IBM TXSeries

IBM TXSeries

Initial release 1997
Stable release 8.1 / November 29, 2013
Development status Active
Operating system AIX, Windows Server, Solaris, HP-UX, Linux on x86
Type Transaction monitor
License proprietary
Website

IBM TXSeries for Multiplatforms is a distributed CICS (Customer Information Control System) online transaction processing (OLTP) environment for mixed language applications.

TXSeries was introduced by IBM's Transarc subsidiary in 1997 and bundled CICS version 2.1.2 with Encina, MQSeries middleware, Lotus Domino Go web server, and other software.[1]

TXSeries is a transaction server available on AIX, Windows Server, Solaris and HP-UX. It shares similar design principles and some functions with CICS on mainframe. End of 2006 saw a major release of TXSeries V6.1, with DCE and Encina components removed. This brought huge simplification to the product. There is also a new graphical web-based administration console.

TXSeries 7.1, announced in 2009,[2] includes new features such as Channels and Containers that eliminate the 32KB size restriction that previously existed for data being passed between programs. It also includes a new protocol, IPIC that enables communication with mainframes using TCP/IP protocols.

TXSeries for Multiplatforms V8.1 extends the capabilities for TXSeries for Multiplatforms V7.1 and offers significant new capabilities in the area of platform coverage, operational efficiency, enterprise integration, and serviceability.

Features and benefits

As a part of CICS family, TXSeries for Multiplatforms is a distributed CICS Online Transaction Processing (OLTP) environment for mixed language applications. It is used for integrating data and applications between distributed solutions and enterprise systems, and the deployment of CICS applications written in COBOL, C / C++, and PL/I.

The distributed transactional services created by TXSeries software can be used in a stand-alone environment, or in support of larger mainframe and Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE) application deployments. TXSeries allows the user to scale up to a centralized IBM.

It can be integrated as a component of a service-oriented architecture (SOA), enabling end-to-end, distributed mixed language solutions through integration with WebSphere Application Server and CICS Transaction Gateway. WebSphere MQ can be used to connect TXSeries to IBM WebSphere Message Broker, or to any other product that supports native MQSeries transport.

TXSeries also provides connectivity with CICS Transaction Server (CICS TS) on z/OS. This acts as a gateway to CICS TS on z/OS to increase the performance of CICS TS on z/OS and protect it from client-originated disruption. TXSeries allows the user to scale up to CICS TS on the mainframe if the needs of the user's business grow.

TXSeries also provides an External File Handler (EXTFH) component which allows COBOL applications to transparently access its data stored in a RDBMS product. All the File I/O verbs such as READ, WRITE, DELETE, etc. used in the COBOL applications would remain unchanged. As a result, the COBOL application programmer sees no apparent difference between a standard COBOL File I/O and access to RDBMS through EXTFH.

TXSeries for Multiplatforms V7.1 offers enhancements in integration and connectivity, system resilience, application development and problem determination tooling, Web administration console, and installation. Earlier versions of TXSeries simplified infrastructure, enhanced the administration capabilities by introducing the Web administration console, improved usability, system resilience, and interoperability.

The main enhancements in TXSeries for Multiplatforms V8.1 are:

Enhanced platform coverage

Improved operational efficiency

Enhanced enterprise integration

In addition, TXSeries serviceability is improved with additional problem determination tools.

Common deployment scenarios

As a distributed transaction server IBM TXSeries for Multiplatforms provides base-level CICS programming interfaces, allowing industry-specific COBOL, C, C++, PL/1, and Core Java specialists to create solutions for business-critical transaction processing. TXSeries supports screen-based terminals and provides programming interfaces for connectivity with graphics-rich displays, depending on the business requirement. Data can be accessed from the integrated CICS Structured File Server, local and remote RDBMS such as DB2, or messaging subsystems like WebSphere MQ. With enterprise integration support, TXSeries can create mainframe value-add or stand-alone distributed transaction processing solutions. Common transaction server deployment scenarios include:

Features of this deployment are:

A rapid deployment integration server

As a rapid deployment integration server, TXSeries for Multiplatforms has support for enterprise information systems (EIS), such as CICS Transaction Server, IMS, DB2, WebSphere MQ, and WebSphere Application Server. It can use TCP/IP and SNA-based communication protocols. The ability to run intelligent business logic in a mid-tier environment that supports the same languages and APIs as the systems that require the integration enables a complex integration solution to be deployed rapidly.

Common integration server deployment scenarios include:

The key features of this deployment:

See also

References

External links

  1. TXSeries Blogs
  2. TXSeries V8.1 Announcement
  3. TXSeries V7.1 Announcement

Social with TXSeries

  1. TXSeries Facebook
  2. TXSeries Twitter