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Note that "setmqenv" is only required for monitoring configurations that require MQ Series.

Then extract and install the monitoring into a convenient directory on the broker host ...

Transfer the installed monitoring extension package (e.g. "qpwmb_installed_windows.zip") from the broker host to the agenthost. Ensure transfers are done as binary files, if that is relevant to the transfer mechanism used.

On the agent host, extract the monitoring extension ...

run the extension installer to relocate the JRE and the MQ java path ...

Note that "mqjavainstallpath" is only required for monitoring configurations that require MQSeries.

The monitoring extension can now be started and configured to monitor a remote broker using extension preferences.

The following examples show minimal preferences that should be set to monitor IIB or ACE in various configurations.

To monitor an IIB broker that published monitoring information via MQTT ...

To monitor an IIB broker that publishes monitoring information via MQ Series ...


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What is message broker in iib?

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When someone close to you passes away, taking bereavement leave from work can provide you time to process the loss and take a step toward


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When does bereavement leave start?

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Today, Sinn Féin is one of the largest political parties in Northern Ireland. Formed in 1905, it first rose to prominence after the Easter Rising to become the political wing of the republican movement. While separate from the IRA, it shared the same goal, as well as many members.

In December 1918, Sinn Féin won a landslide electoral victory, claiming nearly three-quarters of the 105 Irish seats in the British Parliament, leading to the establishment of an independent parliament, named Dáil Éireann. This emboldened the IRA, which, under the leadership of Michael Collins, fought the British Army in the guerrilla-style Irish War of Independence 1919–21.

Sinn Féin split many times throughout the 20th century, including in 1970 when the dominant faction became closely associated with the IRA.

The Irish War of Independence ended in 1921 with a ceasefire and the partition of Ireland. A resulting treaty established the self-governing Irish Free State containing 26 of Ireland’s historic 32 counties, as well as the creation of Northern Ireland from the six remaining northern counties of Ulster, which were to remain part of the United Kingdom.

Many members of the IRA (now known as the ‘Old IRA’) opposed the treaty. Led by Éamon de Valera, they split from Sinn Féin and, from 1922–23, fought a civil war against the provisional government. The pro-treaty forces won thanks to British support, but de Valera turned to the political arena and created a new party, Fianna Fáil, in 1926. He would later become Taoiseach, or prime minister, in 1932.

Despite being declared illegal in the 1930s and its members facing imprisonment without trial, the IRA continued to recruit. During World War II, some members even attempted to collude with Adolf Hitler to help drive out the British. The leaders were caught and executed.

In 1949, Ireland – so-called since 1937 – officially withdrew from the Commonwealth and became a republic, so the IRA focused all efforts on Northern Ireland. It launched its border campaign in 1956, but failed to secure mass support. Many in Northern Ireland were unionists or loyalists (they wished Northern Ireland to stay within the UK), and the division had seismic religious implications as Northern Irish unionists were mainly Protestant while republicans were overwhelmingly Catholic.

Beginning in the late 1960s and lasting until 1998, the Troubles was one of the bloodiest chapters in Northern Irish history, in which around 3,600 people died and tens of thousands were injured.

Civil rights campaigns protesting against Catholic discrimination – especially concerning housing, jobs and voting rights – had emerged in the 1960s, but, despite being non-violent, came into regular conflict with loyalists and the Protestant-dominated police, the Royal Ulster Constabulary.

Clashes escalated until 12 August 1969, when three days of fighting broke out in the city of Derry/Londonderry over a parade of Apprentice Boys (a Protestant society) marching past the Catholic Bogside area. The so-called battle of the Bogside ended with British troops being sent in and building ‘peace walls’ to separate Catholics and Protestants. This was the beginning of an almost 38-year deployment called Operation Banner.

A weakened IRA rallied in the chaos, but soon divided over the use of violence. In 1969, it split into two factions: the Official IRA committed to peaceful means while the Provisional IRA (the ‘Provos’) believed militancy was the only way forward. The Provos became dominant in the Troubles and started its guerrilla campaign – the Long War – in 1970. Through bombings, assassinations and ambushes, the Provos hoped to make Northern Ireland ungovernable. The British and unionists retaliated by arresting suspected IRA members or supporters in droves, interring them without trial, and perpetrating their own attacks.

On 30 January 1972, British soldiers opened fire on unarmed civil rights demonstrators in Derry/Londonderry protesting against internment without trial – 13 people died (another would die from his injuries several months later). The ensuing investigations exonerated the soldiers and it wasn’t until 2010 that an inquiry concluded the killings on Bloody Sunday as “unjustified and unjustifiable”, as stated by then British prime minister David Cameron to parliament. In the immediate aftermath of the events of 1972, anger among nationalists led to a surge in IRA recruitment.

Later in 1972, the Provos set off more than 20 bombs in Belfast, timed for just an 80-minute window on 21 July. Bloody Friday left nine dead and around 130 injured, many of them civilians. In retaliation, the British launched Operation Motorman to retake the ‘no-go zones’ – areas of the city usually controlled by republicans. That year also saw the dissolving of the Northern Irish parliament and the British taking direct rule once more.

In 1973, the IRA campaign escalated with the targeting of the British mainland. Bombs went off on a bus carrying soldiers in Yorkshire; at the Tower of London and Houses of Parliament; and in cities such as Bristol. The most devastating were the bombings of two pubs in Guildford on 5 October, and two pubs in Birmingham on 21 November, killing five and 21 people respectively. At a time of particularly high tension, British police were under pressure to act and made quick arrests – only for it to be later proven that the socalled Guildford Four and Birmingham Six were wrongfully convicted.

The IRA claimed its highest-profile casualty on 27 August 1979 when it planted a bomb on the boat of Lord Mountbatten, cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. He died along with three others. Just a matter of hours later, an IRA unit ambushed British soldiers close to the border, killing 18.

As an illegal organisation, the IRA had moneymaking opportunities through criminal means, such as armed robberies, extortion and smuggling. Members who owned businesses also helped raise money, but a chief source of funding during the Troubles came from wealthy Irish-American sympathisers through an organisation known as NORAID, or the Irish Northern Aid Committee. Weapons were imported from other countries, including the US, regions of Eastern Europe and Libya.

Imprisoned at the notorious Maze Prison, IRA member Bobby Sands began a hunger strike on 1 March 1981 to protest the removal of ‘special category’ status – meaning he and his comrades were treated as criminals rather than political prisoners. Other acts of resistance had included wearing blankets instead of uniforms and taking part in ‘dirty protests’, where they refused to wash and smeared their cells with excrement.

Sands’s hunger strike lasted 66 days before he died, but not before he had made global headlines and was elected to Westminster. Hailed as a martyr, some 100,000 attended his funeral procession and nine other inmates would die from their own hunger strikes.

Attacks continued throughout the 1980s, including an IRA bombing of a Remembrance Day service in Enniskillen, which killed 11 civilians, and an ambush of the SAS in Loughall – both in 1987. But political manoeuvrings started bearing fruit too.

In 1985, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Irish Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald signed the Anglo-Irish Agreement, giving the Irish government a role in Northern Ireland affairs on the condition that they recognised that unification could not happen unless it was supported by a majority of citizens. This was met with mixed reactions, being opposed by unionists and the IRA alike, but was a first step in seeking peace.

Sinn Féin grew in influence under the leadership of Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness, who instigated talks with the leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party, John Hume. By August 1994, enough progress had been made that the IRA declared a “complete cessation of all military activities”, although this was temporarily broken with a bombing in London amidst frustrations that Sinn Féin was being excluded from talks. It was only by agreeing to IRA decommissioning and committing to non-violence that Sinn Féin was allowed to participate in September 1997.

On 10 April 1998, the Good Friday Agreement was signed. Widely seen as the end of the Troubles, it established new institutions: a devolved government and the Northern Ireland Assembly, where power had to be shared by parties on both sides. The Royal Ulster Constabulary was also replaced by the new Police Service of Northern Ireland.


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When ira formed?

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  • The Original Policy documents.
  • Canceled Cheque with the policyholder's name.
  • Copy of Passbook.
  • Bank Statement.
  • Copy of Pan Card.
  • Copy of Aadhaar Card.
  • Copy of Passport.
  • Driving License.

Answer is posted for the following question.

How to close sbi insurance policy?


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