Discusses the administrator's job, presents a roadmap for the administrator's responsibilities, and
outlines how the administrator can plan the configuration.
Identifies the administration tools.
Defines the configuration file, explains how to set parameters, and how to configure application-wide parameters, machines, groups, servers, services, interfaces, routing, and network information.
Explains how to start up and shut down applications,
how to use the tmshutdown command, and how to clear common problems.
Discusses distributed applications, factory-based and data-dependent routing,
and how distributed applications affect the UBBCONFIG file.
Defines terms related to networked applications, explains how to configure networked applications, includes an example of a
network configuration with multiple netgroups, and explains how to run a networked application.
Describes how to modify the UBBCONFIG file and the domain configuration
file for transactions and provides a sample of a distributed application that uses transactions.
Discusses administration considerations and commands related
to managing interface repositories, and how to start one or more interface repository servers.
Explains how to configure multiple WLE domains. This chapter is specific to the WLE system.
Explains how to manage multiple domains. This chapter is specific to the BEA TUXEDO system.
Explains how to manage workstation clients. This chapter is specific to the BEA TUXEDO system.
Defines terms related to the management of remote client applications, defines "remote client," and
explains how to set environment variables and the maximum number of remote clients. Also
explains how to configure a listener, and how to modify the UBBCONFIG file to support remote clients.
Information about how to set up IIOP to work with remote client applications is included.
Explains how to manage queued messages. This chapter is specific to BEA TUXEDO servers.
Discusses the levels of security provided by the system, how to configure the RESOURCES SECURITY parameter, how to implement operating system security and application password-level security, and how to implement security via an authentication server and an access control list (ACL).
Gives an overview of system and application data, explains monitoring methods, discusses using the tmadmin command interpreter, explains how to run the tmadmin commands and how to monitor a running system with tmadmin commands, gives an example of output from the tmadmin commands, and includes a case study.
Defines the ULOG file and the transaction log, and explains how to create and maintain logs and how to use logs to detect failures.
Explains how to maximize application resources, when to use MSSQ sets, how to enable load balancing and assign priorities to interfaces or services, how to bundle services into servers and enhance efficiency with application parameters, and how to set application parameters, determine IPC requirements, and measure system traffic.
Discusses migration options, explains how to switch master and backup machines, how to migrate a server group and machines, how to cancel migration, and how to migrate transaction logs to a backup machine.
Discusses dynamic modification methods and procedures.
Introduces dynamic reconfiguration, gives an overview of the tmconfig command interpreter, includes general instructions for running tmconfig, and includes procedural information and tips for using dynamic reconfiguration.
Explains how to use the Event Broker. This chapter is specific to the BEA TUXEDO system.
Includes such topics as distinguising between types of failures, broadcasting unsolicited messages, performing system file maintenance, and repairing partitioned networks.
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Related Topics
Describes how to create UBBCONFIG files and
perform administrative tasks for Notification Service applications.
Documents the BEA TUXEDO system concepts, tasks, reference material,
and sample code.
This section describes commands and utilities such as qmadmin,
tmadmin, tmboot,
tmconfig, and tmloadcf.
This section describes commands and utilities such as
Field Tables,
MIB,
TM MIBS,
TMQFORWARD,
TMQUEUE,
TMSYSEVT,
TMUSREVT,
UBBCONFIG.
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