "REXX or batch" -- batch REXX? batch COBOL? batch Java? a batch utility like DFSORT or IEBGENER? something else entirely? If Confluence JIRA is not running on the same LPAR as your batch REXX (or whatever), what interface will you use between the machines? Does Confluence JIRA support such interfaces?
Quote: |
Which API can be used? |
I suspect you're not going to get very many answers since Confluence JIRA is not something I'd heard of before your post, so there's not a lot of activity on this (or any) forum in regards to the product.
_________________
TANSTAAFL
The first rule of code reuse is that the code needs to be worth re-using.
"We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: premature optimization is the root of all evil." -- Donald Knuth