Service units cannot go up unless one of the resources being measured also goes up. So, unless you have higher CPU usage, or I/O, the service units cannot go up. Even MSO is only counted when you are using CPU.
The longer elapsed times with no increase in resource consumption indicates a queuing problem. So, that's one area that should be investigated to ensure that jobs have access [dispatching priority]. The second thing is that the reported number of service units simply looks like an error. Values like 7699795 simply look bogus unless the coefficients were changed to multiple significantly larger values. As I said, MSO is still calculated by multiplying CPU service, so there has to be an increase there before it would be affected. Unless you have these same numbers reported from some other process, I would assume you have a bug in the IEFACTRT code. Adam ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN
