[. . . ] SAS Enterprise Miner 6. 2 Administrator's Guide ® TM ® The correct bibliographic citation for this manual is as follows: SAS Institute Inc. Cary, NC: SAS Institute Inc. SAS® Enterprise MinerTM 6. 2: Administrator's Guide Copyright © 2010, SAS Institute Inc. , Cary, NC, USA All rights reserved. For a hard-copy book: No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher, SAS Institute Inc. For a Web download or e-book: Your use of this publication shall be governed by the terms established by the vendor at the time you acquire this publication. [. . . ] You can view and customize Logical Workspace Servers, even if you do not have any registered Enterprise Miner projects. Servers will recognize custom project settings when new projects are created on the servers. Customizing Logical Workspace Servers for Enterprise Miner To customize the properties for an Enterprise Miner server, perform the following steps: 1. Right-click the icon for a server under the Projects folder, and then select Properties from the pop-up menu. You can customize the Default Location for New Projects by entering a path. All new Enterprise Miner projects that are created on this server will default to the path that you specify. If you want to prevent users who create projects from changing the default project location, select the Do not allow users to change this location check box. Concurrent Nodes list, specify the maximum number of concurrently running branches that you want to allow in project process flow diagrams. 5. In the Initialization Code box, enter the path (on this server) to a project start-up file, if you wish to use one. A project start-up file is a text file that contains SAS code that you would like to run when a project is opened or if a process flow diagram is run or if result reports are generated. In the MPCONNECT launch command box, you can enter an alternate command to use when you launch MPCONNECT sessions. There might be cases where you would like to modify some SAS system defaults for sessions that are used when running process flow diagrams. The following default command is used when this box is left blank: !sascmdv -noobjectserver -nosyntaxcheck -noasynchio This command has the same effect as using the SAS command that was used to launch the SAS workspace session at the time the project was opened. In the WebDAV URL box, you can optionally enter the URL to your WebDAV server. If you specify a WebDAV server, the SAS Enterprise Miner model result packages that you save will be copied to the WebDAV server location when the model packages are registered. Adding a New Enterprise Miner User Identity in the SAS 9. 2 Management Console This section provides instructions on how a SAS Administrator can create a new Enterprise Miner identity in the SAS Management Console using domain (or machine name) credentials and a user account that already exists on the machine. The user ID must exist on the operating system before the user ID can be created via SAS Management Console. The user ID and password information on the Login tab of the SAS Management Console must exactly match the operating system user ID and password values. Follow the instructions below to create an identity within the SAS Management Console. After you create the new identity, users will be able to log into Enterprise Miner using these credentials. Use SAS Management Console to create a group for your Enterprise Miner users. In the SAS Management Console window, right-click the User Manager folder and choose New Group. Name your new group 10 "EM Users" or a name that you prefer. 3. [. . . ] This mapping is encoded into PMML as data type parameters in the data dictionary. DATETIME stamps are represented as the number of seconds since midnight of January 1, 1960. When date and time data is brought into SAS from a DBMS, SAS assigns a date/time informat to the specific variables and converts them for SAS internal representation. Subsequent modeling on such data imported into SAS works with the converted internal values. [. . . ]