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Contents
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Audience
Conventions
Part I Understanding an Enterprise Deployment
1
Enterprise Deployment Overview
1.1
About the Enterprise Deployment Guide
1.2
When to Use the Enterprise Deployment Guide
2
Understanding a Typical Enterprise Deployment
2.1
Diagram of a Typical Enterprise Deployment
2.2
Understanding the Typical Enterprise Deployment Topology Diagram
2.2.1
Understanding the Firewalls and Zones of a Typical Enterprise Deployment
2.2.2
Understanding the Elements of a Typical Enterprise Deployment Topology
2.2.3
Receiving Requests Through Hardware Load Balancer
2.2.3.1
Purpose of the Hardware Load Balancer (LBR)
2.2.3.1.1
HTTP Requests from the Internet to the Web server instances in the Web tier
2.2.3.1.2
MLLP Requests for Oracle SOA Suite for Healthcare Integration
2.2.3.1.3
Specific internal-only communications between the components of the Application tier
2.2.3.2
Summary of the Typical Load Balancer Virtual Server Names
2.2.3.3
HTTPS versus HTTP Requests to the External Virtual Server Name
2.2.4
Understanding the Web Tier
2.2.4.1
Benefits of Using Oracle HTTP Server Instances to Route Requests
2.2.4.2
Alternatives to Using Oracle HTTP Server in the Web Tier
2.2.4.3
Configuration of Oracle HTTP Server in the Web Tier
2.2.4.4
About Mod_WL_OHS
2.2.5
Understanding the Application Tier
2.2.5.1
Configuration of the Administration Server and Managed Servers Domain Directories
2.2.5.2
Using Oracle Web Services Manager in the Application Tier
2.2.5.3
Best Practices and Variations on the Configuration of the Clusters and Hosts on the Application Tier
2.2.5.4
About the Node Manager Configuration in a Typical Enterprise Deployment
2.2.5.5
About Using Unicast for Communications Within the Application Tier
2.2.5.6
Understanding OPSS and Requests to the Authentication and Authorization Stores
2.2.5.7
About Coherence Clusters In a Typical Enterprise Deployment
2.2.6
About the Data Tier
3
Understanding the
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Deployment Topology
3.1
Understanding the Primary and Build-Your-Own Enterprise Deployment Topologies
3.2
Diagrams of the Primary
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Topologies
3.2.1
Diagram of the Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle Service Bus Topology
3.2.2
Diagram of the Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle Business Activity Monitoring Topology
3.3
Understanding the Primary Oracle SOA Suite Topology Diagrams
3.3.1
Understanding the Topology Options for Oracle Service Bus
3.3.2
Summary of Oracle SOA Suite Load Balancer Virtual Server Names
3.3.3
Understanding the Routing of SOA Composite Requests
3.3.3.1
More About the soainternal Virtual Server Name
3.3.3.2
About Web Services Optimizations for SOA Composite Applications
3.3.3.3
About Accessing SOA Composite Applications via Oracle HTTP Server
3.3.3.4
About Accessing Oracle SOA Suite Composite Applications Via the Load Balancer
3.3.4
Summary of the Managed Servers and Clusters on SOA Application Tier
3.4
Flow Charts and Roadmaps for Implementing the Primary Oracle SOA Suite Enterprise Topologies
3.4.1
Flow Chart of the Steps to Install and Configure the Primary Oracle SOA Suite Enterprise Topologies
3.4.2
Roadmap Table for Planning and Preparing for an Enterprise Deployment
3.4.3
Roadmap Table for Configuring the Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle Service Bus Enterprise Topology
3.4.4
Roadmap Table for Configuring the Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle Business Activity Monitoring Enterprise Topology
3.5
Building Your Own Oracle SOA Suite Enterprise Topology
3.5.1
Flow Chart of the "Build Your Own" Enterprise Topologies
3.5.2
Description of the Supported "Build Your Own" Topologies
3.6
About Installing and Configuring a Custom Enterprise Topology
3.7
About Using Automatic Service Migration for the Oracle SOA Suite Enterprise Topology
Part II Preparing for an Enterprise Deployment
4
Using the Enterprise Deployment Workbook
4.1
Introduction to the Enterprise Deployment Workbook
4.2
Typical Use Case for Using the Workbook
4.3
Using the
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Deployment Workbook
4.3.1
Locating the
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Deployment Workbook
4.3.2
Understanding the Contents of the
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Deployment Workbook
4.3.2.1
Using the Start Tab
4.3.2.2
Using the Hardware - Host Computers Tab
4.3.2.3
Using the Network - Virtual Hosts & Ports Tab
4.3.2.4
Using the Storage - Directory Variables Tab
4.3.2.5
Using the Database - Connection Details Tab
4.4
Who Should Use the Enterprise Deployment Workbook?
5
Procuring Resources for an Enterprise Deployment
5.1
Hardware and Software Requirements for the Enterprise Deployment Topology
5.1.1
Hardware Load Balancer Requirements
5.1.2
Host Computer Hardware Requirements
5.1.2.1
General Considerations for Enterprise Deployment Host Computers
5.1.2.2
Reviewing the Oracle Fusion Middleware System Requirements
5.1.2.3
Typical Memory, File Descriptors, and Processes Required for an Enterprise Deployment
5.1.2.4
Typical Disk Space Requirements for an Enterprise Deployment
5.1.3
Operating System Requirements for the Enterprise Deployment Topology
5.2
Reserving the Required IP Addresses for an Enterprise Deployment
5.2.1
What Is a Virtual IP (VIP) Address?
5.2.2
Why Use Virtual Host Names and Virtual IP Addresses?
5.2.3
Physical and Virtual IP Addresses Required by the Enterprise Topology
5.3
Identifying and Obtaining Software Downloads for an Enterprise Deployment
6
Preparing the Load Balancer and Firewalls for an Enterprise Deployment
6.1
Configuring Virtual Hosts on the Hardware Load Balancer
6.1.1
Overview of the Hardware Load Balancer Configuration
6.1.2
Typical Procedure for Configuring the Hardware Load Balancer
6.1.3
Summary of the Virtual Servers Required for an Enterprise Deployment
6.1.4
Additional Instructions for admin.example.com
6.1.5
Additional Instructions for soa.example.com
6.1.6
Additional Instructions for soainternal.example.com
6.1.7
Additional Instructions for osb.example.com
6.1.8
Additional Instructions for soahealthcare.example.com
6.2
Configuring the Firewalls and Ports for an Enterprise Deployment
7
Preparing the File System for an Enterprise Deployment
7.1
Overview of Preparing the File System for an Enterprise Deployment
7.2
Shared Storage Recommendations When Installing and Configuring an Enterprise Deployment
7.3
Understanding the Recommended Directory Structure for an Enterprise Deployment
7.4
File System and Directory Variables Used in This Guide
7.5
About Creating and Mounting the Directories for an Enterprise Deployment
7.6
Summary of the Shared Storage Volumes in an Enterprise Deployment
8
Preparing the Host Computers for an Enterprise Deployment
8.1
Verifying the Minimum Hardware Requirements for Each Host
8.2
Verifying Linux Operating System Requirements
8.2.1
Setting Linux Kernel Parameters
8.2.2
Setting the Open File Limit and Number of Processes Settings on UNIX Systems
8.2.2.1
Viewing the Number of Currently Open Files
8.2.2.2
Setting the Operating System Open File and Processes Limits
8.2.3
Verifying IP Addresses and Host Names in DNS or hosts File
8.3
Configuring Operating System Users and Groups
8.4
Enabling Unicode Support
8.5
Mounting the Required Shared File Systems on Each Host
8.6
Enabling the Required Virtual IP Addresses on Each Host
9
Preparing the Database for an Enterprise Deployment
9.1
Overview of Preparing the Database for an Enterprise Deployment
9.2
About Database Requirements
9.2.1
Supported Database Versions
9.2.2
Additional Database Software Requirements
9.2.3
Setting the PROCESSES Database Initialization Parameter for an Enterprise Deployment
9.3
Creating Database Services
9.4
Using SecureFiles for Large Objects (LOBs) in an Oracle Database
9.5
About Database Backup Strategies
9.6
Implementing a Database Growth Management Strategy for Oracle SOA Suite
Part III Configuring the Enterprise Deployment
10
Creating the Initial Infrastructure Domain for an Enterprise Deployment
10.1
Variables Used When Creating the Infrastructure Domain
10.2
Understanding the Initial Infrastructure Domain
10.2.1
About the Infrastructure Distribution
10.2.2
Characteristics of the Initial Infrastructure Domain
10.3
Installing the Oracle Fusion Middleware Infrastructure in Preparation for an Enterprise Deployment
10.3.1
Installing a Supported JDK
10.3.1.1
Locating and Downloading the JDK Software
10.3.1.2
Installing the JDK Software
10.3.2
Starting the Infrastructure Installer on
SOAHOST1
10.3.3
Navigating the Infrastructure Installation Screens
10.3.4
Installing Oracle Fusion Middleware Infrastructure on the Other Host Computers
10.3.5
Checking the Directory Structure
10.4
Creating the Database Schemas
10.4.1
Installing and Configuring a Certified Database
10.4.2
Starting the Repository Creation Utility (RCU)
10.4.3
Navigating the RCU Screens to Create the Schemas
10.5
Configuring the Infrastructure Domain
10.5.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
10.5.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens to Configure the Infrastructure Domain
10.6
Configuring a Per Host Node Manager for an Enterprise Deployment
10.6.1
Creating a Per Host Node Manager Configuration
10.6.2
Creating the boot.properties File
10.6.3
Starting the Node Manager on
SOAHOST1
10.6.4
Configuring the Node Manager Credentials and Type
10.7
Configuring the Domain Directories and Starting the Servers on
SOAHOST1
10.7.1
Starting the Administration Server Using the Node Manager
10.7.2
Validating the Administration Server
10.7.3
Disabling the Derby Database
10.7.4
Creating a Separate Domain Directory for Managed Servers on
SOAHOST1
10.7.5
Starting and Validating the WLS_WSM1 Managed Server on
SOAHOST1
10.8
Propagating the Domain and Starting the Servers on
SOAHOST2
10.8.1
Unpacking the Domain Configuration on
SOAHOST2
10.8.2
Unpacking the Domain on
SOAHOST2
10.8.3
Starting the Node Manager on
SOAHOST2
10.8.4
Starting and Validating the WLS_WSM2 Managed Server on
SOAHOST2
10.9
Modifying the Upload and Stage Directories to an Absolute Path
10.10
Creating a New LDAP Authenticator and Provisioning Enterprise Deployment Users and Group
10.10.1
About the Supported Authentication Providers
10.10.2
About the Enterprise Deployment Users and Groups
10.10.2.1
About Using Unique Administration Users for Each Domain
10.10.2.2
About the Domain Connector User
10.10.2.3
About Adding Users to the Central LDAP Directory
10.10.2.4
About Product-Specific Roles and Groups for
Oracle SOA Suite
10.10.2.5
Example Users and Roles Used in This Guide
10.10.3
Prerequisites for Creating a New Authentication Provider and Provisioning Users and Groups
10.10.4
Provisioning a Domain Connector User in the LDAP Directory
10.10.5
Creating the New Authentication Provider
10.10.6
Provisioning an Enterprise Deployment Administration User and Group
10.10.7
Adding the New Administration User to the Administration Group
10.10.8
Updating the boot.properties File and Restarting the System
10.11
Adding the wsm-pm Role to the Administrators Group
11
Configuring the Web Tier for an Enterprise Deployment
11.1
Variables Used When Configuring the Web Tier
11.2
About the Web Tier Domains
11.3
Installing Oracle HTTP Server on WEBHOST1
11.3.1
Starting the Installer on WEBHOST1
11.3.2
Navigating the Oracle HTTP Server Installation Screens
11.3.3
Verifying the
Oracle HTTP Server
Installation
11.4
Creating a Web Tier Domain on WEBHOST1
11.4.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard on WEBHOST1
11.4.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens for a Web Tier Domain
11.5
Installing and Configuring a Web Tier Domain on WEBHOST2
11.6
Starting the Node Manager and Oracle HTTP Server Instances on WEBHOST1 and WEBHOST2
11.6.1
Starting the Node Manager on WEBHOST1 and WEBHOST2
11.6.2
Starting the Oracle HTTP Server Instances
11.7
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server to Route Requests to the Application Tier
11.7.1
About the Oracle HTTP Server Configuration for an Enterprise Deployment
11.7.1.1
Purpose of the Oracle HTTP Server Virtual Hosts
11.7.1.2
About the WebLogicCluster Parameter of the <VirtualHost> Directive
11.7.1.3
Recommended Structure of the Oracle HTTP Server Configuration Files
11.7.2
Modifying the httpd.conf File to Include Virtual Host Configuration Files
11.7.3
Creating the Virtual Host Configuration Files
11.7.4
Validating the Virtual Server Configuration on the Load Balancer
11.7.5
Configuring Routing to the Administration Server and Oracle Web Services Manager
11.7.6
Validating Access to the Management Consoles and Administration Server
12
Extending the Domain with Oracle SOA Suite
12.1
Variables Used When Extending the Domain with Oracle SOA Suite
12.2
Synchronizing the System Clocks
12.3
Installing the Software for an Enterprise Deployment
12.3.1
Starting the Installer on
SOAHOST1
12.3.2
Navigating the Installation Screens
12.3.3
Installing the Software on the Other Host Computers
12.3.4
Verifying the Installation
12.3.4.1
Reviewing the Installation Log Files
12.3.4.2
Checking the Directory Structure
12.3.4.3
Viewing the Contents of Your Oracle Home
12.4
Creating the Oracle SOA Suite Database Schemas
12.4.1
Starting the Repository Creation Utility (RCU)
12.4.2
Navigating the RCU Screens to Create the Schemas
12.4.3
Configuring SOA Schemas for Transactional Recovery
12.5
Extending the Enterprise Deployment Domain with Oracle SOA Suite
12.5.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
12.5.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens to Extend the Domain with Oracle SOA Suite
12.6
Configuring a Default Persistence Store for Transaction Recovery
12.7
Propagating the Extended Domain to the Domain Directories and Machines
12.7.1
Packing Up the Extended Domain on
SOAHOST1
12.7.2
Unpacking the Domain in the Managed Servers Domain Directory on
SOAHOST1
12.7.3
Unpacking the Domain on
SOAHOST2
12.8
Starting and Validating the WLS_SOA1 Managed Server
12.8.1
Starting the WLS_SOA1 Managed Server
12.8.2
Adding the SOAAdmin Role to the Administrators Group
12.8.3
Validating the Managed Server by Logging in to the SOA Infrastructure
12.9
Starting and Validating the WLS_SOA2 Managed Server
12.10
Validating the Location and Creation of the Transaction Logs
12.11
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for the Extended Domain
12.11.1
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for the
WLS_SOA
Managed Servers
12.11.2
Configuring the WebLogic Proxy Plug-In
12.11.3
Validating the
Oracle SOA Suite
URLs Through the Load Balancer
12.12
Post-Configuration Steps for Oracle SOA Suite
12.12.1
Configuring Oracle Adapters for Oracle SOA Suite
12.12.1.1
Enabling High Availability for Oracle File and FTP Adapters
12.12.1.1.1
Understanding the Oracle File and FTP Adapter Configuration
12.12.1.1.2
Configuring the Oracle File Adapter in the Administration Console
12.12.1.1.3
Editing the JCA File Within the Composite Application
12.12.1.1.4
Configuring the Oracle FTP Adapter
12.12.1.2
Enabling High Availability for Oracle JMS Adapters
12.12.1.3
Enabling High Availability for the Oracle Database Adapter
12.12.2
Enabling SSL Communication Between the SOA Servers and the Hardware Load Balancer
12.12.3
Considerations for sync-async interactions in a SOA cluster
12.13
Enabling Automatic Service Migration and JDBC Persistent Stores for Oracle SOA Suite
13
Adding Oracle Service Bus to the Topology
13.1
Variables Used when Adding Oracle Service Bus to the Enterprise Topology
13.2
About Configuring Oracle Service in Its Own Domain
13.3
Overview of Adding OSB to the Topology
13.4
Prerequisites for Extending the Domain to Include Oracle Service Bus
13.5
Installing Oracle Service Bus Software
13.5.1
Starting the Oracle Service Bus Installer
13.5.2
Navigating the OSB Installation Screens
13.5.3
Installing the Software on the Other Host Computers
13.5.4
Validating the OSB Installation
13.5.4.1
Reviewing the Installation Log Files
13.5.4.2
Checking the Directory Structure
13.5.4.3
Viewing the Contents of Your Oracle Home
13.6
Extending the SOA or Infrastructure Domain to Include Oracle Service Bus
13.6.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
13.6.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens for Oracle Service Bus
13.7
Configuring a Default Persistence Store for Transaction Recovery
13.8
Propagating the Extended Domain to the Domain Directories and Machines
13.8.1
Summary of the Tasks Required to Propagate the Changes to the Other Domain Directories and Machines
13.8.2
Starting and Validating the WLS_OSB1 Managed Server
13.8.2.1
Starting the WLS_OSB1 Managed Server
13.8.2.2
Adding the MiddlewareAdministrators Role to the Enterprise Deployment Administration Group
13.8.2.3
Validating the Managed Server by Logging in to the SOA Infrastructure
13.8.3
Starting and Validating the WLS_OSB2 Managed Server
13.8.4
Validating the Location and Creation of the Transaction Logs
13.8.5
Verifying the Appropriate Targeting for OSB Singleton Services
13.9
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for the Oracle Service Bus
13.10
Configuring the WebLogic Proxy Plug-In
13.11
Validating the Oracle Service Bus URLs Through the Load Balancer
13.12
Post-Configuration Tasks for Oracle Service Bus
13.12.1
Enabling High Availability for Oracle DB, File and FTP Adapters
13.12.2
Configuring Specific Oracle Service Bus Services for an Enterprise Deployment
13.12.3
Enabling SSL Communication Between the Oracle Service Bus Servers and the Hardware Load Balancer
13.12.4
Backing Up the Oracle Service Bus Configuration
13.13
Enabling Automatic Service Migration and JDBC Persistent Stores for Oracle Service Bus
14
Extending the Domain with Business Process Management
14.1
Variables Used in This Chapter
14.2
Prerequisites for Extending the SOA Domain to Include Oracle BPM
14.3
Installing Oracle Business Process Management for an Enterprise Deployment
14.3.1
Starting the Installation Program
14.3.2
Navigating the Oracle BPM Installation Screens
14.3.3
Verifying the Installation
14.3.3.1
Reviewing the Installation Log Files
14.3.3.2
Checking the Directory Structure
14.3.3.3
Viewing the Contents of Your Oracle Home
14.4
Running the Configuration Wizard on SOAHOST1 to Extend a SOA Domain to Include BPM
14.4.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
14.4.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens to Extend the Domain
14.5
Propagating the Extended Domain to the Domain Directories and Machines
14.6
Restarting the WLS_SOA Managed Servers with Business Process Management
14.7
Adding the Enterprise Deployment Administration User to the Oracle BPM Administrators Group
14.8
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for Oracle Business Process Management
14.9
Enabling SSL Communication Between Business Process Management Servers and the Hardware Load Balancer
14.10
Validating Access to Business Process Management Through the Hardware Load Balancer
14.11
Configuring BPMJMSModule for the Oracle BPM Cluster
14.12
Backing Up the Oracle BPM Configuration
14.13
Enabling Automatic Service Migration and JDBC Persistent Stores for Oracle Business Process Management
15
Extending the Domain with Oracle Enterprise Scheduler
15.1
Variables Used in This Chapter
15.2
Overview of Adding Oracle Enterprise Scheduler to a SOA Domain
15.3
Creating the Database Schemas for ESS
15.3.1
Starting the Repository Creation Utility (RCU)
15.3.2
Navigating the RCU Screens to Create the Enterprise Scheduler Schemas
15.4
Extending the SOA Domain to Include Oracle Enterprise Scheduler
15.4.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
15.4.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens to Extend the Domain with Oracle Enterprise Scheduler
15.5
Configuring a Default Persistence Store for Transaction Recovery
15.6
Propagating the Extended Domain to the Domain Directories and Machines
15.7
Adding the ESSAdmin Role to the SOA Administrators Group
15.8
Starting WLS_ESS1 Managed Server
15.9
Starting and Validating the WLS_ESS2 Managed Server
15.10
Validating the Location and Creation of the Transaction Logs
15.11
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for the WLS_ESS Managed Servers
15.12
Configuring the WebLogic Proxy Plug-In
15.13
Validating Access to Oracle Enterprise Scheduler Through the Hardware Load Balancer
15.14
Backing Up the Oracle Enterprise Scheduler Configuration
16
Extending the Domain with Business Activity Monitoring
16.1
Variables Used in This Chapter
16.2
Prerequisites When Adding Oracle BAM to the Domain
16.2.1
Understanding the Installation Requirements Adding Oracle BAM to the Domain
16.2.2
Understanding the Database Schema Requirements for Oracle BAM
16.2.3
Backing Up the Existing Installation
16.3
Special Instructions When Configuring Oracle BAM on Separate Hosts
16.3.1
Procuring Additional Host Computers for Oracle BAM
16.3.2
Installation Requirements When Configuring Oracle BAM on Separate Hosts
16.3.2.1
Installation Requirements When Using a Separate Volume or Partition
16.3.2.2
Installation Requirements When Using a Shared Oracle Home
16.3.3
Configuration Wizard Instructions When Configuring Oracle BAM on Separate Hosts
16.3.4
Propagating the Domain Configuration When Configuring Oracle BAM on Separate Hosts
16.4
Roadmap for Adding Oracle BAM to the Domain
16.5
Extending the SOA Domain to Include Oracle Business Activity Monitoring
16.5.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
16.5.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens for Oracle BAM
16.6
Configuring a Default Persistence Store for Transaction Recovery
16.7
Propagating the Extended Domain to the Domain Directories and Machines
16.8
Adding the Enterprise Deployment Administration User to the Oracle BAM Administration Group
16.9
Starting WLS_BAM1 Managed Server
16.10
Starting and Validating the WLS_BAM2 Managed Server
16.11
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for the WLS_BAM Managed Servers
16.12
Configuring the WebLogic Proxy Plug-In
16.13
Validating Access to Oracle BAM Through the Hardware Load Balancer
16.14
Enabling Automatic Service Migration and JDBC Persistent Stores for the Oracle BAM Servers
16.15
Backing Up the Oracle BAM Configuration
17
Extending the Domain with Oracle B2B
17.1
Variables Used in This Chapter
17.2
Prerequisites for Extending the SOA Domain to Include Oracle B2B
17.3
Installing Oracle B2B for an Enterprise Deployment
17.3.1
Starting the Oracle B2B and Healthcare Installer on
SOAHOST1
17.3.2
Navigating the Oracle B2B Installation Screens
17.3.3
Verifying the B2B or Healthcare Installation
17.3.3.1
Reviewing the Installation Log Files
17.3.3.2
Checking the Directory Structure
17.3.3.3
Viewing the Contents of Your Oracle Home
17.4
Running the Configuration Wizard to Extend for Oracle B2B
17.4.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
17.4.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens for Oracle B2B
17.5
Starting the B2B Suite Components
17.6
Updating the B2B Instance Identifier for Transports
17.7
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for Oracle B2B
17.8
Adding the B2BAdmin Role to the SOA Administrators Group
17.9
Validating Access to Oracle B2B Through the Load Balancer
17.10
Backing Up the Configuration
17.11
Enabling Automatic Service Migration and JDBC Persistent Stores for Oracle B2B
18
Extending the Domain with Oracle SOA Suite for Healthcare Integration
18.1
Variables Used When Extending the Domain for Oracle Healthcare
18.2
About Oracle SOA Suite for Healthcare Integration in an Enterprise Deployment
18.3
Prerequisites for Extending the Domain to Include Oracle Healthcare
18.4
Installing Oracle Healthcare for an Enterprise Deployment
18.4.1
Starting the Oracle B2B and Healthcare Installer on
SOAHOST1
18.4.2
Navigating the Installation Screens for Oracle Healthcare Installation
18.4.3
Verifying the B2B or Healthcare Installation
18.4.3.1
Reviewing the Installation Log Files
18.4.3.2
Checking the Directory Structure
18.4.3.3
Viewing the Contents of Your Oracle Home
18.5
Running the Configuration Wizard for Oracle Healthcare
18.5.1
Starting the Configuration Wizard
18.5.2
Navigating the Configuration Wizard Screens for Oracle Healthcare
18.6
Starting the Healthcare Components
18.7
Updating the B2B Instance Identifier and MLLP High Availability Mode
18.8
Disabling Connection Factory Affinity for Optimum Load Balancing
18.9
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server for Oracle Healthcare
18.10
Adding the B2BAdmin Role to the SOA Administrators Group
18.11
Validating Access to Oracle Healthcare Through the Load Balancer
18.12
Backing Up the Configuration
18.13
Enabling Automatic Service Migration for Oracle Healthcare
Part IV Common Configuration and Management Procedures for an Enterprise Deployment
19
Common Configuration and Management Tasks for an Enterprise Deployment
19.1
Configuration and Management Tasks for All Enterprise Deployments
19.1.1
Verifying Manual Failover of the Administration Server
19.1.1.1
Failing Over the Administration Server When Using a Per Host Node Manager
19.1.1.2
Validating Access to the Administration Server on
SOAHOST2
Through Oracle HTTP Server
19.1.1.3
Failing the Administration Server Back to
SOAHOST1
When Using a Per Host Node Manager
19.1.2
Enabling SSL Communication Between the Middle Tier and the Hardware Load Balancer
19.1.2.1
When is SSL Communication Between the Middle Tier and Load Balancer Necessary?
19.1.2.2
Generating Self-Signed Certificates Using the utils.CertGen Utility
19.1.2.3
Creating an Identity Keystore Using the utils.ImportPrivateKey Utility
19.1.2.4
Creating a Trust Keystore Using the Keytool Utility
19.1.2.5
Importing the Load Balancer Certificate into the Trust Store
19.1.2.6
Adding the Updated Trust Store to the Oracle WebLogic Server Start Scripts
19.1.2.7
Configuring WebLogic Servers to Use the Custom Keystores
19.1.2.8
Testing Composites Using SSL Endpoints
19.1.3
Configuring Roles for Administration of an Enterprise Deployment
19.1.3.1
Summary of Products with Specific Administration Roles
19.1.3.2
Summary of Oracle SOA Suite Products with Specific Administration Groups
19.1.3.3
Adding a Product-Specific Administration Role to the Enterprise Deployment Administration Group
19.1.3.4
Adding the Enterprise Deployment Administration User to a Product-Specific Administration Group
19.1.4
Using JDBC Persistent Stores for TLOGs and JMS in an Enterprise Deployment
19.1.4.1
About JDBC Persistent Stores for JMS and TLOGs
19.1.4.2
Performance Impact of the TLOGs and JMS Persistent Stores
19.1.4.3
Roadmap for Configuring a JDBC Persistent Store for TLOGs
19.1.4.4
Roadmap for Configuring a JDBC Persistent Store for JMS
19.1.4.5
Creating a User and Tablespace for TLOGs
19.1.4.6
Creating a User and Tablespace for JMS
19.1.4.7
Creating GridLink Data Sources for TLOGs and JMS Stores
19.1.4.8
Assigning the TLOGs JDBC store to the Managed Servers
19.1.4.9
Creating a JDBC JMS Store
19.1.4.10
Assigning the JMS JDBC store to the JMS Servers
19.1.4.11
Creating the Required Tables for the JMS JDBC Store
19.1.5
Performing Backups and Recoveries for an Enterprise Deployment
19.2
Configuration and Management Tasks for an
Oracle SOA Suite
Enterprise Deployment
19.2.1
Deploying Oracle SOA Suite Composite Applications to an Enterprise Deployment
19.2.2
Using Shared Storage for Deployment Plans and SOA Infrastructure Applications Updates
19.2.3
Managing Database Growth in an Oracle SOA Suite Enterprise Deployment
20
Using Whole Server Migration and Service Migration in an Enterprise Deployment
20.1
About Whole Server Migration and Automatic Service Migration in an Enterprise Deployment
20.1.1
Understanding the Difference Between Whole Server and Service Migration
20.1.2
Implications of Using Whole Server Migration or Service Migration in an Enterprise Deployment
20.1.3
Understanding Which Products and Components Require Whole Server Migration and Service Migration
20.2
Creating a GridLink Data Source for Leasing
20.3
Configuring Whole Server Migration for an Enterprise Deployment
20.3.1
Editing the Node Manager's Properties File to Enable Whole Server Migration
20.3.2
Setting Environment and Superuser Privileges for the wlsifconfig.sh Script
20.3.2.1
Setting the PATH Environment Variable for the wlsifconfig.sh Script
20.3.2.2
Granting Privileges to the wlsifconfig.sh Script
20.3.3
Configuring Server Migration Targets
20.3.4
Testing Whole Server Migration
20.4
Configuring Automatic Service Migration in an Enterprise Deployment
20.4.1
Setting the Leasing Mechanism and Data Source for an Enterprise Deployment Cluster
20.4.2
Changing the Migration Settings for the Managed Servers in the Cluster
20.4.3
About Selecting a Service Migration Policy
20.4.4
Setting the Service Migration Policy for Each Managed Server in the Cluster
20.4.5
Restarting the Managed Servers and Validating Automatic Service Migration
20.4.6
Failing Back Services After Automatic Service Migration
21
Configuring Single Sign-On for an Enterprise Deployment
21.1
About Oracle HTTP Server Webgate
21.2
General Prerequisites for Configuring
Oracle HTTP Server
12
c
Webgate
21.3
Enterprise Deployment Prerequisites for Configuring
OHS
12
c
Webgate
21.4
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server 12
c
WebGate for an Enterprise Deployment
21.5
Registering the Oracle HTTP Server 12
c
WebGate with Oracle Access Manager
21.5.1
Locating and Preparing the RREG Tool
21.5.2
About RREG In-Band and Out-of-Band Mode
21.5.3
Updating the Standard Properties in the OAM11gRequest.xml File
21.5.4
Updating the Protected, Public, and Excluded Resources for an Enterprise Deployment
21.5.5
Running the RREG Tool
21.5.5.1
Running the RREG Tool in In-Band Mode
21.5.5.2
Running the RREG Tool in Out-Of-Band Mode
21.5.6
Files and Artifacts Generated by RREG
21.5.7
Copying Generated Artifacts to the Oracle HTTP Server WebGate Instance Location
21.5.8
Restarting the Oracle HTTP Server Instance
21.6
Setting Up the WebLogic Server Authentication Providers
21.6.1
Backing Up Configuration Files
21.6.2
Setting Up the Oracle Access Manager Identity Assertion Provider
21.6.3
Setting the Order of Providers
21.7
Configuring Oracle ADF and OPSS Security with Oracle Access Manager
A
Using Multi Data Sources with Oracle RAC
A.1
About Multi Data Sources and Oracle RAC
A.2
Typical Procedure for Configuring Multi Data Sources for an Enterprise Deployment
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