8.7

Table Of Contents
To create an error process, simply replace the initial input task by the InputErrorBin input task,
and that process automatically becomes able to handle error jobs sent to it. It is up to you,
however, to decide how that error job will be handled.
For example, you could place the job file in a specific folder, then send an email to a supervisor
indicating that a job has failed. Or you could update a database with an error status so that it
appears on a customer's online order. You could also zip the order up and send it to an
administrator, while simultaneously advising the person that sent the job that it failed.
You can have as many error processes as you can normal processes - that is, you are limited to
512 processes, subprocesses, startup processes and error processes combined.
The following information is available from within your information process when it is
triggered:
l Job Information variables (%1 to %9)
l The data file as it was before starting the task
l Global variables (which are, of course, available anywhere)
l Aseries of variables containing information about the error, the task that triggered it and
the process that contained it. See "Standard Variables" on page599
Note
Local variables in the process are not sent to error processes, even if the error process has a variable
of the same name.
Accessing the Logs
If your process is running live in PReS Workflow service, you have two ways of seeing what is
happening, now or in the past.
To view what processes are running and processing data as it happens:
1.
In the PReS Workflow Ribbon, click on the Tools tab, then select Service Console in the
Services group. The PReS Workflow Service Console opens.
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