Article ID: 246713
Article Last Modified on 3/4/2004
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 Service Pack 1
- Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 Service Pack 2
- Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 Service Pack 3
This article was previously published under Q246713
SYMPTOMS
You can configure a Microsoft Exchange Server Routing Object application to wait for X minutes before it executes the next line of the code. However, you might find that the application doesn't actually wait for X minutes. For example, for the following setting in a Routing Map,
...... 100 Wait 0 X 200 DoSomething 2 .......
the application may wait longer than X minutes.
CAUSE
The Routing Engine (or the Routing Object) was built on the Exchange Event Service. The Event Service is implemented as a Microsoft Windows NT service that receives notifications about the state of folder items from server-based folders.
The Event Service fires events when an item is added, changed, or deleted in a folder, or according to time intervals. The time interval can be set from the Event Scripting Agent. The time interval must always be a multiplication of 15 minutes, such as 0 minutes, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, and so on. If you set the waiting time to be in the middle of an interval, for example 20 minutes, then the application actually waits for 30 minutes.
MORE INFORMATION
The Wait action actually acts as "wait for Either a response OR a specified time to pass (X minutes in this sample)".
For example, if an Approval or Rejection is received before the timeout, the next action, DoSomething, is executed immediately. It does not wait for X minutes.
REFERENCES
You can find more information on how to set time intervals for Microsoft Exchange Server Scripting Agents, under the following topic on the Microsoft Developer Network, Platform SDK documentation:
Configuring Events and Actions
Additional query words: Event Scripting Agent, Routing Objects
Keywords: kbmsg kbprb KB246713