IDM 7.3.1

Persistent schedules

By default, scheduling information (such as schedule state, and the details of the schedule run) is stored in RAM. This means that such information is lost when the server is rebooted. The schedule configuration is not lost when the server is shut down, and normal scheduling continues when the server is restarted. However, there are no details of missed schedule runs that should have occurred during the period the server was unavailable.

You can configure schedules to be persistent, which means that the scheduling information is stored in the internal repository, rather than in RAM. With persistent schedules, scheduling information is retained when the server is shut down. Any previously scheduled jobs can be rescheduled automatically when the server is restarted.

Persistent schedules also let you manage scheduling across a cluster (multiple IDM instances). When scheduling is persistent, a particular schedule will be launched only once across the cluster, rather than once on every instance. For example, if your deployment includes a cluster of nodes for high availability, you can use persistent scheduling to start a reconciliation operation on only one node in the cluster, instead of starting several competing reconciliation operations on each node.

Persistent schedules rely on timestamps. In a deployment where IDM instances run on separate machines, you must synchronize the system clocks of these machines using a time synchronization service that runs regularly. The clocks of all machines involved in persistent scheduling must be within one second of each other. For information on how you can achieve this using the Network Time Protocol (NTP) daemon, refer to the NTP RFC.

To configure persistent schedules, set persisted to true in the schedule configuration.

If the server is down when a scheduled task was set to occur, one or more runs of that schedule might be missed. To specify what action should be taken if schedules are missed, set the misfirePolicy in the schedule configuration file. The misfirePolicy determines what IDM should do if scheduled tasks are missed. Possible values are as follows:

fireAndProceed

The first run of a missed schedule is immediately implemented when the server is back online. Subsequent runs are discarded. After this, the normal schedule is resumed.

doNothing

All missed schedules are discarded and the normal schedule is resumed when the server is back online.