During route computation, APPN determines the optimum route
through a network in the following steps:
- obtains the required route characteristics from the COS database
using the mode name specified in the session request
- determines all possible combinations of transmission groups and
nodes that form a route to the destination database
- the actual characteristics of the Nodes and TGs in these routes are
compared against the COS tables that contain the required
characteristics of the session. A weight is assigned based on how
well the actual characteristics meet the required characteristics.
Where there is no match between actual and required
characteristics, the route containing the node or TG is excluded
from further computation.
- Each possible route is quantified by adding the weights assigned
to the node and TGs in the route. The route with the lowest weight
is the one used for the session.
This attribute is part of the COS tables and specifies the maximum
route addition resistance value allowed for a node to route session
traffic. Route addition resistance defines the desirability for a
network node to perform additional intermediate session routing.
The higher the value, the less desirable the node is for session
routing purposes.