Instead of using two different rulesets, you can create two different TASM planned environments in the same rule set and TASM will automatically change to the different state by time of day. There is less overhead when you change states compared to when you change rulesets, plus it is automatic.
There is a little more information on changing TASM states in this blog posting on Developer Exchange:
For more detail, the TASM orange book has an entire chapter on the State Matrix and automating setup changes. And I believe the Viewpoint User Guide has some information about how to use Viewpoint Workload Designer screens to set up a state change.
Huzain,
Instead of using two different rulesets, you can create two different TASM planned environments in the same rule set and TASM will automatically change to the different state by time of day. There is less overhead when you change states compared to when you change rulesets, plus it is automatic.
There is a little more information on changing TASM states in this blog posting on Developer Exchange:
http://developer.teradata.com/blog/carrie/2014/01/determining-precedence-among-tasm-planned-environments
For more detail, the TASM orange book has an entire chapter on the State Matrix and automating setup changes. And I believe the Viewpoint User Guide has some information about how to use Viewpoint Workload Designer screens to set up a state change.
Thanks, -Carrie