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job

By TechTarget Contributor

What is a job in an operating system?

In certain computer operating systems, a job is the unit of work that a computer operator -- or a program called a job scheduler -- gives to the OS.

For example, a job could be the running of an application program, such as a weekly payroll program.

How jobs work

A job is usually said to be run in batch -- rather than interactive -- mode. The operator or job scheduler gives the OS a batch of jobs to do -- payroll, cost analysis, employee file updating and so forth -- and these are performed in the background when time-sensitive interactive work is not being done. In IBM mainframe OSes -- MVS, OS/390 and successors -- a job is described with Job Control Language (JCL).

Jobs are broken down into job steps. An example of a job step might be to make sure that a particular data set or database needed in the job is made accessible.

Typically, the development programmer who writes a program that is intended to be run as a batch job also writes JCL that describes for the OS how to run the job -- for example, what data sets or databases it uses. The use of a job scheduler usually provides greater flexibility and the ability to monitor and report batch job operations.

A similar term is task, a concept usually applied to interactive work. A multitasking OS serving one or more interactive users can at the same time perform batch jobs in the background.

11 Aug 2023

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