Having a separate terminal definition for each system involved, each on
a CSD file that is accessible to that system. One is created as a local definition
and one or more are created as remote definitions. This is referred to as duplicating terminal definitions, because there is more
than one resource definition for the same terminal (the definitions are not
necessarily exact duplicates of each other).
To duplicate terminal definitions:
- Create a local definition for the terminal, in the CSD file of the terminal-owning
system, or on a shared CSD file.
- Create a remote definition for the terminal, in the CSD file of the application-owning
system, or in a shared CSD file. If you have more than one application-owning
system, you may need more than one remote definition, but if the systems are
sharing a CSD file, you may be able to use the same remote definition for
them all.
- Install the local definition in the terminal-owning system. This definition
can be autoinstalled.
- Install the remote definition in the application-owning system(s).
Note: If your systems share a CSD file, make sure the definitions
are in different groups, because:
- You want to install them in different systems
- The TERMINAL names are probably the same, so the definitions cannot be
in the same group.