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<title>Example: Spiffy Corporation distributed relational database</title>
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<h1 class="topictitle1">Example: Spiffy Corporation distributed relational database</h1>
<div><p>The Spiffy Corporation is used in several IBM<sup>®</sup> manuals to describe distributed relational
database support. In this topic collection, this fictional company has been
changed somewhat to illustrate <span class="keyword">iSeries™ server</span> support
for DRDA<sup>®</sup> in
an <span class="keyword">iSeries server</span> network.</p>
<div class="section"><p>Examples used throughout this topic collection illustrate particular
functions, connections, and processes. These might not correspond exactly
to the examples used in other distributed relational database publications
but an attempt has been made to make them look familiar.</p>
</div>
<div class="section"><p>Though the Spiffy Corporation is a fictional enterprise, the business
practices described here are modeled after those in use in several companies
of similar construction. However, this example does not attempt to describe
all that can be done using a distributed relational database, even by this
example company. </p>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<ul class="ullinks">
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rbal1spiffyorg.htm">Spiffy organization and system profile</a></strong><br />
Spiffy Corporation is a fictional national product distributor that sells and services automobiles, among other products, to retail customers through a network of regional offices and local dealerships.</li>
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rbal1spiffybus.htm">Business processes of the Spiffy Corporation Automobile Service</a></strong><br />
The Spiffy Corporation automobile division has business practices that are automated in this distributed relational database environment.</li>
<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="rbal1spiffyadm.htm">Distributed relational database administration for the Spiffy Corporation</a></strong><br />
Each dealership manages its data processing resources and procedures
as a stand-alone enterprise. Spiffy Corporation requires that each dealership
have one or more <span class="keyword">iSeries server</span>s
and that those servers must be available to the network at certain times.
However, the size of the server and the number of business processes that
are automated on it are determined by each dealership's needs and the resources
available to it.</li>
</ul>
<div class="familylinks">
<div class="parentlink"><strong>Parent topic:</strong> <a href="rbal1intro.htm" title="Distributed relational database support on the iSeries server consists of an implementation of IBM Distributed Relational Database Architecture (DRDA) and integration of other SQL clients by use of Application Requester Driver (ARD) programs.">Introduction to distributed database programming</a></div>
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