A service endpoint is the Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) location of an 
               		Enterprise Server for .NET component running as a service. The default configuration is a port on the local machine, that is, all components operating
               on a single machine.
               	 
            
 
            	 
            Key WCF service interactions an installation uses include:
               	 
            
 
            	 
             
               		
               - Dispatcher-to-SEP, to submit requests for processing.
                  		
               
- SEP-to-dispatcher, to register an SEP as available for processing requests (self-hosted SEPs only). 
                  		
               
- SEP-to-listener, to send responses back to clients and receive data from specific client conversations.
                  		
               
- SEP-to-monitor, to register database and server instances, register special SEPs (such as debug SEPs) and SEP pools, and process
                  certain CICS APIs.
                  		
               
- Monitor-to-dispatcher, to submit requests generated by events such as timers.
                  		
               
Note: The listener always sends its WCF service location to the dispatcher, so you do not have to configure the listener's endpoint
               for the dispatcher.
               	 
            
 
            	 
            For a system operating on a cluster, service endpoints are defined as URLs. The URL defines the endpoint's protocol, hostname,
               port, and path.