Editing Schedules in Daily Schedule Tables
Theme: Configure
Who Is It For? System Administrator, Automation Engineer
What Is It?
Use this procedure to edit Schedules in Daily Schedule Tables in the Enterprise Manager.
Changes to the schedule start time and events take effect immediately. If the schedule has already run, changes take effect the next time the schedule runs.
To perform this procedure, complete the following steps:
- Select on Daily Maintenance under the Operation topic. The Daily Maintenance screen displays
- Select the
arrow to expand the specific date for the schedule
- Select on the schedule to edit
- Select Edit Daily in the Maintenance frame at the bottom-right. The Schedule Daily screen displays
- (Optional) Select inside the Start Time text box to modify the start time
- Select
Save on the Schedule Daily toolbar
- Select on the Events tab
- (Optional) Select the schedule event to modify, then select Edit in the Events frame. The Event Definition Wizard displays
- Enter the changes and select Finish to save
- Select Close ☒ (to the right of the Schedule Daily tab) to close the Schedule Daily screen
- Select Close ☒ (to the right of the Daily Maintenance tab) to close the Daily Maintenance screen
FAQs
Q: Do edits to schedules in daily schedule tables take effect immediately?
Changes saved to schedules in daily schedule tables in the Job Master take effect the next time the record is built or referenced. Edits to Daily table records apply only to the current instance.
Glossary
Daily Tables: The OpCon database tables that hold the active, date-specific instances of schedules and jobs built for execution. Changes to daily tables affect only the current day's automation.
Resource: A numeric variable in OpCon representing a finite pool. Jobs can be configured to require a set number of resource units to run, limiting concurrent executions and preventing resource contention.
Schedule: A named container for jobs in OpCon, built for a specific date to create that day's automation. Schedules define build settings, frequencies, and the jobs that run within them.
Job: The fundamental unit of work in OpCon. A job defines what to run, on which machine, when to start, and what conditions must be met. Job results are tracked and can trigger events and notifications.