For each active Job, the Active Jobs page shows the assigned Job number, which system is executing the Job (if
Managed File Transfer
is running in a clustered environment), the name of the Project, the user that submitted the Job, when the Job was submitted, when the Job started executing, the Job Queue, and the priority.
The
Priority
indicates how much attention (CPU) the Job will receive from
Managed File Transfer
as it executes. The priority is a value from 1 to 10, in which Jobs with a higher priority will receive more attention than Jobs with a lower priority. For instance, a Job with a priority of 6 will receive more attention (CPU) than a Job with a priority of 5.
The Active Jobs page provides functions to hold active Jobs, cancel Jobs, view Job logs and view stack traces. When
Managed File Transfer
is running in a clustered environment, you can filter the list by selecting the system from the drop-down list.