Job Server Administration

The Job Server is a feature used to off-load visualization file publishing (DWF) from the engineering workstation during the check in process. Publishing visualization files of large assemblies can slow the check in of designs. By off-loading this process, users can quickly check in files and ensure consistent visualization file creation. The Job Server can also be used to synchronize properties after a lifecycle change has been invoked on a file.

Release Availability

The Job Processor feature is available in certain editions of Autodesk Vault. Refer to the table below to see if your edition has this feature. 

  2012 2013 2014
Autodesk Vault Basic    
Autodesk Vault Workgroup
Autodesk Vault Collaboration
Autodesk Vault Professional

Job Server Components

The Job Server consists of two components: 

  1. Job Queue - A list, or queue, of jobs submitted by clients (Inventor, AutoCAD, Vault, Autoloader) waiting to be processed. This queue is stored in and managed by the Vault Server.
  2. Job Processor - is a separate application that reserves queued jobs and pulls them from the job server to process them. Since the job processor is installed along with the vault client, any workstation with Autodesk Vault Workgroup, Collaboration, and Professional can be used to publish jobs.

How It Works

Jobs are submitted to the job server when:

Enable the Job Server

The Job Server allows publishing jobs to be queued and processed at a later time. You mustactivate the Job Server prior to sending any jobs to it for publishing.

Note: You must be an Administrator to enable the Job Server. Users logged in prior to the Job Server being enabled must log in again to submit jobs.
  1. Select Tools Administration in the Vault client application.
  2. In the Administration dialog, click the Visualization tab.
  3. Select the Enable Job Server check box to activate the job server.

Multi-Site Support for the Job Server

The Job Server supports multi-site environments by logging into a specific server and only processing jobs that are associated with that server. In the illustration below, any job processor that logs into Site B will only process jobs that are at Site B. The same happens for Job Processors in Site A.