To Calibrate Advanced DIP processing: - Document Import Processor - English - Foundation 22.1 - OnBase - Essential - Premier - Standard - external - Essential - Standard - Premier

Document Import Processor

Platform
OnBase
Product
Document Import Processor
Release
Foundation 22.1
License
Essential
Standard
Premier

Increase the thread count in the onbase32.ini file until there is no longer an improvement in processing speed. A good rule of thumb is to start with as many threads as you have processors, up to a maximum of three per processor. A four-processor machine would have the following beginning point in the onbase32.ini file under Tuning. Increase the Thread Count in the onbase32.ini file until there is no longer an improvement in processing speed.

[Tuning]
ArchiveThreads=4

When you launch the DIP processor look to the Queued Items, found in the Processor Status dialog, to discern whether your thread count is too high or too low. The Queued Items should be below 100. If it is below 100, you may want to increase Archive Threads, and if it is above, you may want to decrease the number of Archive Threads. If you increase your thread count and do not see any Queued Items, then you will need to reference the Verification Report to discern whether or not performance has been diminished. Queued items only occur when OnBase is processing data faster than the database can accept it. To have some queued items is common, but having 100 items queued is considered the maximum threshold.

Note:

If you are monitoring your threads through the Microsoft Windows Task Manager, you may notice that your processors are not being utilized uniformly. OnBase Advanced Processors will create the threads, but it is the function of the operating system to control the actual utilization of processors.