High Availability Guide
Table of Contents
Show All | Collapse- List of Examples
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Title and Copyright Information
- Preface
- Part I Introduction to High Availability
- 1 Introduction and Roadmap
- 2 High Availability Concepts
- 2.1 Server Load Balancing in a High Availability Environment
- 2.2 Application Failover
- 2.3 Real Application Clusters
- 2.4 Coherence Clusters and High Availability
- 2.5 Disaster Recovery
- 2.6 Install Time Configuration
- 2.7 Application and Service Failover
- 2.8 Roadmap for Setting Up a High Availability Topology
- Part II Creating a High Availability Environment
- 3 Using Shared Storage
- 4 Database Considerations
- 5 JMS and JTA High Availability
- 6 Scaling Out a Topology (Machine Scale Out)
- 6.1 About Machine Scale Out
- 6.2 Roadmap for Scaling Out Your Topology
- 6.3 Optional Scale Out Procedure
- 6.4 About Scale Out Prerequisites
- 6.5 Resource Requirements
- 6.6 Creating a New Machine
- 6.7 Packing the Domain on APPHOST1
- 6.8 Preparing the New Machine
- 6.9 Running Unpack to Transfer the Template
- 6.10 Starting the Node Manager
- 6.11 Starting the Managed Servers
- 6.12 Verifying Machine Scale Out
- Part III Component Procedures
- 7 Configuring High Availability for Web Tier Components
- 7.1 Oracle HTTP Server and High Availability Concepts
- 7.2 Oracle HTTP Server Single-Instance Characteristics
- 7.3 Oracle HTTP Server Startup and Shutdown Lifecycle
- 7.4 Starting and Stopping Oracle HTTP Server
- 7.5 Oracle HTTP Server High Availability Architecture and Failover Considerations
- 7.6 Oracle HTTP Server Protection from Failures and Expected Behaviors
- 7.7 Oracle HTTP Server Cluster-Wide Configuration Changes
- 7.8 Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for High Availability
- 8 Configuring High Availability for Oracle Application Development Framework
- 9 Configuring High Availability for Other Components
- 7 Configuring High Availability for Web Tier Components