When you force a job to complete, the server completes the job immediately. The server deems the completed job to have executed, even if the job has not been submitted, has failed, or is still running. If you force a job to complete, its successors can run.
Note: You can monitor for forced completions by specifying a notification in the Application or job definition. The notification can send an email, trigger an Event, run a JavaScript script, or send an SNMP trap. For more information about setting up notifications, see the Define Perspective Help.
If you mistakenly complete a job, you can insert another occurrence of it with the required dependencies. Because job names must be unique, you could use the same job name but add a different qualifier. However, the job's successors may already have been released.
Note: Completing a job is different than bypassing a job. If you bypass a job, the server does not bypass the job until its dependencies are met. If you mistakenly bypass a job, you can unbypass it before the job is eligible to run. If you complete a job, it is completed immediately and cannot be undone.
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