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Chapter 9. Scheduler
		Read this chapter to learn about the role of timers in the Business Process Manager.
	
		Timers can be created upon events in the process. Set them to trigger either action executions or event transitions.
	
9.1.  Timers 
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			The easiest way to set a timer is by adding a timer element to the node. This sample code shows how to do so:
		
			A timer specified on a node is not executed after that node is exited. Both the transition and the action are optional. When a timer is executed, the following events occur in sequence:
		
- an event of typetimeris fired
- if an action is specified, it executes
- a signal is to resume execution over any specified transition
			Every timer must have a unique name. If no name is specified in the 
timer element, the name of the node is used by default.
		
			Use the timer action to support any action element (such as 
action or script.)
		
			Timers are created and canceled by actions. The two pertinent 
action-elements are create-timer and cancel-timer. In actual fact, the timer element shown above is just short-hand notation for a create-timer action on node-enter and a cancel-timer action on node-leave.
		9.2.  Scheduler Deployment 
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			Process executions create and cancel timers, storing them in a timer store. A separate 
timer runner checks this store and execute each timers at the due moment.
		Figure 9.1. Scheduler Components Overview
