Weblogic 9.2 System Administration Course

Course Code: IN 723
Course Abstract: The J2EE platform is Java’s answer to enterprise scalable applications. BEA Weblogic is one of the premiere Application Servers that implements the J2EE specification. Participants will come away from class with the ability to build and configure complete Weblogic domains. The course will cover the details of administrating a J2EE server. This is a hands-on learning experience, with each participant having their own Weblogic Server to learn with.
Audience: This course is designed for administrators.
Duration: 5 days
Learning Outcomes: Upon completion of this course, the participant will be able to:
> Install a Weblogic Server
> Build a Weblogic Domain
> Utilize many of the command-line administrative tools provided by Weblogic
> Implement Database access with Weblogic Connection Pools
> Describe JMS based messaging servers
> Create and deploy a JMS Topic
> Pass messages to and receive messages from a JMS Topic
> Implement Weblogic security for deployed components
> Effectively design a clustered installation
> Monitor an existing Weblogic implementation for problems
> Tune a Weblogic server for maximum performance
Course Topics:

Introduction to Weblogic 9.2
What is Java?
What is J2EE?
The J2EE Architecture
Servlets and JSPs
Enterprise Java Beans
Application Server
Web Container
EJB Container
BEA Weblogic Platform
J2EE Example Application

WebLogic Installation and Testing
System Configuration
Installation Files
Installation
Silent Installation
WebLogic Directory Structure
WebLogic Directory Structure cont.
Building a Domain
WebLogic Server types
Domain File Structure
Configuration Files
startweblogic.cmd
Testing your Installation
Weblogic Scripting
WLST Operations
Configuring Startup
Running the WebLogic Console
Shutting down Weblogic

Weblogic Console Administration
Console Overview
Configuring the Console
Centralized Administration
Monitoring Weblogic Servers
Change Center
Using the Change Center
Monitoring Weblogic Servers cont
Configuring a New Machine
Configuring a new Server
Configuring Domain Properties
Building a Managed Server
Weblogic Node Manager
Node Manager
Console Configuration
Remote Start Options
Starting Node Manager
Monitoring Domain Logging
Weblogic Server Memory
Weblogic Server Memory cont

Weblogic JNDI
What is JNDI?
JNDI and Weblogic
Using JNDI
JNDI Client
JNDI Registration
Monitoring JNDI

Weblogic Deployments
Deployments Overview
EJB Jar Files
EJB Home Interface
EJB Remote Interface
EJB Implementation Class
Deployment Descriptors
web.xml
weblogic.xml
ejb-jar.xml
weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
weblogic-cmp-rdbms.xml
War and Ear files
War File Structure
Deployment techniques
Weblogic Deployment Plans
Distributing Applications
weblogic.Deployer
Console Deployment
Deployment Descriptor Editor
Ant

Configuring JDBC
JDBC Architecture
JDBC Driver Install
Connection Pool
Configuring Connection Pools
Data Sources
Tx Data Sources
Monitoring Pool Performance

Configuring JMS
Asynchronous Messaging
Messages
Queue
Topic
JMS Connection Factory
JMS Servers
Configuration of JMS Destinations
Monitoring JMS Servers

Weblogic HTTP Server
Overview
Configuring HTTP
Web-server Proxy
Weblogic Plug-in
IIS and Weblogic
Apache and Weblogic
Virtual Hosts
Weblogic Server HTTP Log Files

Weblogic Security
Weblogic Security Design
Weblogic Security Providers
Authorization
Authentication-Users
Authentication-Groups
Authentication Roles
Integration with legacy providers
Security Administration Tasks
Handling User Lockouts

Configuring Weblogic Clusters
Clustering Servers
Cluster Layout
Cluster Design
Implementing a Cluster
Configuring the Cluster
Load Balancing
Clustered Servers
Cluster Communication
Server Migration
WAN and MAN failover
Administrative Server Failure
Configuring Replication Groups

Node Manager
What is Node Manager
Node Manager Details
Configuring Node Manager
Configuring Node Manager Cont.
Node Manager Startup
Node Manager Services
Node Manager Health Monitoring
Node Manager Domain Management
Node Manager Logging

Weblogic Performance Tuning
Introduction
Bottleneck Location
CPU Utilization
Memory Utilization
Centralized Diagnostic Service
Event Capture
Monitoring the JVM
Server Self-Tuning
Overload Protection
Network Channels
Configuring Network Channels
Monitoring Threads
Stuck Threads
Configuring new Thread Queues

Prerequisites: Participants should have a System Administrative background. Familiarity with installing and configuring software on a Windows platform is essential. Some knowledge of Java is helpful, but not necessary.
Note: All fields are required
At the present time we do not offer training for individuals or groups less then 6 individuals. We apologize for any inconvenience.


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TEKsystems has been able to successfully train the Help Desk on Windows XP Professional, Windows 2003 Server, and Managing a Windows 2003 Network Environment. They have been willing to schedule both day and night classes to meet our needs.

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