Go to main content
1/13
Contents
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Documentation Accessibility
Conventions
1
Introduction to Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector
1.1
Document Scope
1.1.1
Guide to this Document
1.1.2
Related Documentation
1.2
Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Overview
1.3
Key Functionality and Administrative Features
1.4
Known Limitations
1.5
How Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Differs from Jolt
1.6
Platform Support
1.7
New and Changed Features in This Release
2
Configuring Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector
2.1
Summary of Environment Changes and Considerations
2.1.1
Oracle Tuxedo Changes
2.1.2
WebLogic Server Changes
2.1.2.1
Administration and Programming
2.1.2.2
WebLogic Server Threads
2.2
Configuring Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for Your Applications
2.2.1
Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector MBean Classes
2.2.2
Configuring Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Using the Administration Console
2.2.3
Configuring Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Using the Command-Line Interface
2.2.4
Set the WebLogic Server Environment
2.2.5
How to Set Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Properties
2.2.5.1
Set PasswordKey
2.2.5.2
Set encoding
2.2.5.3
Set Dumping of User Data
2.2.5.3.1
Enable IPv4 for SDP transport
2.2.6
System Level Debug Settings
2.2.7
Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Configuration Guidelines
3
Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Administration
3.1
Configuring the Connections Between Access Points
3.1.1
How to Request a Connection at Boot Time (On Startup)
3.1.1.1
How to Configure RetryInterval
3.1.1.2
How to Configure MaxRetries
3.1.2
How to Request Connections for Client Demands (On Demand)
3.1.3
Accepting Incoming Connections (Incoming Only)
3.1.4
How to use LOCAL Connection Policy
3.2
Configuring Failover and Failback
3.2.1
Prerequisite to Using Failover and Failback
3.2.2
How to Configure Failover
3.2.2.1
How Failback Works
3.2.3
How to Configure Link-level Failover
3.2.3.1
Sample Link-level Failover Configuration
3.3
Configuring for TypedMBString Support
3.4
Authentication of Remote Access Points
3.4.1
Configuring a Password Configuration
3.4.1.1
Using AES Encrypted Passwords
3.4.2
Generating Encrypted Passwords
3.4.3
Usage
3.4.4
Examples
3.4.4.1
Local Passwords
3.4.4.2
Remote Passwords
3.4.4.3
App Passwords
3.5
User Authentication
3.5.1
ACL Policy is LOCAL
3.5.2
ACL Policy is GLOBAL
3.5.3
Remote Access Point Credential Policy is GLOBAL
3.5.4
Remote Access Point Credential Policy is LOCAL
3.5.5
User Authentication for Tuxedo 6.5
3.6
How to Configure Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector to Provide Security between Oracle Tuxedo and Oracle WebLogic Server
3.6.1
TpUsrFile Plug-in
3.6.1.1
Configuring the Local Tuxedo Access Point for the TpUsrFile Plug-in
3.6.1.2
Configure the Remote Tuxedo Access Point for the TpUsrFile Plug-in
3.6.1.2.1
Using the Resources TpUsrFile attribute
3.6.2
LDAP Plug-in
3.6.2.1
Implementing Single Point Security Administration
3.6.2.2
Configure the Local Tuxedo Access Point for the LDAP Plug-in
3.6.2.3
Configure the Remote Tuxedo Access Point for the LDAP Plug-in
3.6.3
Custom Plug-in
3.6.3.1
Configure the Local Tuxedo Access Point for the Custom Plug-in
3.6.3.2
Configure the Remote Tuxedo Access Point for the Custom Plug-in
3.6.4
Anonymous Users
3.6.4.1
Anonymous Users and CORBA Services
3.7
Link-Level Encryption
3.8
Secure Socket Level Encryption
4
Controlling Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Connections and Services
4.1
Dynamic Administration of Connections
4.1.1
Using the WebLogic Server Administration Console
4.1.2
Using WebLogic Scripting Tool (WLST)
4.1.2.1
Listing Connections
4.1.2.2
Starting Connections
4.1.2.3
Stopping Connections
4.1.2.4
Modifying Configuration Attributes
4.2
Suspend/Resume WTC Services
4.2.1
Using the WebLogic Server Administration Console
4.2.2
Using WebLogic Scripting Tool (WLST)
4.2.2.1
Checking Status of WTC Services
4.2.2.2
Suspending WTC Services
4.2.2.3
Resuming WTC Services
4.2.3
Suspend/Resume WTC Services Dynamically
5
Administration of CORBA Applications
5.1
How to Configure Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for CORBA Service Applications
5.1.1
Example WTC Server and Tuxedo UBB Files
5.2
How to Administer and Configure Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for Inbound RMI-IIOP
5.2.1
Configuring Your WTC Server for Inbound RMI-IIOP
5.2.2
Administering the Tuxedo Application Environment
5.2.2.1
Guidelines About Using Your Server Name as an Object Reference
5.3
How to Configure Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for Outbound RMI-IIOP
5.3.1
Example Outbound RMI-IIOP Configuration
6
How to Manage Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector in a Clustered Environment
6.1
Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Guidelines for Clustered Environments
6.1.1
How to Configure for Clustered Nodes
6.1.1.1
Limitations for Clustered Nodes
6.2
How to Configure OutBound Requests to Tuxedo Domains
6.2.1
Example Clustered Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Configuration
6.3
How to Configure Inbound Requests from Tuxedo Domains
6.3.1
Load Balancing
6.3.2
Fail Over
7
How to Configure the Oracle Tuxedo Queuing Bridge
7.1
Overview of the Tuxedo Queuing Bridge
7.1.1
How Tuxedo Queuing Bridge connects JMS with Tuxedo
7.1.2
How Tuxedo Queuing Bridge connects Tuxedo to JMS
7.1.3
Tuxedo Queuing Bridge Limitations
7.2
Configuring the Tuxedo Queuing Bridge
7.2.1
Dynamically Adding/Modifying Tuxedo Queuing Bridge
7.2.2
Tuxedo Queuing Bridge Instantiate
7.2.3
Starting the Tuxedo Queuing Bridge
7.2.4
Error Logging
7.3
Tuxedo Queuing Bridge Connectivity
7.4
Example Connection Type Configurations
7.4.1
Example JmsQ2TuxQ Configuration
7.4.2
Example TuxQ2JmsQ Configuration
7.4.3
Example JmsQ2TuxS Configuration
7.5
Priority Mapping
7.6
Error Queues
7.6.1
WLS Error Destination
7.6.2
Unsupported Message Types
7.6.3
Tuxedo Error Queue
7.6.4
Limitations
8
Connecting WebLogic Integration and Tuxedo Applications
8.1
Synchronous WebLogic Integration-to-Tuxedo Connectivity
8.1.1
Defining Business Operations
8.1.2
Invoking an eLink Adapter
8.1.3
Define Exception handlers
8.2
Synchronous Non-Blocking WebLogic Integration-to-Tuxedo Connectivity
8.3
Asynchronous WebLogic Integration-to-Tuxedo Connectivity
8.4
Asynchronous Tuxedo /Q-to-WebLogic Integration Connectivity
8.5
Bi-directional Asynchronous Tuxedo-to-WebLogic Integration Connectivity
9
WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Samples Quick Start Guide
9.1
Where to Find Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Samples
9.2
Configuring the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector
9.2.1
Build the Simpapp Example
9.2.2
Create WTC Servers
9.2.3
Create a Local Oracle Tuxedo Access Point
9.2.4
Create a Remote Oracle Tuxedo Access Point
9.2.5
Create Exported Services
9.2.6
Create Imported Services
9.2.7
Target mySimpapp to the examplesServer
9.2.8
Register TDOM1 as an Oracle WebLogic Server User
9.3
Configuring Oracle Tuxedo
9.4
Run the Example
9.4.1
Oracle WebLogic Server to Oracle Tuxedo Interoperability
9.4.2
Oracle Tuxedo to Oracle WebLogic Server Interoperability
10
Troubleshooting The WebLogic Tuxedo Connector
10.1
Monitoring the WebLogic Tuxedo Connector
10.1.1
Set Trace Levels (Deprecated)
10.1.2
Enable Debug Mode
10.1.3
Enable a User Data Dump
10.2
Frequently Asked Questions
10.2.1
What does this EJB Deployment Message Mean?
10.2.2
How Do I Start the Connector?
10.2.3
How do I Start the Tuxedo Queuing Bridge?
10.2.4
How do I Assign a WTC Server to a Server Instance?
10.2.5
How do I Resolve Connection Problems?
10.2.6
How do I Migrate from Previous Releases?
Scripting on this page enhances content navigation, but does not change the content in any way.