The Administration Guide is organized as follows.
Table P–1 How This Book Is Organized
Chapter |
Description |
---|---|
Describes Application Server system administration. |
|
Describes JDBC resources (data source) provides applications with a means of connecting to a database. |
|
Describes how to configure resources for applications that use the Java Message Service (JMS) API. |
|
Describes JavaMail Resources, a set of abstract APIs that model a mail system |
|
Explains JNDI resources, which are used for accessing different kinds of naming and directory services. |
|
Describes Application Server support for connectors. |
|
Describes Application Server support for containers. |
|
Describes how to configure Application Server security |
|
Describes message security for the Application Server. |
|
Provides information on how to configure transactions in the Application Server. |
|
Describes how to deploy web applications and make deployed web applications accessible by HTTP clients. |
|
Describes web services management with Application Server. |
|
Describes how to configure the Object Request Broker (ORB) and IIOP listeners. |
|
Describes how to create, edit, and delete thread pools in Application Server. |
|
Describes how to use the Admin Console to configure logging and view the server log. |
|
Contains information about monitoring components using the Application Server Admin Console |
|
Contains information about setting administration policies to automate routine administration tasks, configure self-tuning of the application server for diverse runtime condition and improve availability by preventing failures. |
|
Explains the diagnostic framework and describes how to generate reports. |
|
Explains how to configure JVM settings. |
|
Describes automatic restart on various platforms including Windows and Linux. |
|
Describes the dotted name attributes that can be used to address the MBean and its attributes. |
|
Describes the command-line administration utility known as asadmin. |