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<h1 class="topictitle1">What happens before work enters the system</h1>
<div><p>All jobs, with the exception of system jobs, run within subsystems.
For work to start in an active subsystem, memory pools and at least one source
of work entry point need to be established. Job queues are an example of a
source of work.</p>
<p>The iSeries™ server ships with a default set of job queues,
subsystems, and memory pools, which can allow work to begin as soon as the
system is powered on.</p>
<p>You can tailor the subsystem and memory pool configurations to optimize
your iSeries servers
capabilities and performance. For example, if batch jobs are critical to the
success of your business, you may want to allocate more memory for them to
run. Or, you may determine that the number of jobs running at one time in
your Qbatch subsystem should be lower so that those jobs can use the maximum
amount of resources to run. Also, you can create job queues, subsystems, and
memory pools specifically designed to complete specific types of work. For
example, you can create a job queue called Nightreps, where nightly batch
reports are sent to a subsystem called Nightrep that allocates memory exclusively
for running these batch jobs.</p>
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<div class="parentlink"><strong>Parent topic:</strong> <a href="rzakshowworkgetsdone.htm" title="Use this information to learn about what work is, what needs to be set up before work can begin, how work travels through the system, and what happens to work after it is done running.">How work gets done</a></div>
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<div class="relconcepts"><strong>Related concepts</strong><br />
<div><a href="rzakswhatswrk.htm" title="On the iSeries server, work is always being done, whether you initiate it or the system initiates it. Any action done on the iSeries server has some type of work being performed to complete it.">What work is</a></div>
<div><a href="rzakshowwrkgetsinsys.htm" title="Work entries identify the sources where jobs enter a subsystem to become available to run. Each type of job on the iSeries has different types of work entries that it uses.">How work enters the system</a></div>
<div><a href="rzakshowwrkgetsproc.htm" title="When the iSeries server is started, a subsystem monitor job begins running. The subsystem monitor job controls the jobs within subsystems. It also starts and ends work, as well as manages the resources for work in the subsystem.">How work gets processed</a></div>
<div><a href="rzakshowwrklvs.htm" title="The output queue works similarly to a job queue in that it schedules output to be printed. Both the printer output and the output queue carry attributes that are used to print the information.">How work leaves the system</a></div>
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