Go to main content
1/53
Contents
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Audience
Documentation Accessibility
Related Documents
Conventions
What's New in This Guide?
Part I Managing Oracle Fusion Middleware
1
Introduction to Middleware Management
1.1
Middleware Management with Enterprise Manager Cloud Control
1.2
Key Oracle Fusion Middleware Management Features
1.3
Managing Fusion Middleware with Fusion Middleware Control
2
Managing Middleware Targets
2.1
Middleware Targets in Enterprise Manager
2.1.1
Oracle Fusion Middleware Components
2.1.2
Oracle Application Server Components
2.1.3
Non-Oracle Middleware Components
2.2
Monitoring Middleware Targets
2.2.1
Middleware Summary Page
2.2.1.1
Heat Map
2.2.1.2
Searching Middleware Managed Targets
2.2.2
Target Home Page
2.2.3
Predefined Performance Metrics
2.2.4
Analyzing Historical Performance
2.2.5
Setting Metric Thresholds for Alert Notifications
2.2.6
Monitoring Templates
2.2.7
Managing and Creating Blackouts and Brownouts
2.2.8
Extend Monitoring for Applications Deployed to WebLogic Server
2.2.9
Using Multi-Tenancy
2.3
Diagnosing Performance Problems
2.3.1
Using Home Pages to Diagnose Performance Issues
2.3.2
Diagnostic Snapshots
2.3.3
Log File Viewer
2.4
Analyzing Middleware Problems Using Problem Analysis
2.5
Managing Problems with Support Workbench
2.5.1
Accessing and Logging In To Support Workbench
2.5.1.1
Accessing Support Workbench
2.5.1.2
Logging In
2.5.2
Using Fusion Middleware Support Workbench
2.5.2.1
Viewing Diagnostics
2.5.2.2
Viewing an Aggregated Diagnostic Summary
2.5.2.3
Searching for Problems
2.5.2.4
Annotating a Problem
2.5.2.5
Adding More Files
2.5.2.6
Creating a Package
2.5.2.7
Providing Additional Files
2.5.2.8
Uploading a Package to Oracle Support
2.5.2.9
Creating a Service Request
2.5.2.10
Managing Problem Resolution
2.6
Administering Middleware Targets
2.6.1
Shutting Down, Starting Up, or Restarting a Middleware Target
2.7
About Lifecycle Management
2.7.1
Managing Configurations
2.7.2
Compliance Management
2.7.3
Patch Management
2.7.4
Provisioning
2.7.4.1
Cloning from Test to Production Environments
2.7.4.2
Scaling Out Domains
2.7.4.3
Deploying / Undeploying Java EE Applications
2.8
Managing Service Levels
2.8.1
Service Dashboard
2.9
Job System
2.10
Routing Topology Viewer
3
Testing Application Load and Performance
3.1
Introduction to Application Replay
3.2
Testing Against Real-World Application Workloads
3.3
Capturing Application Workload Using RUEI
3.4
Prerequisites and Considerations When Using Application Replay
3.4.1
Using RUEI to Capture Application Workloads
3.4.2
Configuring Required User Privileges in Enterprise Manager
3.4.3
Setting up the Test System Database for Application Replay
3.4.4
Setting up the Capture Directory for Application Replay
3.5
Understanding the Application Capture and Replay Process
3.6
Creating Application Workload Captures
3.7
Monitoring the Application Capture Process
3.8
Replaying Application Workload Captures
3.8.1
Preparing to Replay Workload Captures
3.8.2
Understanding Application Replays and Replay Tasks
3.8.3
Resolving References to External Systems for Application Replays
3.8.4
Remapping URLs for Application Replays
3.8.5
Substituting Sensitive Data for Application Replays
3.8.6
Replaying Workload Captures
3.8.7
Analyzing Application Replay Results
3.9
Importing Replay Session Divergences into OpenScript
3.10
Troubleshooting Application Replay
4
Composite Applications
4.1
Viewing the Composite Application Dashboard
4.2
Creating a Composite Application
4.3
Editing a Composite Application
4.4
Editing a Composite Application Home Page
4.5
Using Composite Applications
Part II Monitoring Exalytics Target and Traffic Director
5
Monitoring an Exalytics Target
6
Oracle Traffic Director
6.1
Before Discovering Traffic Director
6.2
Adding a Traffic Director to an Exalogic Target
6.3
About Traffic Director Configuration
6.3.1
Using the Traffic Director Configuration Page
6.3.2
Adding Traffic Director Target Configuration
6.3.2.1
Finding Configurations and Instances
6.3.2.2
Discovered Targets
6.3.2.3
Viewing Results
6.4
About Traffic Director Instance
6.5
About Traffic Director Refresh Flow
6.5.1
Adding New Targets to Newly Added Configurations
6.5.2
Adding New Targets for Newly Added Instances of Configurations
6.5.3
Deleting Targets of Configurations That Have Been Removed
6.5.4
Deleting Targets of Instances That Have Been Removed
Part III Monitoring Oracle WebLogic Domains and Oracle GlassFish Domains
7
Monitoring WebLogic Domains
7.1
Updating the Agent Truststore
7.1.1
Importing a Demo WebLogic Server Root CA Certificate
7.1.2
Importing a Custom Root CA Certificate
7.1.3
Prerequisites for Domain Discovery When in TLS Mode
7.2
Changing the Default AgentTrust.jks Password Using Keytool
7.3
Collecting JVM Performance Metrics for WebLogic Servers
7.3.1
Setting the PlatformMBeanServerUsed Attribute
7.3.2
Activating Platform MBeans on WebLogic Server 9.x to 10.3.2 versions
8
Overview of Oracle GlassFish Server Management
8.1
Before Getting Started
8.1.1
GlassFish Roles and Privileges
8.1.2
Adding Domain Certificate to Activate Start and Stop Operations
8.2
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Domain
8.2.1
How to Add an Oracle GlassFish Domain To Be Monitored
8.2.2
Adding an Oracle GlassFish Domain: Finding and Assigning Targets
8.2.3
Adding an Oracle GlassFish Domain: Displaying Results
8.2.4
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Domain
8.2.5
Refreshing an Oracle GlassFish Domain
8.3
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Server Home Page
8.3.1
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Server
8.4
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Cluster Home Page
8.4.1
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Cluster
8.5
Viewing Collected Configuration Data for Oracle GlassFish Members
8.6
Creating an Oracle GlassFish Server Configuration Comparison Template
Part IV Managing Oracle SOA
9
Overview of Oracle SOA Management
9.1
About Oracle SOA Management Pack Enterprise Edition
10
Discovering and Monitoring Service Bus
10.1
New Features in This Release
10.2
Supported Versions
10.3
Understanding the Discovery Mechanism
10.4
Understanding the Discovery Process
10.5
Discovering Service Bus
10.5.1
Discovering Service Bus Deployed to WLS Not Monitored by Enterprise Manager
10.5.2
Discovering Service Bus Deployed to WLS Monitored by Enterprise Manager
10.6
Enabling Management Packs
10.7
Monitoring Service Bus in Cloud Control
10.7.1
Enabling Monitoring for Service Bus Services
10.8
Generating Service Bus Reports Using BI Publisher
10.9
Troubleshooting Service Bus
10.9.1
System and Service
10.9.2
SOAP Test
11
Discovering and Monitoring the SOA Suite
11.1
New Features in This Release
11.2
List of Supported Versions
11.3
Monitoring Templates
11.4
Discovering the SOA Suite
11.4.1
Discovering the SOA Suite Using a Local Agent
11.4.2
Discovering the SOA Suite Using a Remote Agent
11.5
Configuring the SOA Suite with Target Verification
11.5.1
Running Functionality-Level Diagnostic Checks
11.5.2
Running System-Level Diagnostic Checks
11.5.3
Repairing Target Monitoring Setup Issues
11.6
Metric and Collection Settings
11.7
Setting Up and Using SOA Instance Tracing
11.7.1
Configuring Instance Tracing (SOA 11
g
Targets Only)
11.7.2
Setting Search Criteria for Tracing an Instance
11.7.2.1
Instance Tracing for SOA 11g Targets
11.7.2.2
Instance Tracing for SOA 12c Targets
11.7.3
Tracing an Instance Within a SOA Infrastructure
11.7.4
Tracing Instance Across SOA Infrastructures
11.8
Monitoring Dehydration Store
11.8.1
Enabling Monitoring of the SOA Dehydration Store
11.8.2
Viewing the SOA Dehydration Store Data
11.9
Publishing a Service to UDDI
11.10
Generating SOA Reports
11.10.1
Generating SOA Reports Using BI Publisher
11.10.2
Generating SOA Reports Using Information Publisher
11.10.3
Generating SOA Diagnostic Reports
11.10.4
Viewing SOA Diagnostics Jobs
11.11
Provisioning SOA Artifacts and Composites
11.12
Diagnosing Issues and Incidents
11.13
Searching Faults in the SOA Infrastructure
11.13.1
Overview of Faults and Fault Types in SOA Infrastructure
11.13.2
Overview of the Recovery Actions for Resolving Faults
11.13.3
Prerequisites for Searching, Viewing, and Recovering Faults
11.13.4
Searching and Viewing Faults
11.13.4.1
Setting Search Criteria
11.13.4.2
Finding Total Faults in the SOA Infrastructure
11.13.4.3
Limiting Faults Searched and Retrieved from the SOA Infrastructure
11.13.4.4
Searching Only Recoverable Faults
11.13.4.5
Searching Faults in a Particular Service Engine
11.13.4.6
Searching Faults by Error Message
11.13.4.7
Filtering Displayed Search Results
11.13.5
Recovering a Few Faults Quickly (Simple Recovery)
11.14
Recovering Faults in Bulk
11.14.1
Performing Bulk Recovery from the Bulk Recovery Jobs Page
11.14.1.1
Setting Fault Details for Recovering Faults in Bulk
11.14.1.2
Setting Recovery and Batch Details for Recovering Faults in Bulk
11.14.1.3
Scheduling Bulk Recovery Jobs to Run Once or Repeatedly
11.14.2
Performing Bulk Recovery from Faults and Rejected Messages Tab
11.14.3
Performing Bulk Recovery from the Error Hospital Tab
11.14.4
Tracking Bulk Recovery Jobs
11.14.4.1
Tracking Bulk Recovery Jobs, and Viewing Their Results and Errors
11.14.4.2
Creating Bulk Recovery Jobs Using EMCLI and Web Services
11.14.4.2.1
Creating Bulk Recovery Jobs Using EMCLI
11.14.4.2.2
Viewing the Submitted Jobs and Outputs Using EMCLI
11.14.4.2.3
Creating Bulk Recovery Jobs through Web-Service
11.14.5
WorkFlow Examples for Bulk Recovery
11.14.5.1
Running Bulk Recovery Job Every Night
11.14.5.2
One Time Job with Specific Time Interval to Recover Faults
11.15
Generating Error Hospital Reports
11.15.1
Generating an Error Hospital Report
11.15.2
Customizing the Error Hospital Report
11.16
Recovering BPMN Messages
11.17
Troubleshooting
11.17.1
Discovery
11.17.2
Monitoring
11.17.3
Instance Tracing
11.17.4
Recent Faults
11.17.5
Fault Management
11.17.5.1
Bulk Recovery
11.17.5.2
Fault Search and Recovery
11.17.5.3
Fault Management and Instance Tracing Errors
11.17.6
Information Publisher Reports
11.17.7
BI Publisher Reports
11.17.8
Systems and Services
11.17.9
BPEL Recovery
11.17.10
SOA License Issue
11.17.11
Dehydration Store Issue
Part V Managing Oracle Business Intelligence
12
Discovering and Monitoring Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Oracle Essbase
12.1
Overview of Oracle Business Intelligence Targets You Can Monitor
12.1.1
Oracle Business Intelligence Instance
12.1.2
Oracle Essbase
12.2
Understanding the Monitoring Process
12.3
Discovering Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Oracle Essbase Targets
12.3.1
Discovering Targets of an Undiscovered WebLogic Domain
12.3.2
Discovering New or Modified Targets of a Discovered WebLogic Domain
12.4
Monitoring Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Essbase Targets
12.4.1
Performing General Monitoring Tasks
12.4.1.1
Viewing Target General and Availability Summary
12.4.1.2
Viewing Target Status and Availability History
12.4.1.3
Viewing Target Performance or Resource Usage
12.4.1.4
Viewing Target Metrics
12.4.1.5
Viewing or Editing Target Metric and Collection Settings
12.4.1.6
Viewing Target Metric Collection Errors
12.4.1.7
Viewing Target Health
12.4.1.8
Viewing Target Alert History
12.4.1.9
Viewing Target Incidents
12.4.1.10
Viewing Target Logs
12.4.1.11
Viewing Target Configuration and Configuration File
12.4.1.12
Viewing Target Job Activity
12.4.1.13
Viewing Target Compliance
12.4.2
Performing Target-Specific Monitoring Tasks
12.4.2.1
Viewing Oracle Business Intelligence Dashboard Reports
12.4.2.2
Viewing Oracle Business Intelligence Scheduler Reports
12.4.2.3
Viewing Oracle Business Intelligence Instance Key Metrics
12.4.2.4
Viewing Oracle Essbase Applications Summary
12.4.2.5
Viewing Oracle Essbase Application Data Storage Details
12.5
Administering Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Essbase Targets
12.5.1
Performing General Administration Tasks
12.5.1.1
Starting, Stopping, or Restarting the Target
12.5.1.2
Administering Target Access Privileges
12.5.1.3
Administering Target Blackouts
12.5.1.4
Viewing Target Monitoring Configuration
12.5.2
Performing Target-Specific Administration Tasks
12.5.2.1
Viewing Oracle Business Intelligence Component Failovers
12.5.2.2
Editing Oracle Business Intelligence Monitoring Credentials
12.6
Scaling Out Oracle Business Intelligence Domains
12.7
Creating Oracle Business Intelligence Instance Provisioning Profiles
12.8
Cloning Oracle Business Intelligence Instances
Part VI Monitoring Application Performance
13
Monitoring Performance
13.1
Monitoring Views and Dimensions
13.2
Using ECIDs to Track Requests
13.2.1
ECIDs for Components Other Than Oracle Fusion Middleware Components
13.3
Setting up End-to-end Monitoring
13.3.1
Set up Enterprise Manager
13.3.2
Set up Java Virtual Machine Diagnostics
13.3.3
Set up Real User Experience Insight
13.3.4
Set up Business Transaction Management
13.3.5
Create the Business Application
13.4
User Roles and Privileges
14
Understanding the User Experience
14.1
What Does RUEI Discover?
14.2
Viewing and Analyzing RUEI Data
14.2.1
Dashboards
14.2.2
Reports
14.2.3
Session Diagnostics
14.2.4
User Flows
14.2.5
KPIs and Service Level Agreements
14.3
What Questions Can RUEI Answer?
14.4
What Aspects of RUEI Can You Access from the EM Console?
14.5
How Does RUEI Work with BTM and JVM Diagnostics?
15
Discovering Services and Working with Transactions
15.1
What Does Business Transaction Management Discover?
15.2
Defining Transactions
15.2.1
Promoting SLA Violations to the Business Application Page
15.3
Monitoring Transactions
15.4
What Questions Can Business Transaction Management Answer?
15.5
Accessing BTM from the Enterprise Manager Console
15.6
How Does Business Transaction Management Work with RUEI and JVM Diagnostics?
16
Getting Detailed Execution Information
16.1
Using JVM Diagnostics
16.2
Using Request Instance Diagnostics
17
Monitoring Business Applications
17.1
Introduction to Business Applications
17.1.1
Systems, Services, and Business Applications
17.1.2
MyBank: An Example Business Application
17.2
Prerequisites and Considerations
17.2.1
Requirements for Using RUEI
17.2.1.1
Registering RUEI Installations with Self-Signed Certificates
17.2.2
Requirements for Using BTM
17.3
Registering RUEI/BTM Systems
17.3.1
Setting Up a Connection Between RUEI and the Oracle Enterprise Manager Repository
17.4
Creating Business Applications
17.5
Monitoring Business Applications
17.6
Monitoring End User Experience
17.6.1
Monitoring End User Experience Data
17.6.1.1
Key Performance Indicators
17.6.1.2
Usage Data
17.6.1.3
Violations Data
17.6.2
Working With Session Diagnostics
17.6.2.1
Creating an Enterprise Manager User for Session Diagnostics
17.6.2.2
Getting Started with Session Diagnostics
17.6.2.3
Customizing Session Diagnostics Reporting
17.6.2.4
Exporting Full Session Information
17.6.2.5
Exporting Session Pages to Microsoft Excel
17.6.3
Monitoring End User Experience Metrics
17.6.4
Monitoring User Flows
17.6.5
Monitoring Logs
17.7
Monitoring an End User Service
17.7.1
Troubleshooting an End User Service
17.8
Monitoring KPI and SLA Alert Reporting
17.9
Monitoring BTM Transactions in Enterprise Manager
17.10
Working Within Business Transaction Manager
17.10.1
Summary Information
17.10.2
Analyzing Transaction Information
17.10.3
Viewing Alerts
17.10.4
Viewing Transaction Instances
17.10.5
Viewing Message Logs
17.10.6
Viewing Service Level Agreement Compliance
17.10.7
Viewing Policies Applied to Transactions
17.10.8
Viewing Transaction Profile Information
17.10.9
Viewing Transaction Conditions
17.10.10
Viewing Transaction Properties
17.11
Upgrading Business Applications
18
Monitoring End-to-end Performance
18.1
Troubleshooting: A Case Study
18.2
Finding Solutions
19
Troubleshooting Middleware Applications Using Enterprise Manager
19.1
Introduction to Troubleshooting Middleware Applications
19.2
Preparing the Environment to Troubleshoot Applications
19.2.1
Document the Topology of the Systems in the Environment
19.2.2
Install Management Agents on All Systems in the Environment
19.2.3
Install JVMD to Help Troubleshoot Java based Applications
19.2.4
Install RUEI to Help Troubleshoot Web Applications
19.2.5
Install BTM to Help Troubleshoot Multiple Tier Applications
19.3
Configure the Environment to Help Troubleshoot Applications
19.3.1
Discover All Targets in the Environment
19.3.2
Deploy JVM Agents in the Environment
19.3.3
Define Composite Applications to Help Troubleshoot Multiple Tier Applications
19.3.4
Define BTM Transactions to Help Troubleshoot Multiple Tier Applications
19.3.5
Define Synthetic Monitoring Beacons in Enterprise Manager
19.3.6
Define Thresholds in Enterprise Manager
19.3.7
Set up Compliance Management in Enterprise Manager
19.3.8
Create a RUEI Application to Help Troubleshoot Web Applications
19.3.9
Define RUEI Service Level Agreements
19.3.10
Deploy BTM Agents to Help Troubleshoot Multiple Tier Applications
19.3.11
Create a Business Application in Enterprise Manager
19.4
Analyzing Issues Using Enterprise Manager, BTM and RUEI
19.4.1
Analyzing Incidents using Log Files
19.4.2
Analyzing Incidents using Business Applications
19.4.3
Analyzing Incidents in an Environment with a Single Middleware Tier
19.4.3.1
Check EM Dashboards to Analyze Incidents
19.4.3.2
Use RUEI to Check Pages Affected by an Incident
19.4.3.3
Use JVMD to Isolate Issue
19.4.3.4
Use Thresholds and Compliance to Analyze Incidents
19.4.4
Analyzing Incidents in an Environment with Multiple Middleware Tiers
19.4.4.1
Use BTM to Isolate the Tier
19.4.4.2
Use Composite Applications to Highlight Key Metrics
19.4.4.3
Use Dependency Tab in BTM to Isolate Tier
19.5
Resolving Issues Using Enterprise Manager
19.5.1
Resolve an Issue Using Configuration Tools
19.5.2
Work with Application Developers or DBAs to Resolve Application Issues
19.5.3
Resolve a Capacity Issue Using Provisioning Tools
Part VII Using JVM Diagnostics and MDA Advisor
20
Introduction to JVM Diagnostics
20.1
Overview
20.1.1
Java Activity Monitoring and Diagnostics with Low Overhead
20.1.2
In-depth Visibility of JVM Activity
20.1.3
Real Time Transaction Tracing
20.1.4
Cross-Tier Correlation with Oracle Databases
20.1.5
Memory Leak Detection and Analysis
20.1.6
JVM Pooling
20.1.7
Real-time and Historical Diagnostics
20.2
New Features in this Release
20.3
Supported Platforms and JVMs
20.4
User Roles
21
Using JVM Diagnostics
21.1
Installing JVM Diagnostics
21.1.1
Monitoring a Standalone JVM
21.1.1.1
Using the jamrun Wrapper
21.1.1.2
Using JamAttach to Monitor an Already Running JVM
21.2
Setting Up JVM Diagnostics
21.2.1
Configuring the JVM Diagnostics Engine
21.2.2
Configuring JVMs and JVM Pools
21.2.3
Registering Databases
21.2.4
Configuring the Heap Analysis Hosts
21.2.5
Viewing Registered JVMs and Managers
21.3
Accessing the JVM Diagnostics Pages
21.4
Managing JVM Pools
21.4.1
Viewing the Java Virtual Machine Pool Home Page
21.4.1.1
Promoting JVM Diagnostics Events to Incidents
21.4.2
Viewing the JVM Pool Performance Diagnostics Page
21.4.3
Viewing the JVM Pool Live Thread Analysis Page
21.4.4
Configuring a JVM Pool
21.4.4.1
Updating Pool Thresholds
21.4.5
Removing a JVM Pool
21.4.6
Adding a JVM Pool to a Group
21.5
Managing JVMs
21.5.1
Viewing the JVM Home Page
21.5.2
Viewing the JVM Performance Diagnostics Page
21.5.3
Viewing the JVM Diagnostics Performance Summary
21.5.4
Viewing the JVM Live Thread Analysis Page
21.5.4.1
Performing Cross Tier Analysis
21.5.4.2
Establishing Cross-Tier Correlation in Oracle RAC Databases
21.5.5
Viewing Memory Diagnostics
21.5.6
Working with Class Histograms
21.5.6.1
Saving a Class Histogram
21.5.6.2
Viewing Saved Histograms
21.5.6.3
Scheduling a Histogram Job
21.5.6.4
Comparing Class Histograms
21.5.6.5
Deleting Class Histograms
21.5.7
Taking a Heap Snapshot
21.5.8
Taking a Heap Snapshot and Loading Into the Repository
21.5.9
Analyzing Heap Snapshots
21.5.9.1
Viewing Heap Usage by Roots
21.5.9.1.1
Top 40 Objects
21.5.9.1.2
Heap Object Information
21.5.9.1.3
Comparing Heap Snapshots
21.5.9.2
Viewing Heap Usage by Objects
21.5.9.3
Memory Leak Report
21.5.9.4
Anti-Pattern Report
21.5.10
Managing JFR Snapshots
21.5.11
Configuring a JVM
21.5.12
Removing a JVM
21.5.13
Adding a JVM to a Group
21.6
Managing Thread Snapshots
21.6.1
Tracing Active Threads
21.7
Analyzing Trace Diagnostic Images
21.8
Viewing Heap Snapshots and Class Histograms
21.9
JVM Offline Diagnostics
21.9.1
Creating a Diagnostic Snapshot
21.9.2
Using the Diagnostic Snapshots Page
21.9.3
Analyzing a Diagnostic Snapshot
21.9.4
Viewing a Diagnostic Snapshot
21.10
Viewing JVM Diagnostics Threshold Violations
21.11
Viewing the Request Instance Diagnostics
21.12
Using emctl to Manage the JVM Diagnostics Engine
21.13
Using Java Workload Explorer
21.13.1
Accessing Java Workload Explorer
21.13.2
Performance Analysis and Search Criteria
21.13.3
Graph Highlights
21.13.4
Diagnostics
21.14
Managing and Troubleshooting JVMD (Globally)
21.15
Managing and Troubleshooting JVMD (Specific Instance)
22
Troubleshooting JVM Diagnostics
22.1
Cross Tier Functionality Errors
22.2
Trace Errors
22.3
Deployment Execution Errors
22.4
LoadHeap Errors
22.5
Heap Dump Errors on AIX 64 and AIX 32 bit for IBM JDK 1.6
22.6
Errors on JVM Diagnostics UI Pages
22.7
Frequently Asked Questions
22.7.1
Location of the JVM Diagnostics Logs
22.7.2
JVM Diagnostics Engine Status
22.7.3
JVM Diagnostics Agent Status
22.7.4
Monitoring Status
22.7.5
Running the create_jvm_diagnostic_db_user.sh Script
22.7.6
Usage of the Try Changing Threads Parameter
22.7.7
Significance of Optimization Levels
22.7.8
Custom Provisioning Agent Deployment
22.7.9
Log Manager Level
22.7.10
Repository Space Requirements
23
Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.1
Diagnosing Performance Issues with Oracle WebLogic Server
23.2
Diagnosing Performance Issues Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.3
Functioning of Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.4
Prerequisites for Configuring Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.5
Configuring Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.6
Enabling Middleware Diagnostics Advisor for a Target
23.7
Setting Up Middleware Diagnostics Advisor (MDA)
23.8
Limiting the Scope of Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
23.9
Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor to View and Diagnose Performance Issues
23.10
Running an Unscheduled Middleware Diagnostics Advisor Analysis on a Target
23.11
Troubleshooting Issues Related to Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
Part VIII Managing Oracle Coherence
24
Getting Started with Management Pack for Oracle Coherence
24.1
About Coherence Management
24.2
New Features
24.3
Configuring a Coherence Cluster
24.3.1
Creating and Starting a JMX Management Node
24.3.1.1
Specifying Additional System Properties
24.3.1.2
Including the Additional Class Path
24.3.1.3
Using the Custom Start Class
24.3.1.4
Example Start Script for the Coherence Management Node
24.3.2
Configuring All Other Nodes
24.3.2.1
Additional System Properties for All Other Coherence Nodes
24.3.2.2
Example Start Script for All Other Coherence Nodes
24.3.3
Testing the Configuration
24.3.3.1
Verifying Remote Access for the MBean Objects Using JConsole
24.4
Discovering Coherence Targets
24.4.1
Discovering a Standalone Coherence Cluster
24.4.1.1
Refreshing a Cluster
24.4.1.2
Managing Mis-configured Nodes
24.4.2
Discovering a Managed Coherence Cluster
24.5
Enabling the Management Pack
25
Monitoring a Coherence Cluster
25.1
Understanding the Page Layout
25.1.1
Navigation Tree
25.1.2
Personalization
25.2
Viewing the Home Pages
25.2.1
Coherence Cluster Home Page
25.2.1.1
General Tab
25.2.1.1.1
Cluster Management Operations
25.2.1.2
Heatmap
25.2.1.3
Cluster Menu Navigation
25.2.2
Node Home Page
25.2.2.1
Node Menu Navigation
25.2.3
Cache Home Page
25.2.3.1
Near Cache
25.2.3.2
Cache Menu Navigation
25.2.4
Partition Cache Home Page
25.2.4.1
Cache Menu Navigation
25.2.5
Application Home Page
25.2.6
Service Home Page
25.2.7
Connection Manager Home Page
25.3
Viewing the Summary Pages
25.3.1
Nodes Page
25.3.2
Caches Page
25.3.3
Services Page
25.3.4
Applications Page
25.3.5
Proxies Page
25.4
Log Viewer
25.4.1
Configuring the Log Location Settings
25.4.2
Viewing the Log Messages
25.5
Viewing the Performance Pages
25.5.1
Performance Summary Page
25.5.1.1
Customizing the Performance Page Charts
25.5.2
Connection Manager Performance Page
25.6
Removing Down Members
25.7
Topology Viewer
25.8
Viewing Incidents
26
Administering a Coherence Cluster
26.1
Cluster Administration Page
26.1.1
Changing the Node Configuration
26.1.2
Changing the Cache Configuration
26.1.3
Changing the Service Configuration
26.2
Node Administration Page
26.3
Cache Administration Page
26.4
Service Administration Page
26.5
Cache Data Management
26.5.1
Explain Plan
26.5.2
Trace
27
Troubleshooting and Best Practices
27.1
Troubleshooting Coherence
27.2
Best Practices
27.2.1
Monitoring Templates
28
Coherence Integration with JVM Diagnostics
28.1
Overview
28.2
Configuring Coherence Nodes for JVM Diagnostics Integration
28.2.1
Example Start Script for Coherence Management Node
28.2.2
Example Start Script for All Other Nodes
28.3
Accessing JVM Diagnostics from Coherence Targets
28.3.1
Accessing JVM Diagnostics from Oracle Coherence Node Menu
28.3.2
Accessing JVM Diagnostics from Oracle Coherence Cache Menu
28.3.3
Accessing JVM Diagnostics from Oracle Coherence Cluster Menu
28.4
Including the JVM Diagnostics Regions in the Coherence Target Home Pages
Part IX Using Identity Management
29
Getting Started with Oracle Identity Management
29.1
Benefits of the Using Identity Management Pack
29.2
Features of the Identity Management Pack
29.2.1
New Features for this Release
29.3
Monitoring Oracle Identity Management Components in Enterprise Manager
30
Prerequisites for Discovering Oracle Identity Management Targets
30.1
System Requirements
30.2
Installing Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 13
c
30.3
Prerequisites for Discovering Identity Management Targets in Enterprise Manager
31
Discovering and Configuring Oracle Identity Management Targets
31.1
Discovering Identity Management Targets
31.1.1
Discovering Identity Management 11g
31.1.2
Discovering Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition 7.x and 11g
31.1.3
Discovering Oracle Access Manager Access Server 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
31.1.4
Discovering Oracle Access Manager Identity Server 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
31.1.5
Discovering Oracle Identity Management Suite 10.1.4.3.0
31.2
Collecting User Statistics for Oracle Internet Directory
31.3
Creating Identity Management Elements
31.3.1
Creating Identity and Access System Target
31.3.2
Creating Generic Service or Web Application Targets for Identity Management
31.3.3
Creating a Service Dashboard Report
32
Investigating and Analyzing Problems
32.1
Accessing Problem Analysis and Logs
32.2
Viewing and Analyzing Problems
32.3
Customizing the Display
Part X Discovering and Monitoring Non-Oracle Middleware
33
Discovering and Monitoring IBM WebSphere MQ
33.1
Introduction
33.1.1
Out-of-Box Availability and Performance Monitoring
33.1.2
Centralized Monitoring of all Information in a Single Console
33.1.3
Enhance Service Modeling and Perform Comprehensive Root Cause Analysis
33.2
Prerequisites
33.2.1
Basic Prerequisites
33.2.2
JAR File Requirements (for Local Monitoring and Remote Monitoring)
33.3
Understanding Discovery
33.3.1
Discovery Prerequisites for Local Agent
33.3.2
Discovery Prerequisites for Remote Agent
33.3.3
Queue Manager Cluster Discovery
33.3.4
Standalone Queue Manager Discovery
33.4
Monitoring
34
Discovering and Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Servers, Clusters, and Cells
34.1
About Managing IBM WebSphere Application Servers, Clusters, and Cells
34.2
Supported Versions for Discovery and Monitoring
34.3
Prerequisites for Discovering IBM WebSphere Application Servers, Clusters, and Cells
34.4
Discovering IBM WebSphere Application Servers, Clusters, and Cells
34.5
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.1
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.1.1
General Section
34.5.1.2
Monitoring and Diagnostics Section
34.5.1.3
Response and Load Section
34.5.1.4
Applications Tab
34.5.1.5
Servlets and JSPs Tab
34.5.1.6
EJBs Tab
34.5.2
Administering IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.3
Monitoring the Performance of IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.4
Monitoring the Applications Deployed to IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.5
Viewing the Top EJBs of IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.6
Viewing the Top Servlets and JSPs of IBM WebSphere Application Servers
34.5.7
Viewing IBM WebSphere Application Server Metrics
34.6
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Server Clusters
34.6.1
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Server Clusters
34.6.1.1
Summary Section
34.6.1.2
Monitoring and Diagnostics Section
34.6.1.3
Servers Section
34.6.1.4
Resource Usage Section
34.6.2
Administering IBM WebSphere Application Server Clusters
34.6.3
Viewing IBM WebSphere Application Server Cluster Members
34.6.4
Viewing IBM WebSphere Application Server Cluster Metrics
34.7
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Server Cells
34.7.1
Monitoring IBM WebSphere Application Server Cells
34.7.1.1
General Section
34.7.1.2
Incidents Summary Section
34.7.1.3
Clusters Section
34.7.1.4
Servers Section
34.7.2
Administering IBM WebSphere Application Server Cells
34.7.3
Viewing IBM WebSphere Application Server Cell Members
34.8
Troubleshooting IBM WebSphere Application Server Discovery and Monitoring Issues
34.8.1
Troubleshooting Discovery Issues
34.8.2
Troubleshooting Monitoring Issues
35
Discovering and Monitoring JBoss Application Server
35.1
About Managing JBoss Application Servers, JBoss Domains and JBoss Partitions
35.2
Finding Out the Supported Versions for Discovery and Monitoring
35.3
Prerequisites for Discovering JBoss Application Servers, Domains and Partitions
35.4
Discovering JBoss Application Servers 7.x and JBoss Domains
35.5
Discovering JBoss Application Servers 6.x and JBoss Partitions
35.6
Monitoring JBoss Application Servers
35.6.1
Monitoring JBoss Application Servers 7.x
35.6.1.1
General
35.6.1.2
JVM Threads
35.6.1.3
Transaction Metrics
35.6.1.4
Response and Load Section
35.6.1.5
Deployments Section
35.6.2
Monitoring JBoss Application Servers 6.x
35.6.2.1
General
35.6.2.2
Servlets/JSPs
35.6.2.3
JVM Threads
35.6.2.4
Datasource
35.6.2.5
Response and Load Section
35.6.2.6
Most Requested Servlets/JSPs Section
35.6.3
Administering JBoss Application Servers 7.x and 6.x
35.6.4
Monitoring Applications Deployed to JBoss Application Servers 7.x and 6.x
35.6.5
Monitoring the Performance of JBoss Application Servers 7.x and 6.x
35.6.6
Monitoring Servlets and JSPs Running on JBoss Application Servers 6.x
35.6.7
Viewing JBoss Application Server Metrics
35.6.8
Analyzing Problems Using Metric Correlation
35.7
Monitoring JBoss Domains
35.7.1
Monitoring JBoss Domains
35.7.1.1
Summary Section
35.7.1.2
Servers Section
35.7.1.3
Incidents Section
35.7.2
Monitoring JBoss Server Groups
35.7.2.1
Summary Section
35.7.2.2
Servers Section
35.7.2.3
Incidents Section
35.7.3
Administering JBoss Domains
35.7.4
Viewing JBoss Domain Members
35.7.5
Refreshing JBoss Domains
35.8
Monitoring JBoss Partitions
35.8.1
Monitoring JBoss Partitions
35.8.1.1
Summary Section
35.8.1.2
Servers Section
35.8.1.3
Incidents Section
35.8.2
Administering JBoss Partitions
35.8.3
Viewing JBoss Partition Members
35.8.4
Refreshing JBoss Partitions
35.9
Deploying JVMD on JBoss Application Server 7.x and 6.x to Diagnose Issues
35.10
Troubleshooting JBoss Application Server Discovery and Monitoring Issues
35.10.1
Troubleshooting Monitoring Issues
35.10.2
Troubleshooting Discovery Issues
35.10.3
Additional Useful Resources
36
Discovering and Monitoring Apache HTTP Server
36.1
Introduction to HTTP Servers
36.2
Supported Versions of Apache HTTP Server for Discovery and Monitoring
36.3
Prerequisites for Discovering and Monitoring Apache HTTP Server
36.4
Discovering Apache HTTP Servers
36.5
Monitoring Apache HTTP Servers
36.6
Configuration Management for Apache HTTP Servers
36.7
Troubleshooting Apache HTTP Server Issues
Part XI Managing Oracle Data Integrator
37
Configuring and Monitoring Oracle Data Integrator
37.1
Prerequisites for Monitoring Oracle Data Integrator
37.2
Monitoring Oracle Data Integrator
37.2.1
Monitoring Oracle Data Integrator
37.2.1.1
Master Repositories Health
37.2.1.2
ODI Agents Health
37.2.1.3
Work Repositories Health
37.2.1.4
Data Servers Health
37.2.1.5
Sessions/Load Plan Executions
37.2.2
Monitoring ODI Agents
37.2.2.1
Search Agents
37.2.2.2
ODI Agents
37.2.3
Monitoring Repositories
37.2.3.1
Search Repositories
37.2.3.2
Repositories
37.2.3.3
Cluster Databases
37.2.3.4
Database Details
37.2.3.5
Tablespace/File Group Details
37.2.4
Monitoring Load Plan Executions and Sessions
37.2.4.1
Search Sessions/LPEs
37.2.4.2
Load Plan Executions/Sessions
37.2.4.3
Load Plan Executions/Session Detail
37.3
Administering Oracle Data Integrator
37.3.1
Starting Up, Shutting Down, and Restarting Oracle Data Integrator Agents
37.3.2
Managing Agent Status and Activities
37.3.3
Searching Sessions and Load Plan Executions
37.3.4
Viewing Log Messages
37.4
Creating Alerts and Notifications
37.5
Monitoring Run-Time Agents
37.5.1
Agent Home Page
37.5.1.1
General Info
37.5.1.2
Load
37.5.1.3
Target Incidents
37.5.1.4
LPEs/Sessions Execution Incidents
37.5.1.5
Load Balancing Agents
37.6
Configuring Oracle Data Integrator Console
37.7
Configuring an Oracle Data Integrator Domain
Index
Scripting on this page enhances content navigation, but does not change the content in any way.