oracle application server 10 g (9.0.4) recommended topologies pavana jain

Post on 31-Dec-2015

27 Views

Category:

Documents

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Oracle Application Server 10 g (9.0.4) Recommended Topologies Pavana Jain. Agenda. Topology Considerations Recommended Topologies Q and A. Recommended Topologies. What is it? Oracle Recommended Topologies To address 80% use cases in the market Why do we need it? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Oracle Application Server 10g (9.0.4)Recommended Topologies

Pavana Jain

Agenda

Topology Considerations

Recommended Topologies

Q and A

Recommended Topologies

What is it?– Oracle Recommended Topologies

To address 80% use cases in the market

Why do we need it?– Too many deployment topologies

Test, document, support and recommend smaller set of topologies

What are the benefits?– Oracle

Enables better planning internally Help guide customers on how best to deploy our product

– Customers Oracle recommended topology Better performance

Recommended Topologies

General Development Configurations– Java Developer– Portal and Wireless Developer– Forms and Reports Developer– Integration Architect and Process Modeler

General Deployment Configurations– Enterprise Data Center Configuration– Departmental Configuration– Development Life Cycle Support Configuration (Test to

Stage to Production rollout support)

Topology Considerations

Installation Considerations– How do I install Oracle Application Server 10G (9.0.4) to get

to a specific topology?– Which distributed install model is best suited for this

topology?– What types of machines are typically used in this

topology?– What is the profile of the user who would do the

installations in this topology?

Topology Considerations

Application Deployment and Performance Considerations– What type of performance goals are typical for this

type of topology, and what heuristics can be used to estimate representative values for those goals.

– What distribution of components across multiple hardware best meets those performance goals

– How are applications and OracleAS components best distributed among multiple hardware nodes to meet the performance goals

– What application development strategies will maximize the performance of a topology

– What tunable parameters exist to improve performance, and how to determine when to alter these parameters

Topology Considerations

Security Considerations– What level of security does the topology require?– What isolation of components or applications is

needed to increase the security of these topologies?– What 3rd party suppliers for security hardware and

software requirements exist for these topologies?

Topology Considerations

Management Considerations– What facilities are required to manage this

topology?– What distributions of components or applications

across multiple hardware nodes provides for manageable topology?

– What backup and recovery methods to use for these topologies?

– What are the best management practices for these topologies?

Topology Considerations

HA Considerations– Which HA methodology is recommended for these

topologies?

3rd Party Products– What are the special 3rd party products such as

gateways, adapters, and load balancer, firewall requirements in these topologies?

– How do these 3rd party products impact the high availability, management, security and performance recommendations for these configurations?

Migration Objectives– How would earlier versions of Oracle9iAS need to

be migrated to fit into this configuration?

General Development Configurations

Java Developer Portal and Wireless Developer Forms, Reports and Discoverer Developer Integration Architect and Process Modeler

Java Developer

Java Developer

Consideration Highlights:

Installation and Configuration –

•Quick adoption to new O/S

•Installation for dummies needed

•Quick uptake of IDE and container

•Limited knowledge of db

Management –

•GUI used sometimes. Mostly command line preferred.

•File backup

Security –

•Self contained environment. Might need container services.

Java Developer

Consideration Highlights:

HA –

•File based clustering

Performance –

•Good OC4J performance desired

Java Developer

Topology Recommendations:

Single box installations –

•Jdeveloper and use of inbuilt OC4J for testing (<500M HD, 256M RAM)

•OC4J standalone, Jdeveloper (< 800M HD, 516M RAM)

•J2EE and Web Cache, Jdeveloper (2G HD, 516M RAM)

Consideration Recommendations:

Management – EM to startup, shutdown, OHS, OC4J management

Security – JAZN-XML, SSL

HA – File backup

Performance – OC4J tuning tips in Performance Guide

Portal and Wireless Developer

Portal and Wireless Developer

Consideration Highlights:

Installation and Configuration –

•Quick adoption to new O/S, On/Off network support, DHCP

•Quick uptake of Dev kits

•Fair amount of knowledge of db

Management –

•GUI used all the time.

•Backup and Recovery

Security –

•Single Sign on used to build apps.

Portal and Wireless Developer

Consideration Highlights:

HA –

•Clustering desired

Performance –

•Good performance desired

Portal and Wireless Developer

Topology Recommendations:

Single box installations –

•OracleAS Devkits (2G HD, 516M RAM)

•Infrastructure + Portal and Wireless (10G, 2G RAM)

•Post installation steps to shared OHS, EM Services

Consideration Recommendations:

Management – EM to startup, shutdown, OHS, OC4J, Portal, SSO, OID, Wireless management

Security – SSO, OID, DIP, DAS

HA – Backup and Recovery tool

Performance – Portal performance tips in Portal docs

Forms, Reports and Discoverer Developer

Forms, Reports and Discoverer Developer

Consideration Highlights:

Installation and Configuration –

•Good amount of knowledge of db

Management –

•GUI used all the time.

•Backup and Recovery

Security –

•Single Sign on used to build apps.

Forms, Reports and Discoverer Developer

Consideration Highlights:

HA –

•Clustering desired

Performance –

•Good performance desired

Forms, Reports and Discoverer Developer

Topology Recommendations:

Single box installations –

•OracleAS Devkits (2G HD, 516M RAM)

•Infrastructure + BI and Forms (10G, 4G RAM)

•Post installation steps to shared OHS, EM Services

Consideration Recommendations:

Management – EM to startup, shutdown, OHS, OC4J,Forms, Reports, Discoverer, SSO, OID,

Security – SSO, OID, DIP, DAS

HA – Backup and Recovery tool

Performance – OC4J tips

Integration Architect and Process Modeler

General Deployment Configurations

Enterprise Data Center Configuration Departmental Configuration Development Life Cycle Support

Configuration (Test to Stage to Production rollout support)

Enterprise Data Center TopologyJ2EE Applications

Enterprise Data Center TopologyPortal and other Applications

Enterprise Data Center

Consideration Highlights:

Installation and Configuration –

•Ability to install OracleAS in tiered environment

Management –

•GUI used all the time

•Backup and Recovery

•Cluster management

•System provisioning

•Cloning, Change Host name, Change IP address

•Patching

Enterprise Data Center

Consideration Highlights:

Security –

•Single Signon and integration with windows native authentication and other 3rd party products

•Central user provisioning system with the ability to handle outside as well as inside organization authentication and authorization capabilities

HA –

•Clustering needed

•Active Clusters needed

•Disaster Recovery needed

Performance –

•Caching capabilities needed

•Application performance monitoring

Enterprise Data Center

Topology Recommendations:

Tiered installations (testing ongoing)–

•Web Tier: OHS, Web Cache (2G, 2G RAM), Identity Management (10G, 4G RAM)

•J2EE Tier: OC4J (2G, 2G RAM)

•Business Tier: Customer database (10G, 4G RAM)

Consideration Recommendations:

Management – Central Console, Standalone Console, lot of scripts for batch processing

Security – SSO, OID, DIP, DAS, fanout, AD connector, Netgrity integration

HA –Web Cache cluster, OracleAS Cluster, Cold Failover Cluster or Replication (local protection), Disaster Recovery (remote protection)

Performance – Sizing tips to be made available

Departmental Configurations

Departmental Topology

Consideration Highlights:

Installation and Configuration –

•Ability to install OracleAS on multiple machines as different users

Management –

•GUI used all the time

•Backup and Recovery

•Cluster management

•System provisioning

•Change Host name, Change IP address

•Patching

Departmental Topology

Consideration Highlights:

Security –

•Single Signon

•Central user provisioning system for the department

•HA –

•Clustering needed

•Active Clusters needed

Performance –

•Caching capabilities needed

•Application performance monitoring

Departmental Topology

Topology Recommendations:

Tiered installations (testing ongoing)–

•Middle Tier (depends on the middle tier)

•Infrastructure (10G, 4G RAM)

Consideration Recommendations:

Management – Standalone Console, Central Console

Security – SSO, OID, DIP, DAS

HA –Web Cache cluster, OracleAS Cluster, Cold Failover Cluster

Performance – Sizing tips to be made available

Development Life Cycle Support Configurations

Development Life Cycle Support Configurations

Tests ongoing. Recommendations not yet defined for how applications get moved from Test to Stage to Production Environment.

. The instances do not move.. Just applications moves

. Test environment recommendation would be similar to Developer topologies

. Staging environment recommendation would be similar to Departmental topology

. Production environment recommendation would be similar to Enterprise Data Center topology

Recommended Topology Project

•Where are we with this project as of 8/7/2003:

•Testing for deployment topologies are ongoing. Results with recommendation will be documented in official documentation before production.

•Sizing tools are planned and we hope to have it delivered close to production.

•The following sales tools are planned:

• Cheat sheet with consideration decisions to help decide which topology a customer would get most benefit from .

• Comparison study on how we compare with BEA/IBM wrt these topologies.

• Document of the type of licenses recommended to deploy these topologies

top related