Deployment Guide

     Previous  Next    Contents  Open Index in new window  View as PDF - New Window  Get Adobe Reader - New Window
Content starts here

Introduction

Deployment Goals

Key Deployment Tasks

Roles in AquaLogic Service Bus Deployment

Deployment Specialists

WebLogic Server Administrators

Database Administrators

Key Deployment Resources

WebLogic Server Resources

Clustering

Java Message Service

EJB Pooling and Caching

JDBC Connection Pools

Execution Thread Pool

J2EE Connector Architecture

AquaLogic Service Bus Configuration Resources

Business Services

Proxy Services

WSDLs

Schemas

Service Accounts

Proxy Service Providers

WS-Policies

XQuery and XSLT Transformations

MFLs

JARS

Alert Destinations

UDDI Registries

JNDI Providers

SMTP Servers

Best Practices to Follow When Migrating Global Resources

Relational Database Management System Resources

Hardware, Operating System, and Network Resources

Configuring a Single-Server Deployment

Step 1. Configure a Database for the JMS Reporting Provider Data Store

Step 2. Prepare an AquaLogic Service Bus Domain

Creating an AquaLogic Service Bus Domain Using the Configuration Wizard

Configuring JMS Resources

Step 3. Configure AquaLogic Service Bus Security

Step 4. Deploy an AquaLogic Service Bus Configuration

Step 5. Update Your Domain as Your Production Environment Changes

Changing a Business Service

Installing a New Version of a Proxy Service

Online Configuration Updates

Best Practices for Successful Online Configuration Updates

Understanding AquaLogic Service Bus Clusters

Understanding AquaLogic Service Bus Clusters

Designing a Clustered Deployment

Introducing AquaLogic Service Bus Domains

Creating Domains

Clustered Servers

AquaLogic Service Bus Deployment Resources

Singleton Resources

Monitoring and Alert Resources in a Cluster

Cluster Configuration Changes and Deployment Requests

Load Balancing in a AquaLogic Service Bus Cluster

Load Balancing HTTP Functions in a Cluster

Load Balancing JMS Functions in a Cluster

High Availability in an AquaLogic Service Bus Cluster

Highly Available JMS for AquaLogic Service Bus

Deploying Configurations

Configuring a Clustered Deployment

Step 1. Comply with Configuration Prerequisites

Step 2. Prepare an AquaLogic Service Bus Domain

Creating an AquaLogic Service Bus Domain Using the Configuration Wizard

Adding Proxy Server or Firewall Information to your Domain Configuration

Configuring JMS Resources

Step 3. Configure AquaLogic Service Bus Security

Step 4. Starting, Stopping, and Monitoring Managed Servers

Starting and Stopping Managed Servers

Monitoring Your Servers

Step 5. Deploy an AquaLogic Service Bus Configuration

Step 6.Update Your Domain as Your Production Environment Changes

Adding a Managed Server

Adding A Managed Server to an AquaLogic Service Bus Cluster

Updating Business Service Configurations for an Expanded Cluster

Updating Proxy Service Configurations for an Expanded Cluster

Dropping a Managed Server

Changing a Business Service in a Cluster

Installing a New Version of a Proxy Service in a Cluster

Understanding AquaLogic Service Bus High Availability

About AquaLogic Service Bus High Availability

Recommended Hardware and Software

Regarding JMS File Stores

What Happens When a Server Fails

Software Faults

Hardware Faults

Server Migration

Message Reporting Purger

AquaLogic Service Bus Failure and Recovery

Transparent Server Reconnection

EIS Instance Failover

High Availability for Poller Based Transports

JMS Queues

High Availability in Clusters

Load Balancing

Using the Deployment APIs

Managing Sessions Using Programs and Scripts

Creating, Activating, Discarding, and Locating Sessions

Examples

Managing Configuration Tasks Using Programs and Scripts

Importing, Exporting, and Querying Configurations

Updating Environment-Specific Information

Examples

APIs Deprecated in AquaLogic Service Bus 2.6

AquaLogic Service Bus Deployment Resources


  Back to Top       Previous  Next