Problem Note 65133: It is not possible to run any job-flow instances
When you launch a task in SAS® Risk Governance Framework or SAS® Risk and Finance Workbench, or when you create a job-flow instance directly within SAS® Infrastructure for Risk Management, the instance might not run and a message like the following might occur in the middle-tier log file SASIRMServer.log:
ERROR org.hibernate.util.JDBCExceptionReporter - ERROR: duplicate key value violates unique constraint "ix_data_path"
This problem can occur when the SAS Infrastructure for Risk Management web application server startup process detects some job-flow instances as out-of-date due to data or timestamp changes in some federated areas.
To work around this problem, perform the following steps:
- Identify which federated areas are associated with the out-of-date job-flow instances.
- In SAS® Management Console, on the Plug-ins tab, select Application Management ► Configuration Manager ► SAS Application Infrastructure ► right-click IRM Mid-Tier Server ► select Properties ► Advanced tab.
- For each federated area that you identified in Step (1), add the following property:
Property Name: com.sas.solutions.risk.irm.alwaysexecute.fa.<federated-area-id>
Property Value: true
- Restart the SAS Infrastructure for Risk Management web application server, which is typically SASServer8_1.
Click the Hot Fix tab in this note to access the hot fix for this issue.
Operating System and Release Information
SAS System | SAS Infrastructure for Risk Management | Microsoft® Windows® for x64 | 3.5 | | 9.4 TS1M5 | |
Linux for x64 | 3.5 | | 9.4 TS1M5 | |
*
For software releases that are not yet generally available, the Fixed
Release is the software release in which the problem is planned to be
fixed.
In SAS® Infrastructure for Risk Management, it might not be possible to run any instances after a restart of the SAS Infrastructure for Risk Management web application server.
Type: | Problem Note |
Priority: | high |
Date Modified: | 2019-12-12 15:03:52 |
Date Created: | 2019-11-18 07:35:48 |