The way the MQ client and MQ server decide to TIMEOUT a connection is based on the negotiated Heart Beat (HBINT
) value for the running SVRCONN
channel. The negotiated HBINT
is always the highest value negotiated between the SVRCONN
and the client application.
Note: SVRCONN
HBINT
has a default value of 300
.
The TIMEOUT is determined in one of two ways:
- If the negotiated
HBINT
is less than 60 the TIMEOUT is 2x HBINT
.
- If the negotiated
HBINT
is greater than or equal to 60 the TIMEOUT is HBINT
+ 60.
Specific to the area of .NET clients related to HBINT
:
APAR IT26614 corrects the following three issues:
In either Unmanaged or Managed mode it is documented that if you are not using a CCDT the HBINT
will use the value of the SVRCONN
channel. In reality if not using a CCDT the HBINT
on the client side defaults to 300
so this is the lowest HBINT
you will see.
Specific to Managed .NET the client side HBINT
cannot be lower than the SVRCONN
HBINT
the connection will fail with a 2059. This problem impacts both with or without CCDT.
- with a CCDT you are unable to set the
CLNTCONN
HBINT
to a value less than the SVRCONN
HBINT
- without a CCDT you will be impacted if the
SVRCONN
HBINT
is set to 301
or higher
Specific to Managed .NET the client side receive timeout was being calculated in milliseconds not seconds. In this case the defect has been present according to IBM for a long time, but did not present itself until APAR IT16167: Managed .NET client application does not send heartbeat request to queue manager was introduced in 8.0.0.10 and 9.0.0.4 (IBM also confirmed this is present in GA 9.1.0.0). The reason it was not previously a problem was that Managed .NET was never initiating the Heart Beat, the queue manager would always send the Heart Beat at HBINT + 5 seconds and the .NET client would respond. Once this was corrected, the miscalculation of the receive timeout presented itself.
The fix is targeted for delivery in the following PTFs:
Version Maintenance Level
v8.0 8.0.0.13
v9.0 LTS 9.0.0.7
v9.1 CD 9.1.3
v9.1 LTS 9.1.0.3
As of July 12th 2019 only 9.0.0.7 and 9.1.3 have been released and can be downloaded from the following locations:
Unless you are using a version of the amqmdnet.dll
which includes the above APAR or you ask IBM to provide you with a IFIX for any lower version, the only way to accomplish a lower than 300 HBINT would require the SVRCONN
HBINT
to be set to a lower value in combination with the client using a CCDT with the CLNTCONN
HBINT
set to a lower value. Based on unmanaged or Managed .NET you have two options:
- With unmanaged .NET you can set the
CLNTCONN
HBINT
to 1
and allow the client to to always negotiate up to the SVRCONN
HBINT
value. You would then need the MQ admin to set the SVRCONN
HBINT
to the desired value.
- With Managed .NET you would need the MQ admin to set the
SVRCONN
HBINT
to the desired value, and you would then need to set the CCDT CLNTCONN
HBINT
to the same value as the SVRCONN
HBINT
.
If you are using a version of the amqmdnet.dll
which includes the above APAR or you ask IBM to provide you with a IFIX for any lower version the following will be how things work:
- If not using a CCDT the client side will use the equivalent of
HBINT(1)
and will negotiate up to the SVRCONN
value.
- If using a CCDT the
CLNTCONN
can have the HBINT
set to 1
which would result in the same behavior as above when not using a CCDT, the HBINT
will negotiate up to the SVRCONN
value.
No matter if using a CCDT with CLNTCONN
HBINT
set to 1
or not using a CCDT where client side will use HBINT(1)
, you will need to ask the MQ admin to set the SVRCONN
HBINT
to a lower value to accomplish a shorter TIMEOUT.
Example of setting HBINT
on the CCDT CLNTCONN
channel:
DEFINE CHL(CLIENT_CHL) CHLTYPE(CLNTCONN) CONNAME('1.2.3.4(9999)') QMNAME(ABC) HBINT(1)
DIS CHL(channel_name) HBINT
.