Application Development Discussions
Join the discussions or start your own on all things application development, including tools and APIs, programming models, and keeping your skills sharp.
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

client no

Former Member
0 Kudos
287

>suppose client no is 006

what is stand for:

0 >

0 >

6 >

tell me plzzz

3 REPLIES 3

Former Member
0 Kudos
216

Hi,

A client means a separate unit within one sap system or instance which have its own business organisation and own data. However clients within a single instance share a common database.

When a SAP system is implemented customization is done separately for each client.

But all the clients in a single system have a common repository for all ABAP Workbench development objectssuch as tables, data elements,domains etc.

Each client has its own master data, user data and transaction data.

Tcode SCC4 shows diff clients .

The numbers assigned to a client is only to identify the client only. One can assign any three digit number but not 000 and 066.

000 is the default client when sap is installed and 066 is the default client for solution manager.

Any changes applied in the 000 client is distributed across all other clients but not the vice versa.

Hope this meets your querry.

Dont forget to award a point

Regards

Former Member
0 Kudos
216

HI,

As far as I know there is no specific meaning for 0 0 6 separately. Its your client's numbering, that has got nothing to do with SAP standards. and this numbering would differ from co. to co.

But 000 is the SAP client, you cannot log into this and make alterations to it. Any changes done in this client is automatically reflected in all the clients of that system. If we need to do some specific changes to a program in 000 client, this would require special permission from SAP, or SAP will directly log into your system remotely and do the changes for you. On the contrary, SAP will not support in upgrading the program which you have requested for alteration in their subsequent versions.

Regards

Subramanian

Clemenss
Active Contributor
0 Kudos
216

Welcome! Before you post, please familiarize yourself with the rules of engagement.

Step 1: Finding An Answer

Rule number one: Try to find the answer first. There are tons of resources out there, show that you have tried to find the answer. A question that shows that the person is willing to try and help themselves is more likely to be answered than one which simply demands information. Tell us what you have done to try and solve the problem yourself - often we can learn from that too!

Search the forums, the articles, the blog posts and the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) in the Wiki for your topic.

Step 2: Asking Your Question

Once you have verified that no resources are available for solving your problem, ask your question. Do the following:

- Use a Good Subject Line

The subject header is your golden opportunity to attract qualified experts' attention in around 50 characters or less. Don't waste it on babble like "Workflow question". We all have busy jobs, often we just skim through the list headings and read those that interest us. Also, DO NOT reply to an unrelated post to ask a different question. This confuses those reading the thread and may lose people that would be interested in your question. Always start a new topic with a new mail.

Bad subject: Urgent problem with workflow

Good subject: Error after transport: "Inconsistent workflow definition"

Do not use words in capital letters and any of the words: urgent, quickly, burning, etc in your message. Especially not in the title! This just irritates and does not help you get to your goal. From our side, we definitely do not answer faster when we see these words.

The same goes for such things as ??? or !!! in appends. In the English language one ? or ! is sufficient to terminate a sentence.

- Only One Question Per Posting

For each question that you have, make a separate posting. Don't ask multiple questions in one posting, this is confusing for people and might not get answered, since the subject line does not reflect all your problems. If a new and unrelated question comes up during a thread, start a new thread.

- Provide Enough Information.

For starters, please tell us which version and type of system you're working on - e.g. SAP R/3 4.6C or SRM 4.0 (EBP 5.0). If your question is regarding an error, include that in the message. If it is a request for info, please be specific. Questions such as "How do I administer workflow" are vague, tell us exactly what you want to know - "I'm the administrator, how do I forward work items to another agent?". If it's a big query, its better to break it down into separate questions.