RJE is well suited to organizations that had a single large central computer center. However, in large organizations with multiple data centers, there was an interest in a peer-to-peer transfer of, e.g., submitted jobs, printer output. Following customer requests, IBM developed a suite of facilities, derived from
BITNET and
VNET, known as Network Job Entry. As part of that software, IBM provided commands to transmit
datasets among nodes (complexes of computers with a collective name). NJE allows a batch job to control where it would run and where its output would be processed; similarly, NJE allows an interactive user to send printed or punched output to a different node. IBM has integrated NJE facilities into its mainframe software, and it is no longer available as separate products. However, the NJE support in
JES3 requires the Batch Data Transmission (BDT)
program product and the NJE support in
z/VM requires the Remote Spooling Communications Subsystem (
RSCS) program product. NJE supports
Binary Synchronous Communications (BSC),
Channel-to-channel adapter (CTCA),
Systems Network Architecture (SNA) and
TCP/IP connections among its nodes. == See also ==