Ctrc and db2 – IBM BC-201 User Manual

Page 41

Advertising
background image

Overview of IBM Networking

Cisco Transaction Connection

BC-241

Cisco IOS Bridging and IBM Networking Configuration Guide

78-11737-02

Figure 109

Cisco Router Configured with the CTRC Feature for CICS Communications

CTRC and DB2

CTRC enables Cisco routers to implement IBM’s DRDA over TCP/IP. The Cisco router with CTRC
exists in the TCP/IP network, and clients use a CTRC IP address and port on the router to connect to the
IBM host system that exists in either an SNA network or a TCP/IP network.

When CTRC is appropriately configured on a router, client-based ODBC applications can connect to the
following IBM D2 relational databases:

DB2 for OS/390 (MVS)

DB2 for Virtual Machine (VM) (SQL/DS)

DB2 for Virtual Storage Extended (VSE) (SQL/DS)

DB2 for OS/400

DB2 Universal Database (UNIX, Windows, OS/2)

For an SNA host connection, the router with CTRC converts DRDA packets over TCP/IP to DRDA
packets over (APPC LU 6.2) and then routes them to DB2 databases. CTRC runs as a TCP/IP daemon
on the router, accepting DRDA client connections over TCP/IP. When a client connects to the database
on an IBM mainframe host, CTRC allocates an APPC conversation over SNA to an IBM server, and acts
as a gateway between DRDA over TCP/IP and DRDA over APPC.

Figure 110

illustrates how the Cisco router configured with the CTRC feature enables the exchange of

database information between ODBC client applications running DRDA in a TCP/IP network and a
DRDA-based IBM system that accesses DB2 relational data.

Figure 110

Cisco Router Configured with the CTRC Feature for DB2 Communications (SNA Host
Network)

CTRC

TCP/IP

SNA

TCP/IP

CICS transaction

monitor

26062

SNA

SNA

APPC

(LU 6.2)

CICS client

TCP/IP

CTRC

TCP/IP

SNA

TCP/IP

DRDA server

DB2 database

26076

RDBMS

SNA

SNA

APPC

(LU 6.2)

ODBC client

TCP/IP

Advertising