Basically, it is a workload automation that we are using to run our various SAP application jobs. The background jobs are scheduled from third-party tools. We used to trigger from AutoSys. This is a replacement product for AutoSys.
We have 35,000 jobs that are running in SAP at different times of the day and at different frequencies. All those have been configured in Stonebranch Universal Automation Center.
Application and Database Administrator at Blue Bird Corp
Real User
2020-04-22T08:26:00Z
Apr 22, 2020
The primary use case is that we are now at the point where we are creating workflows and it is allowing us to shorten the time it takes for tasks to go through multiple machines. We wanted something that would give us better visibility.
Sr. Manager - Performance and Automation Engineering at PSCU Financial Services
Real User
2019-08-13T06:03:00Z
Aug 13, 2019
We use it for IT workflow automation. We have three main categories: billing, reporting, and analytics. We automate the entire workflow, end-to-end, including the file movement from our managed file-transfer solution to our NAS storage point and then kick off the downstream workflows. Most of them are ETL-based in Informatica. And the loads are done to a database and/or storage with output. It's the entire workflow. We host it on-prem. It is our enterprise scheduler; we're migrating everything to it. We'll only have Stonebranch as the enterprise scheduler controlling all of our jobs when we get to the end of our project. So it's being used extensively. We'll be somewhere north of 450 jobs when have completed the project and we will increase usage. As more workflows come online, Stonebranch is the platform we will use to automate them.
Systems Programmer II at a insurance company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2019-05-28T07:45:00Z
May 28, 2019
We use it for enterprise scheduling and workload automation. For the most part, it runs our internal mainframe batch jobs and does file transfer processes in and outside the company.
Senior Technical Analyst at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2019-04-17T08:37:00Z
Apr 17, 2019
We started off with replacing mainframe batch scheduling for some of our distributed applications, and then it grew into not just batch but workflows and file transfers. The volumes that we throw at it are in excess of 15 million tasks per month.
Sr. System Programmer at a retailer with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2019-04-17T08:37:00Z
Apr 17, 2019
It handles all of our scheduling. All our batch workload runs through it. We use MOVEit for our file process transfers, so we don't use Stonebranch for that. We have MOVEit integrated with our scheduling, so we run commands to MOVEit from scheduling. We're running about 46,000 tasks per day.
BI - BO Data Services Architect with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2018-11-11T12:02:00Z
Nov 11, 2018
* We are using Stonebranch to automate our MDM solution with all inbound and outbound systems. * We also use it for scheduling jobs or process to extract data from our business app to data warehouse solutions.
Works at a computer software company with 5,001-10,000 employees
User
2018-11-11T11:54:00Z
Nov 11, 2018
Universal Agent is used as a distributed scheduling agent with IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS. It's used in different environments (development, production) for scheduling jobs on open systems.
Manager of Scheduling at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2018-11-11T11:52:00Z
Nov 11, 2018
We are currently converting a segment of our distributed batch scheduling requirements from another vendor. The new model will give each application the ability to build, maintain and monitor their own batch flows.
Works at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2018-10-23T09:44:00Z
Oct 23, 2018
We use UAC on a daily basis to serve our internal customers. My team uses UAC to create workflows based on business requirements, creating patching campaigns and provide support.
Works at a real estate/law firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2018-10-23T09:35:00Z
Oct 23, 2018
Automate batch processing jobs that used to run on cron and had very ambiguous logging. It really helped us automated many manual jobs as well that were time-consuming and tedious.
Works at a insurance company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2018-10-23T09:30:00Z
Oct 23, 2018
Originally purchased as a replacement for CA7/11, now used for full-blown enterprise automation. We utilize agents on Linux, Windows, iSeries, and zSeries machines.
Stonebranch automates enterprise-level workload and task scheduling across platforms like Linux, Windows, and mainframe, managing thousands of daily tasks for improved efficiency and visibility.Stonebranch enables organizations to streamline job scheduling by replacing older systems with a robust solution that automates complex workflows, batch processing, and secure file transfers. Its compatibility with multiple platforms and enhanced visibility aid teams in efficiently managing business...
Basically, it is a workload automation that we are using to run our various SAP application jobs. The background jobs are scheduled from third-party tools. We used to trigger from AutoSys. This is a replacement product for AutoSys.
We have 35,000 jobs that are running in SAP at different times of the day and at different frequencies. All those have been configured in Stonebranch Universal Automation Center.
We use Stonebranch to manage and migrate automated tasks.
I am a consultant. Stonebranch was used for retail businesses.
We primarily use the solution for our clients.
The primary use case is that we are now at the point where we are creating workflows and it is allowing us to shorten the time it takes for tasks to go through multiple machines. We wanted something that would give us better visibility.
We use it for IT workflow automation. We have three main categories: billing, reporting, and analytics. We automate the entire workflow, end-to-end, including the file movement from our managed file-transfer solution to our NAS storage point and then kick off the downstream workflows. Most of them are ETL-based in Informatica. And the loads are done to a database and/or storage with output. It's the entire workflow. We host it on-prem. It is our enterprise scheduler; we're migrating everything to it. We'll only have Stonebranch as the enterprise scheduler controlling all of our jobs when we get to the end of our project. So it's being used extensively. We'll be somewhere north of 450 jobs when have completed the project and we will increase usage. As more workflows come online, Stonebranch is the platform we will use to automate them.
Our primary use case is automating the workload for the company. It's used quite extensively. We run over 500,000 jobs a week with it.
We use it for enterprise scheduling and workload automation. For the most part, it runs our internal mainframe batch jobs and does file transfer processes in and outside the company.
We started off with replacing mainframe batch scheduling for some of our distributed applications, and then it grew into not just batch but workflows and file transfers. The volumes that we throw at it are in excess of 15 million tasks per month.
It handles all of our scheduling. All our batch workload runs through it. We use MOVEit for our file process transfers, so we don't use Stonebranch for that. We have MOVEit integrated with our scheduling, so we run commands to MOVEit from scheduling. We're running about 46,000 tasks per day.
We had no enterprise solution in place for our application. This was meant to support Linux and Windows.
* We are using Stonebranch to automate our MDM solution with all inbound and outbound systems. * We also use it for scheduling jobs or process to extract data from our business app to data warehouse solutions.
Universal Agent is used as a distributed scheduling agent with IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS. It's used in different environments (development, production) for scheduling jobs on open systems.
We are currently converting a segment of our distributed batch scheduling requirements from another vendor. The new model will give each application the ability to build, maintain and monitor their own batch flows.
I am a part of a production support team, and we automate most of our work using this. It reduces all the manual work.
Centralized scheduling and file transfers running on a couple of hundred agents (Windows/Unix/Linux).
Using Universal Agent as a distributed agent (like extended agents), managed with IBM Workload Scheduler for z/OS.
Scheduling Linux and Windows tasks from a 3rd party scheduler running on IBM z System. Integrating mainframe workload with distributed ones.
Scheduling Unix and Wintel batches. Full package - finance, backups, transfers. Three environments.
We use UAC on a daily basis to serve our internal customers. My team uses UAC to create workflows based on business requirements, creating patching campaigns and provide support.
We are scheduling applications and tasks for our internal customers.
Automate batch processing jobs that used to run on cron and had very ambiguous logging. It really helped us automated many manual jobs as well that were time-consuming and tedious.
Originally purchased as a replacement for CA7/11, now used for full-blown enterprise automation. We utilize agents on Linux, Windows, iSeries, and zSeries machines.
FileTransfers and batch automation in Java environments. Implement daily checks on database tables with SQL tasks.