WEBLOGIC TRAINING IN CHENNAI
Oracle Weblogic Application Server Training
WEBLOGIC TRAINING INSTITUTE IN CHENNAI .This WEBLOGIC TRAINING was designed by an experienced WebLogic Consultant with many years of Oracle Application Server Administration experience.
WEBLOGIC TRAINING IN CHENNAI
WEBLOGIC TRAINING IN CHENNAI with real time corporate professionals.
WEBLOGIC training in chennai focuses on BEA Systems WebLogic is a server software application that runs on a middle tier, between back-end databases and related applications and browser-based thin clients. WebLogic is a leading e-commerce online transaction processing (OLTP) platform, developed to connect users in a distributed computing environment and to facilitate the integration of mainframe applications with distributed corporate data and applications.
WEBLOGIC TRAINING INSTITUTES IN CHENNAI
BEA WebLogic Server, the #1 Web and Wireless application server, powers the most sophisticated e-business applications. WebLogic Server's advanced architecture implements the Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) platform specification, including Servlets, Java Server Pages (JSP), Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), Java Messaging Services (JMS), and other platform services that provide the scalability, flexibility, and reliability required by multi-tier, mission-critical e-business applications.
WEBLOGIC TRAINING INSTITUTES IN CHENNAI
All topics are supported by hands-on exercises with real time project scenarios designed to provide you with the knowledge to load test your applications in the Web environment.
Weblogic training program is very much mixed both practical and interview point of questions.
By course syllabus and practicals we are the BEST WEBLOGIC TRAINING INSTITUTE IN CHENNAI.
WEBLOGIC TRAINING IN CHENNAI - Certification and Placement
Weblogic Server Administration in Linux and Solaris
Weblogic Course content
The WebLogic Components and architecture:
- WebLogic architecture
- WebLogic Systems Modules
- WebLogic command interfaces
- WebLogic Java components
- WebLogic security overview: best practices, SSL, wallets and certificates
- Application stated (precompiled, expanded, archived)
- Overview of WebLogic System Management
Oracle WebLogic Installation and Configuration:
- Oracle WebLogic capacity planning
- Oracle WebLogic Server Sizing
- Oracle WebLogic Server kernel setup
- Oracle WebLogic initialization parameters
- Oracle WebLogic installation
- Creating the HTTP server
- Create a WebLogic Default Web Application
- Create virtual hosts
- Use the WebLogic administration port to create a new domain
- Overview of WebLogic security
- Configure the WebLogic work manager
- Integrating Oracle WebLogic with the Oracle database server
Oracle WebLogic and Java:
- Overview of JMS and JDBC for WebLogic
- Create JDBC connection pooling
- Make JDBC Data Sources
- Understand the Java Transaction API (JTA)
- Oracle WebLogic plug-in's
WebLogic HTTP Server:
- Installing and configuring a HTTP server
- Managing HTTP connections to WebLogic (connection pooling)
- HTTP request caching
- HTTP Server load balancing and failover
- Using HTTP for connections to replicated WebLogic instances
Oracle WebLogic System Administration:
- Using the WebLogic Administration Console
- Installing Oracle WebLogic service packs
- Using the WebLogic command-line Interface
- Creating WebLogic Domains
- Using the WebLogic Scripting Tool (WLST)
- Oracle WebLogic maintenance: Installing WebLogic patches
- Using the WebLogic upgrade tool
- Provider export and provider import
- Using the WebLogic garbage collector (GC)
- Learn server-level migration
WebLogic Instance Management:
- Creating pending configurations
- Using the WebLogic lock and edit features
- Creating a WebLogic Administration Server
- Starting and stopping WebLogic managed servers
- Using the NodeManager to automatically start and stop WebLogic instances.
- Using the WebLogic standby admin mode.
- Oracle WebLogic Backup and Recovery
- Creating an high availability WebLogic Environment
- Making a disaster recovery planning
- Building a failover architecture for the WebLogic layer
- Managing WebLogic backups for high availability
WebLogic clustering:
- Create a WebLogic cluster using Enterprise Java Beans (EJB)
- Create a WebLogic cluster using JMS and JDBC
- Using multi-tier WebLogic Server clusters
Oracle WebLogic security administration:
- Creating security policies
- HTTP server security
- WebLogic security nodes
- Examining incoming HTTP requests
- Rejecting hacked URL requests
- Enabling JMS message quotas
- Using WebLogic keys, SSL, wallets and certificates
- Configuring the WebLogic Java Transaction API (JTA) for transaction timeout
- Oracle WebLogic user administration and Maintenance
- Administering the HTTP Server authorized connections
- Creating WebLogic users
- Oracle WebLogic pre-spawned connections to Oracle
- WebLogic privilege and security management
Deploying new WebLogic Applications:
- WebLogic deployment best practices
- Unit, functional and systems testing of a new WebLogic application
- Benchmarking stress testing of a new WebLogic application
- Creating a WebLogic deployment plan
- Tracking WebLogic domain changes
- Using ConfigToScript in WLST
- Understanding the WebLogic Deployer
- Scheduling automatic deployment at a specific date-time
- Using staging modes
WebLogic connections to database layer:
- Connecting WebLogic to non-Oracle databases
- Using JDBC with WebLogic
- Using WebLogic system modules and application modules
- Oracle WebLogic and the GoldenGate Director Server (GDS)
- Connecting WebLogic to multiple Oracle databases
- WebLogic Java Messaging System (JMS)
- Creating a JMS Server
- Make JMS destinations
- Using JMS Connection Factories
- Understanding the JMS persistence store
- Setup JMS message throttling
- Creating JMS messagethresholds
- Using the JMS message bridge
- Oracle WebLogic Performance Tuning
- WebLogic Monitoring and troubleshooting
- Look-up error messages using the WebLogic Message Catalog
- Using the WebLogic logs with WLST
- Measuring WebLogic Server Native I/O
- Viewing the logs using UNIX/Linux grep and other UNIX Solaris system utilities
- Using difference log files for WebLogic monitoring
- Tracing a dye application request through the JDBC subsystem (WebLogic request dyeing with the dye
injection monitor)
- Oracle WebLogic Diagnostic Framework (WLDF) to create notifications and watches
- Using SNMP to trap errors
- Using a JVM thread dump
- Using JVM to see RAM memory stack usage details
- Find JDBC memory leaks
- Create a debugging flag with WLST and the WebLogic administration console
- Writing monitoring scripts using WLST
- Tuning the HTTP Server
- Monitoring the HTTP logs
- HTTP Load Balancing
- Tuning the WebLogic instances
- Concurrent request monitoring and tuning with the WebLogic work manager
- Optimizing WebLogic server RAM and CPU consumption
- Tuning connection backlog buffering
- Tuning the Oracle database layer
- Monitoring the Oracle SQL workload
- Finding high-impact WebLogic transactions
- Parameters that effect SQL performance
- Using STATSPACK and AWR to spot database bottlenecks
Description of IBM Weblogic Application Server
WebSphere Application Server is the foundation of the IBM WebSphere software platform. It enables programmers to develop, deploy and integrate the secure, scalable, and flexible e-business applications. It also supports business applications from simple Web publishing through enterprise-scale transaction processing.
Weblogic AS Training Objectives
WebSphere Application Server serves as a run-time environment for J2EE or Portal applications. This course is intended for those Java programmers who are interested in develop, deploy and run the J2EE based application on WebSphere.
Weblogic AS Training Course Prerequisites
Before learning this course, we are assuming that the candidate is familiar with the following areas:
- Intermediate knowledge of Core Java programming.
- Should be familiar with general principles of Web server administration and building Web applications using Servlet & JSP.
- Some familiarity with SQL, relational databases, and the Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) interfaces will be helpful.