High-Performance Routing (HPR) is the evolution of Advanced Peer-to-Peer Networking® (APPN). HPR enhances APPN data routing performance and reliability, especially when using higher-speed lower-error links.
To support high-speed communications facilities, certain changes to the APPN architecture are required. These are necessary to allow switching in intermediate nodes to be done at a lower layer and to enable faster switching than in base APPN support. HPR changes the existing APPN intermediate session routing by using automatic network routing (ANR), which maximizes the storage and processing requirement in intermediate nodes. Each outbound packet has a predetermined path through the network so that intermediate routing nodes need not remember anything about HPR sessions that flow through them. Intermediate routing nodes in HPR simply route data that is based on information that is contained within the packet itself.
Enterprise Extender (SNA over IP networks using HPR)
Enterprise Extender is a networking architecture that allows Systems Network Architecture (SNA) applications to run over Internet Protocol (IP) networks using High Performance Routing (HPR). This is the preferred way to run SNA applications over IP networks with communications input/output adapters (IOAs), such as Gigabit Ethernet, since these IOAs do not require an input/output processor (IOP) and, therefore, do not natively support SNA. IBM® recommends that Enterprise Extender be used in place of AnyNet®.
Enterprise Extender utilizes the following HPR option sets: 1401, 1402, 2006, and 2009. These option sets, as well as 1400, are described below.
The HPR function can operate under a base architecture, or can operate under the base architecture plus options. There are performance capabilities available under the Tower RTP (Rapid Transport Protocol) option not available with the base. See the following for a more thorough explanation of what architecture option is appropriate for you.