Documentation Home
> Sun Java Enterprise System 5 Installation Planning Guide
Sun Java Enterprise System 5 Installation Planning Guide
Book Information
Index
A
B
C
D
G
H
I
L
M
N
P
Q
R
S
T
W
Preface
Chapter 1 Introduction to Installation Planning
Java ES Components Used in This Release
Java ES Installation Defined
Installation Planning Tasks
Chapter 2 Developing Your Implementation Specifications
Analyzing the Deployment Architecture
Developing Your Computer Hardware and Operating System Specification
Developing a Network Connectivity Specification
Developing Your User Management Specifications
Specifying the LDAP Schema for a Solution
Specifying the Directory Tree Structure for a Solution
Chapter 3 Preparing Your Installation Plan
Installation Planning Issues
Distributed Installations
Component Dependencies
Configuring for Interoperation
Redundancy Strategies
LDAP Schema and LDAP Directory Tree Structure
Java ES Installer Behavior
The Installer is Local
Installer Operating Modes
Installer Compatibility Checking
Other Installation Issues
Developing Your Installation Plan
Appendix A Java ES and Solaris 10 Zones
What Are Zones?
Structure of a Multi-zone Environment
Whole Root Zones vs. Sparse Root Zones
Package Propagation
Why Use Zones for Java ES?
Zones Limitations of Java ES Components
Java ES Shared Components and Zones
Synchronization of Shared Components
Shared Components and Sparse Root Zones
Java ES Product Components and Zones
Zone Support in the Java ES Installer
Java ES Propagation Policies
Installation of Product Components
Upgrade of Product Components
Synchronize All Shared Components
Summary of Java ES Installer Behavior Regarding Shared Components
Recommended Use of Zones with Java ES
Recommended Practices
Deployment Architectures
Special Cases or Exceptions
Product Component Special Cases
Shared Component Special Cases
An Illustrative Example: Install Application Server in a Sparse Root Zone
© 2010, Oracle Corporation and/or its affiliates