I'm not that happy how the term "scheduling" is used within SAS DIS/SMC. If I understand this right then you're simply talking about creating .sas files out of SAS metadata. This is unfortunately called "scheduling". You need a SAS server (the SAS Batch Server) to create these .sas files. When moving to another environement (code migration) then what you normally do is to export your metadata from the source environment (creating .spk files), moving these files to your target environment, import the .spk files into the target environment (I'm using DIS for this) and then re-deploy your jobs (=scheduling in the target environment creating new .sas file in the target environment). What "scheduling" also does is creating these additional scheduling objects. If you're using LSF for scheduling (and here comes the terminology mess) then you use these objects to build your scheduling flows in SMC (not job flows now but scheduling flows where you define how the jobs are executed). So that's where the question comes: What scheduler are you using. I don't see a reason to change the default path for the batch server logs. That's only the logs about "scheduling" your jobs. I can see a lot of reasons why you might want to define the log location for the jobs which get regularly executed. Whatever scheduler (LSF or something else) you're using, you will batch submit the .sas files with a command line like: sas.sh -prog <program name> .... There are a lot of additional parameters possible. sas.sh sets a lot of the values if not passed explicitly. I believe the location for logs is one of it. So if you want to define the location of the log then you do something like sas.sh -prog <path/program name> -log <path/logname> .... You could use a UNIX environment variable as part of the pathname for the log. If you want to do this then I would set this environment variable in the .profile of the user under which the process runs. The one thing I've done already more than once is to define a UNIX environment variable $LEV as this is normally the only changing part between environments. And then I use this environment variable both for batch submitting and also within SAS code using SYMGET()
... View more