Hi all,
I have have been asked if FNMS can identify which IBM MQ release type has been installed. Which deployments are LTS and which are CD. Current version is 2020 R2 but we are due to upgrade shortly just in case it affects your responses.
I haven't been able to find anything through my internet and community forum searches. I can only find reference about the blue rectangles via this IBM support page - https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/ibm-mq-faq-long-term-support-and-continuous-delivery-releases
Does anybody know what I can use either in the file evidence or elsewhere to identify which is which?
Many thanks,
Geoff
Aug 15, 2022 03:01 AM - edited Aug 15, 2022 03:03 AM
I wonder whether those values in parentheses are MQ installation names that the ARL has been configured to recognize.
I'm not seeing anything obvious in the evidence there that would help to identify the deployment type sorry. It looks like the different types of deployments may look exactly the same from. If that's the case then I can't think of any way to automatically distinguish them.
Aug 23, 2022 09:13 PM
I don't know enough about IBM MQ to help with knowing what differences there might be in evidence gathered by your inventory tool from a computer that has an LTS deployment vs a computer with a CD deployment. However if there is a difference, you may be able to identify that by looking at data that appears on the All Evidence page in the web portal:
Aug 17, 2022 12:12 AM
Hi ChrisG,
Thanks for the reply. I can see potential evidence in there as there are references to LTS and CD; however, none has been discovered. As we have plenty of MQ 9 installed I would expect to see either or both types of evidence being returned.
Kind regards,
Geoff
Aug 22, 2022 02:37 AM
I wonder whether those values in parentheses are MQ installation names that the ARL has been configured to recognize.
I'm not seeing anything obvious in the evidence there that would help to identify the deployment type sorry. It looks like the different types of deployments may look exactly the same from. If that's the case then I can't think of any way to automatically distinguish them.
Aug 23, 2022 09:13 PM