Initially it is manual work in Blue Prism to set up a schedule for however many resources a process needs to run on. If you need 10 sessions of a process to run at the same time from a schedule, then you need to drag and drop the process 10 times. Then, each time the schedule starts, it'll spin up 10 sessions, assuming runtime resources and license availability.
As far as Pools, when you create the schedule, you can do the same thing but you drag and drop the process 10 times onto the resource pool instead of on a specific resource. When the schedule triggers, it will spin up session after session available resources in the pool until it hits 10 sessions, runs into a license limitation, or runs out of available resources.
There is one issue I've seen others encounter and I have as well, but it's hard to reproduce. What will happen is that if the first resource that a session is started on is the primary resource in the pool (the one with a star next to it) and that session is in exclusive mode, then all other sessions will fail to start because Blue Prism will think the entire pool is busy because the primary resource on it is. Has anyone else encountered this? I just had it happen on 6.5 and I'm thinking I might submit an enhancement request.
Edit: FYI, when I say that it's required to drag and drop the process 10 times, I am saying this is true if you only use in-built functionality in Blue Prism such as Scheduler in Control Room. It's pretty easy to spin up as many a session as you want by using CLI commands from an outside application or script. I've been using PowerShell to do this and it works reliably.
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Dave Morris
3Ci @ Southern Company
Atlanta, GA
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Dave Morris, 3Ci at Southern Company