Creating queue managers on Multiplatforms
Before you can use messages and queues, you must create and start at least one queue manager and its associated objects. A queue manager manages the resources associated with it, in particular the queues that it owns. It provides queuing services to applications for Message queuing Interface (MQI) calls and commands to create, modify, display, and delete IBM® MQ objects.
Before you begin
- The installation associated with the queue manager
- To create a queue manager, you use the IBM MQ control command crtmqm. The crtmqm command automatically associates a queue manager with the installation from which the crtmqm command was issued. For commands that operate on a queue manager, you must issue the command from the installation associated with the queue manager. You can change the associated installation of a queue manager using the setmqm command. Note that the Windows installer does not add the user that performs the installation to the mqm group, for more details, see Authority to administer IBM MQ on UNIX, Linux®, and Windows.
- Naming conventions
- Use uppercase names so that you can communicate with queue managers on all platforms. Remember that names are assigned exactly as you enter them. To avoid the inconvenience of lots of typing, do not use unnecessarily long names.
- Specify a unique queue manager name
-
When you
create a queue manager, ensure that no other queue manager has the same name anywhere in your
network. Queue manager names are not checked when the queue manager is created, and names that are
not unique prevent you from creating channels for distributed queuing. Also, if you use the network
for publish/subscribe messaging, subscriptions are associated with the queue manager name that
created them. Therefore if queue managers in the cluster or hierarchy have the same name, it can
result in publications not reaching them.
One way of ensuring uniqueness is to prefix each queue manager name with its own unique node name. For example, if a node is called
ACCOUNTS
, you can name your queue managerACCOUNTS.SATURN.QUEUE.MANAGER
, whereSATURN
identifies a particular queue manager andQUEUE.MANAGER
is an extension you can give to all queue managers. Alternatively, you can omit this, but note thatACCOUNTS.SATURN
andACCOUNTS.SATURN.QUEUE.MANAGER
are different queue manager names.If you are using IBM MQ for communication with other enterprises, you can also include your own enterprise name as a prefix. This is not shown in the examples, because it makes them more difficult to follow.
Note: Queue manager names in control commands are case-sensitive. This means that you are allowed to create two queue managers with the namesjupiter.queue.manager
andJUPITER.queue.manager
. However, it is better to avoid such complications. - Limit the number of queue managers
-
You can create
as many queue managers as resources allow. However, because each queue manager requires its own
resources, it is generally better to have one queue manager with 100 queues on a node than to have
ten queue managers with ten queues each.
In production systems, many processors can be exploited with a single queue manager, but larger server machines might run more effectively with multiple queue managers.
- Specify a default queue manager
-
Each node should have a default
queue manager, though it is possible to configure IBM MQ
on a node without one. The default queue manager is the queue manager that applications connect to
if they do not specify a queue manager name in an MQCONN call. It is also
the queue manager that processes MQSC commands when you invoke the runmqsc
command without specifying a queue manager name.
Specifying a queue manager as the default replaces any existing default queue manager specification for the node.
Changing the default queue manage can affect other users or applications. The change has no effect on currently-connected applications, because they can use the handle from their original connect call in any further MQI calls. This handle ensures that the calls are directed to the same queue manager. Any applications connecting after you have changed the default queue manager connect to the new default queue manager. This might be what you intend, but you should take this into account before you change the default.
Creating a default queue manager is described in Creating a default queue manager.
- Specify a dead-letter queue
-
The dead-letter
queue is a local queue where messages are put if they cannot be routed to their intended
destination.
It is important to have a dead-letter queue on each queue manager in your network. If you do not define one, errors in application programs might cause channels to be closed, and replies to administration commands might not be received.
For example, if an application tries to put a message on a queue on another queue manager, but gives the wrong queue name, the channel is stopped and the message remains on the transmission queue. Other applications cannot then use this channel for their messages.
The channels are not affected if the queue managers have dead-letter queues. The undelivered message is put on the dead-letter queue at the receiving end, leaving the channel and its transmission queue available.
When you create a queue manager, use the -u flag to specify the name of the dead-letter queue. You can also use an MQSC command to alter the attributes of a queue manager that you have already defined to specify the dead-letter queue to be used. See Displaying and altering queue manager attributes for an example of the MQSC command ALTER.
- Specify a default transmission queue
-
A transmission
queue is a local queue on which messages in transit to a remote queue manager are queued before
transmission. The default transmission queue is the queue that is used when no transmission queue is
explicitly defined. Each queue manager can be assigned a default transmission queue.
When you create a queue manager, use the -d flag to specify the name of the default transmission queue. This does not actually create the queue; you have to do this explicitly later on. See Working with local queues for more information.
- Specify the logging parameters you require
-
You can specify logging parameters on
the crtmqm command, including the type of logging, and the path and size
of the log files. In a development environment, the default logging parameters should be adequate. However, you can change the defaults if, for example:
- You have a low-end system configuration that cannot support large logs.
- You anticipate a large number of long messages being on your queues at the same time.
- You anticipate a lot of persistent messages passing through the queue manager.
For more information about logging parameters, see Configuring high availability, recovery and restart.
- For IBM MQ for UNIX systems only
- You can create the queue manager directory
/var/mqm/qmgrs/qmgr
, even on a separate local file system, before you use the crtmqm command. When you use crtmqm, if the/var/mqm/qmgrs/qmgr
directory exists, is empty, and is owned by mqm, it is used for the queue manager data. If the directory is not owned by mqm, the creation fails with a First Failure Support Technology ( FFST ) message. If the directory is not empty, a new directory is created.
About this task
To create a queue manager, you use the IBM MQ control command crtmqm. For more information, see crtmqm. The crtmqm command automatically creates the required default objects and system objects (see System default objects). Default objects form the basis of any object definitions that you make; system objects are required for queue manager operation.
On Windows systems you have the option to start multiple instances of the queue manager by using the sax option of the crtmqm command.
When you have created a queue manager and its objects, you can use the strmqm command to start the queue manager.