The following table indicates how the transfer priority settings and the agent Discreet Mode settings work together to determine the mode used for sending the transfer and for receiving the transfer:
|
Initiator_Priority (ipriority), |
From N to N |
From N to Y |
From Y to N |
From Y to Y |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Default, Default |
Normal transfer |
Discreet receive |
Discreet send |
Discreet transfer |
|
Default, Discreet |
Discreet receive |
Discreet receive |
Discreet transfer |
Discreet transfer |
|
Discreet, Default |
Discreet send |
Discreet transfer |
Discreet send |
Discreet transfer |
|
Discreet, Discreet |
Discreet transfer |
Discreet transfer |
Discreet transfer |
Discreet transfer |
|
Default, Urgent |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
|
Discreet, Urgent |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
|
Urgent, Default |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
|
Urgent, Discreet |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
|
Urgent, Urgent |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
Normal transfer |
The table reveals that a default and an urgent transfer both mean the same type of transfer: a normal transfer. Similarly, a default or urgent send means a normal send, and a default or urgent receive means a normal receive.
For any transfer, any send, or any receive, an urgent setting always overrides a discreet setting and makes it normal, while a discreet setting always overrides a normal setting and makes it discreet.
Note: It is assumed that the initiator is the sending computer and the responder is the receiving computer. However, if the initiator is the responding computer, replace the words “send,” “sending,” and so forth with the words “receive,” “receiving,” and so forth in the text above.
|
Copyright © 2014 CA Technologies.
All rights reserved.
|
|