Abruptly stops the queue and returns control to the system. Any jobs that cannot be restarted are aborted immediately. For autostart queues, also marks the queue as inactive for autostart. The /QUEUE qualifier is optional, but you must specify the /RESET qualifier. Requires manage (M) access to the queue. Format STOP/QUEUE/RESET queue-name[:]
1 – Parameter
queue-name[:] Specifies the name of the queue you want to reset.
2 – Examples
1.$ INITIALIZE/QUEUE/AUTOSTART_ON=MYNODE::LPAO/START LPA0 $ENABLE AUTOSTART/QUEUES/ON_NODE=MYNODE . . . $STOP/QUEUE/RESET LPA0 $START/QUEUE LPA0 THE INITIALIZE/QUEUE command in this example creates an autostart output queue named LPA0. The /START qualifier activates the queue for autostart, and the ENABLE AUTOSTART/QUEUES command causes the queue to begin executing. Suppose the printer LPA0:: runs out of paper. The STOP/QUEUE/RESET command abruptly stops the queue LPA0. The current print job stops immediately and is requeued. The STOP/QUEUE/RESET command also makes the queue inactive for autostart, so it will not be restarted while the printer's paper is being resupplied. After the printer is loaded with paper, the START/QUEUE command makes the queue active for autostart and allows the queue manager to automatically start it again. 2.$ STOP/QUEUE/RESET TEXBATCH The STOP/QUEUE/RESET command in this example stops the batch queue TEXBATCH. Any current jobs that were submitted with the /RESTART qualifier are requeued for processing when the queue is restarted. Users might want to resubmit current jobs that were not originally submitted with the /RESTART qualifier.