Skip Headers
Oracle® Enterprise Manager Cloud Control Getting Started with Oracle Fusion Middleware Management
12c Release 3 (12.1.0.3)
Part Number E24215-05
Home
Book List
Index
Contact Us
Next
PDF
·
Mobi
·
ePub
Contents
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Audience
Documentation Accessibility
Related Documents
Conventions
What's New in Getting Started with Oracle Fusion Middleware Management Manual?
Part I Managing Oracle Fusion Middleware
1
Introduction to Middleware Management
1.1
Middleware Management with Enterprise Manager Cloud Control
1.2
Key Oracle Fusion Middleware Management Features
1.3
Managing Fusion Middleware with Fusion Middleware Control
2
Discovering Middleware Targets
2.1
Enabling Automatic Discovery of Fusion Middleware Targets
2.2
Discovering Targets Manually
2.2.1
Discovering a WebLogic 9.x or 10.x Domain Using Cloud Control
2.2.2
Discovering Multiple WebLogic Domains Using EM CLI
2.2.3
Discovering a Standalone Oracle HTTP Server
2.3
Discovering New or Modified Domain Members
2.3.1
Enabling Automatic Discovery of New Domain Members
2.3.2
Manually Checking for New or Modified Domain Members
2.3.3
Removing Targets
3
Managing Middleware Targets
3.1
Middleware Targets in Enterprise Manager
3.1.1
Oracle Fusion Middleware Components
3.1.2
Oracle Application Server Components
3.1.3
Non-Oracle Middleware Components
3.2
Monitoring Middleware Targets
3.2.1
Middleware Target Home Page
3.2.2
Target Home Page
3.2.3
Out-of-box Metrics
3.2.4
Analyzing Historical Performance
3.2.5
Setting Metric Thresholds for Alert Notifications
3.2.6
Monitoring Templates
3.2.7
Managing and Creating Blackouts
3.2.8
Extend Monitoring for Applications Deployed to WebLogic Server
3.2.9
Request Monitoring
3.3
Diagnosing Performance Problems
3.3.1
Using Home Pages to Diagnose Performance Issues
3.3.2
Diagnostics Snapshots
3.4
Administering Middleware Targets
3.5
Lifecycle Management
3.5.1
Managing Configurations
3.5.2
Compliance Management
3.5.3
Patch Management
3.5.4
Provisioning
3.6
Managing Service Levels
3.6.1
Service Dashboard
3.7
Job System
3.7.1
Log File Rotation
3.7.2
Log File Viewer
3.8
Topology Viewer
3.9
Support Workbench
4
Testing Application Load and Performance
4.1
Introduction to Application Replay
4.2
Testing Against Real-World Application Workloads
4.3
Capturing Application Workload Using RUEI
4.4
Synchronized vs. Non-Synchronized Replay
4.5
Prerequisites and Considerations
4.5.1
Using RUEI to Capture Application Workloads
4.5.2
Configuring Required User Privileges in Enterprise Manager
4.5.3
Using Synchronization
4.5.4
Setting up the Test System Database
4.5.5
Restarting the Database and Application Stack
4.5.6
Setting up the Capture Directory
4.6
Understanding the Capture and Replay Process
4.7
Creating Application Workload Captures
4.8
Monitoring the Capture Process
4.9
Replaying Application Workload Captures
4.9.1
Preparing to Replay Workload Captures
4.9.2
Understanding Replays and Replay Tasks
4.9.3
Resolving References to External Systems
4.9.4
Remapping URLs
4.9.5
Substituting Sensitive Data
4.9.6
Replaying Workload Captures
4.9.7
Analyzing Replay Results
4.10
Importing Replay Session Divergences into OpenScript
4.11
Troubleshooting
Part II Monitoring Exalogic Elastic Cloud, Exalytics Target, and Traffic Director
5
Monitoring Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud
5.1
Prerequisites to Discovering Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud
5.1.1
Importing Ops Center Certificate to the Oracle Management Agent Keystore
5.1.2
Critical Prerequisites For Oracle VM Manager Discovery
5.1.3
ZFS Plug-in and Oracle VM Manager Registration Preconfiguration Steps
5.2
Using the Exalogic Elastic Cloud Discovery Wizard
5.3
Upgrading Exalogic System Targets to the Version 12.1.0.3 Fusion Middleware Model
5.4
Displaying and Using the Exalogic Elastic Cloud Dashboard
5.5
Refreshing the Exalogic Elastic Cloud
5.6
Monitoring the Hardware Components of Exalogic Elastic Cloud
5.7
Viewing Application Deployments in Exalogic Elastic Cloud Targets
5.8
Viewing WebLogic Domains in Exalogic Elastic Cloud Targets
5.9
Viewing Coherence Clusters in Exalogic Elastic Cloud Targets
5.10
Viewing Hosts in Exalogic Elastic Cloud Targets
5.11
Exalogic Control Stack Monitoring
5.12
Visualizing Relationships Between Exalogic Software and Hardware Components
5.13
Analyzing the Impact of Component Failures
5.14
Viewing Incidents and Status Changes Created for an Exalogic System in Ops Center as Incidents in Cloud Control
5.15
Creating Exalogic Reports
5.16
Viewing and Managing Exalogic Consumption Tracking
5.17
Viewing the vCPU Consumption Report
5.18
Viewing the Resource Consumption Trend
5.19
Exporting the vCPU Consumption Report
5.20
Configuring Exalogic Oracle Engineered System Healthchecks
6
Discovering and Monitoring an Exalytics Target
6.1
Discovering an Exalytics Target
6.1.1
Prerequisites for Discovering an Exalytics Machine Target
6.1.2
Discovering an Exalytics System Target
6.2
Monitoring an Exalytics System
6.2.1
Displaying and Using the Exalytics System Dashboard
6.2.2
Viewing the Generic Performance of an Exalytics System
6.2.3
Viewing the Members Topology of an Exalytics System
6.2.4
Viewing the Routing Topology of an Exalytics System
6.2.5
Refreshing an Exalytics System
6.2.6
Viewing the Job Activity of an Exalytics System
6.2.7
Administering Targets of an Exalytics System
6.3
Monitoring an Exalytics Machine
6.3.1
Displaying and Using the Exalytics Machine Homepage
6.3.2
Viewing the Generic Performance of an Exalytics Machine
6.3.3
Viewing the Members Topology of an Exalytics Machine
6.3.4
Viewing the vCPU Consumption Report for an Exalytics Machine
6.3.5
Managing License Editions for an Exalytics Machine
6.3.6
Viewing the Job Activity of an Exalytics Machine
6.3.7
Viewing the Collected Configuration of an Exalytics Machine
6.3.8
Administering the Exalytics Machine Target
7
Oracle Traffic Director
7.1
Adding a Traffic Director to an Exalogic Target
7.2
About Traffic Director Configuration
7.2.1
Using the Traffic Director Configuration Page
7.2.2
Adding Traffic Director Target Configuration
7.3
About Traffic Director Instance
7.4
About Traffic Director Refresh Flow
7.4.1
Adding New Targets to Newly Added Configurations
7.4.2
Adding New Targets for Newly Added Instances of Configurations
7.4.3
Deleting Targets of Configurations That Have Been Removed
7.4.4
Deleting Targets of Instances That Have Been Removed
Part III Monitoring Oracle WebLogic Domain and Oracle GlassFish Server
8
Monitoring WebLogic Domains
8.1
Updating the Agent Truststore
8.1.1
Importing a Demo WebLogic Server Root CA Certificate.
8.1.2
Importing a Custom Root CA Certificate
8.2
Changing the Default AgentTrust.jks Password Using Keytool
8.3
Collecting JVM Performance Metrics for WebLogic Servers
8.3.1
Setting the PlatformMBeanServerUsed Attribute
8.3.2
Activating Platform MBeans on WebLogicServer 9.x to 10.3.2 versions
9
Overview of Oracle GlassFish Server Management
9.1
Before Getting Started
9.1.1
GlassFish Roles and Privileges
9.1.2
Adding Domain Certificate to Activate Start and Stop Operations
9.2
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Domain
9.2.1
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Domain
9.2.2
How to Add an Oracle GlassFish Domain To Be Monitored
9.2.3
Adding an Oracle GlassFish Domain: Finding and Assigning Targets
9.2.4
Adding an Oracle GlassFish Domain: Displaying Results
9.2.5
Refreshing an Oracle GlassFish Domain
9.3
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Server Home Page
9.3.1
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Server
9.4
Understanding the Oracle GlassFish Cluster Home Page
9.4.1
How to Access an Oracle GlassFish Cluster
9.5
Viewing Collected Configuration Data for Oracle GlassFish Members
9.6
Creating an Oracle GlassFish Server Configuration Comparison Template
Part IV Managing Oracle SOA
10
Overview of Oracle SOA Management
11
Discovering and Monitoring Oracle BPEL Process Manager
11.1
Supported Versions
11.2
Understanding the Discovery Mechanism
11.3
Understanding the Discovery Process
11.4
Setting Up Oracle Software Library
11.5
Discovering BPEL Process Manager
11.5.1
Deployed to Oracle Application Server
11.5.2
Deployed to Oracle WebLogic Managed Server
11.5.3
Deployed to IBM WebSphere Application Server
11.6
Configuring BPEL Process Manager
11.6.1
Specifying Details for Monitoring BPEL Process Manager
11.6.2
Registering BPEL Process Manager Credentials and Host Credentials
11.7
Troubleshooting BPEL Process Managers
11.7.1
Discovery Errors on Target Details Page
11.7.2
Discovery Errors on Review Page
11.7.3
Discovery Errors on Review Page
11.7.4
Display Errors on Processes Page
11.7.5
Retrieving the OPMN Port
11.7.6
javax.naming.NameNotFoundException Error
11.7.7
javax.naming.NamingException Error
11.7.8
javax.naming.NoInitialContextException Error
11.7.9
Error While Creating BPEL Infrastructure Services
11.7.10
Metric Collection Errors for BPEL Process Manager Partner Link Metrics
11.7.11
Agent Monitoring Metric Errors
12
Discovering and Monitoring Oracle Service Bus
12.1
Supported Versions
12.2
Understanding the Discovery Mechanism
12.3
Understanding the Discovery Process
12.4
Downloading One-Off Patches
12.5
Discovering Oracle Service Bus
12.5.1
Discovering OSB Deployed to WLS Not Monitored by Enterprise Manager
12.5.2
Discovering OSB Deployed to WLS Monitored by Enterprise Manager
12.6
Enabling Management Packs
12.7
Monitoring Oracle Service Bus in Cloud Control
12.7.1
Enabling Monitoring for OSB Services
12.8
Generating Oracle Service Bus Reports Using BI Publisher
12.9
Troubleshooting Oracle Service Bus
12.9.1
Required Patches Missing
12.9.2
System and Service
12.9.3
SOAP Test
13
Discovering and Monitoring the SOA Suite
13.1
New Features in This Release
13.2
List of Supported Versions
13.3
Monitoring Templates
13.4
Overview of the Discovery Process
13.5
Discovering the SOA Suite
13.5.1
Discovering the SOA Suite
13.5.2
Configuring the SOA Suite
13.6
Metric and Collection Settings
13.6.1
Viewing Application Dependency and Performance (ADP) Metrics
13.7
Configuring Instance Tracing
13.8
Setting Up and Using SOA Instance Tracing
13.8.1
SOA Instance Tracing at SOA Infrastructure Level
13.8.2
SOA Instance Tracing at SOA Composite Level
13.9
Monitoring Dehydration Store
13.9.1
Enabling Monitoring of the SOA Dehydration Store
13.9.2
Viewing the SOA Dehydration Store Data
13.10
Viewing the Service Topology
13.11
Publishing a Server to UDDI
13.12
Generating SOA Reports Using BI Publisher
13.13
Generating SOA Reports Using Information Publisher
13.14
Provisioning SOA Artifacts and Composites
13.15
Diagnosing Issues and Incidents
13.16
Verifying Target Monitoring Setup
13.16.1
Running Functionality-Level Diagnostic Checks
13.16.2
Running System-Level Diagnostic Checks
13.16.3
Repairing Target Monitoring Setup Issues
13.17
Searching Faults in the SOA Infrastructure
13.17.1
Overview of Faults and Fault Types in SOA Infrastructure
13.17.2
Overview of the Recovery Actions for Resolving Faults
13.17.3
Prerequisites for Searching, Viewing, and Recovering Faults
13.17.4
Searching and Viewing Faults
13.17.5
Recovering a Few Faults Quickly (Simple Recovery)
13.18
Creating and Tracking Bulk Recovery Jobs
13.18.1
Recovering Faults in Bulk (Bulk Recovery)
13.18.2
Tracking Bulk Recovery Jobs, and Viewing Their Results and Errors
13.18.3
Creating Bulk Recovery Jobs Using EMCLI and Web Services
13.19
Recovering BPEL/BPMN Messages
13.20
Troubleshooting
13.20.1
Discovery
13.20.2
Monitoring
13.20.3
Instance Tracing
13.20.4
Recent Faults
13.20.5
Fault Management
13.20.6
Application Dependency and Performance Integration
13.20.7
Information Publisher Reports
13.20.8
BI Publisher Reports
13.20.9
Systems and Services
13.20.10
BPEL Recovery
13.20.11
SOA License Issue
13.20.12
Dehydration Store Issue
Part V Managing Oracle Business Intelligence
14
Discovering and Monitoring Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Oracle Essbase
14.1
Overview of Oracle Business Intelligence Targets You Can Monitor
14.1.1
Oracle Business Intelligence Instance
14.1.2
Oracle Essbase
14.2
Understanding the Monitoring Process
14.3
Discovering Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Oracle Essbase Targets
14.3.1
Discovering Targets of an Undiscovered WebLogic Domain
14.3.2
Discovering New or Modified Targets of a Discovered WebLogic Domain
14.4
Monitoring Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Essbase Targets
14.4.1
Performing General Monitoring Tasks
14.4.2
Performing Target-Specific Monitoring Tasks
14.5
Administering Oracle Business Intelligence Instance and Essbase Targets
14.5.1
Performing General Administration Tasks
14.5.2
Performing Target-Specific Administration Tasks
Part VI Using JVM Diagnostics and MDA Advisor
15
Introduction to JVM Diagnostics
15.1
Overview
15.1.1
Java Activity Monitoring and Diagnostics with Low Overhead
15.1.2
In-depth Visibility of JVM Activity
15.1.3
Real Time Transaction Tracing
15.1.4
Cross-Tier Correlation with Oracle Databases
15.1.5
Memory Leak Detection and Analysis
15.1.6
JVM Pooling
15.1.7
Real-time and Historical Diagnostics
15.2
New Features in this Release
15.3
Supported Platforms and JVMs
15.4
User Roles
16
Using JVM Diagnostics
16.1
Installing JVM Diagnostics
16.1.1
Monitoring a Standalone JVM
16.2
Setting Up JVM Diagnostics
16.2.1
Configuring the JVM Diagnostics Engine
16.2.2
Configuring JVMs and Pools
16.2.3
Register Databases
16.2.4
Configuring the Heap Analysis Hosts
16.2.5
Viewing Registered JVMs and Managers
16.3
Accessing the JVM Diagnostics Pages
16.4
Managing JVM Pools
16.4.1
Viewing the JVM Pool Home Page
16.4.2
Viewing the JVM Pool Performance Diagnostics Page
16.4.3
Viewing the JVM Pool Live Thread Analysis Page
16.4.4
Configuring a JVM Pool
16.4.5
Removing a JVM Pool
16.4.6
Add to Group
16.5
Managing JVMs
16.5.1
Viewing the JVM Home Page
16.5.2
Viewing the JVM Performance Diagnostics Page
16.5.3
Viewing the JVM Diagnostics Performance Summary
16.5.4
Viewing the JVM Live Thread Analysis Page
16.5.5
Viewing the JVM Live Heap Analysis Page
16.5.6
Working with Class Histograms
16.5.7
Taking a Heap Snapshot
16.5.8
Analyzing Heap Snapshots
16.5.9
Configuring a JVM
16.5.10
Removing a JVM
16.5.11
Add JVM to Group
16.6
Managing Thread Snapshots
16.6.1
Tracing Active Threads
16.7
Analyzing Trace Diagnostic Images
16.8
Uploading Trace Diagnostics Images
16.9
JVM Offline Diagnostics
16.9.1
Creating a Diagnostic Snapshot
16.9.2
Using the Diagnostic Snapshots Page
16.9.3
Analyzing a Diagnostic Snapshot
16.9.4
Viewing a Diagnostic Snapshot
16.10
Viewing JVM Diagnostics Threshold Violations
16.11
Using emctl to Manage the JVM Diagnostics Engine
17
Troubleshooting JVM Diagnostics
17.1
Cross Tier Functionality Errors
17.2
Trace Errors
17.3
Deployment Script Execution Errors
17.4
LoadHeap Errors
17.5
Heap Dump Errors on AIX 64 and AIX 32 bit for IBM JDK 1.6
17.6
Errors on JVM Diagnostics UI Pages
17.7
Frequently Asked Questions
17.7.1
Location of the JVM Diagnostics Logs
17.7.2
JVM Diagnostics Engine Status
17.7.3
JVM Diagnostics Agent Status
17.7.4
Monitoring Status
17.7.5
Running the create_jvm_diagnostic_db_user.sh Script
17.7.6
Usage of the Try Changing Threads Parameter
17.7.7
Significance of Optimization Levels
17.7.8
Custom Provisioning Agent Deployment
17.7.9
Log Manager Level
17.7.10
Repository Space Requirements
18
Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
18.1
Diagnosing Performance Issues with Oracle WebLogic Server
18.2
Diagnosing Performance Issues Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
18.3
Functioning of Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
18.4
Limiting the Scope of Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
18.5
Prerequisites
18.6
Enabling Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
18.7
Setting the Preferred Frequency for Purging Data
18.8
Enabling JMS Destination Metrics
18.9
Using Middleware Diagnostics Advisor to View and Diagnose Performance Issues
18.10
Troubleshooting Issues Related to Middleware Diagnostics Advisor
Part VII Managing Oracle Coherence
19
Getting Started with Management Pack for Oracle Coherence
19.1
About Coherence Management
19.2
New Features
19.3
Understanding the Discovery Mechanism
19.3.1
Restarting a Node
19.3.2
Starting a JMX Management Node
19.3.3
Starting Other Nodes
19.3.4
Using JVM Diagnostics with Coherence
19.3.5
Discovering Coherence Targets
19.3.6
Refreshing a Cluster
19.4
Enabling the Management Pack
20
Monitoring a Coherence Cluster
20.1
Cluster Level Pages
20.1.1
Cluster Level Home Page
20.1.2
Cluster Level Node Performance Page
20.1.3
Cluster Level Cache Performance Page
20.1.4
Cluster Level Connection Performance Page
20.1.5
Cluster Level Administration Page
20.2
Detailed Pages
20.2.1
Node Home Page
20.2.2
Cache Home Page
20.2.3
Connection Manager Home Page
20.3
Performance Pages
20.3.1
Cache Performance Details Page
20.3.2
Connection Manager Performance Page
20.3.3
Connection Performance Page
20.3.4
Service Performance Page
20.3.5
Administration Pages
20.4
Log File Monitoring
20.5
Cache Data Management
20.5.1
View Explain Plan
20.5.2
View Trace
20.6
Reap Session Support
20.7
Push Replication Pattern
20.8
Transactional Cache Support
20.9
Integration with JVM Diagnostics
20.10
Viewing Performance Summary
20.11
Viewing Configuration Topology
20.12
Viewing Incidents
20.13
Troubleshooting Coherence
20.14
Best Practices
20.14.1
Mandatory Patches
20.14.2
Critical Metrics
20.14.3
Refresh Cluster
20.14.4
Custom Metrics
20.14.5
Monitoring Templates
20.14.6
Sample Code Snippets
Part VIII Using Identity Management
21
Getting Started with Identity Management
21.1
Benefits of the Using Identity Management Pack
21.2
Features of the Identity Management Pack
21.2.1
New Features for this Release
21.3
Monitoring Oracle Identity Management Components in Enterprise Manager
22
Prerequisites for Discovering Identity Management Targets
22.1
System Requirements
22.2
Installing Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 12
c
Release 2
22.3
Prerequisites for Discovering Identity Management Targets in Enterprise Manager
23
Discovering and Configuring Identity Management Targets
23.1
Discovering Identity Management Targets
23.1.1
Discovering Identity Management 11g
23.1.2
Discovering Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition 6.x, 7.x, 11g
23.1.3
Discovering Oracle Access Manager Access Server 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
23.1.4
Discovering Oracle Access Manager Identity Server 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
23.1.5
Discovering Oracle Identity Federation Server 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
23.1.6
Discovering Oracle Identity Management Suite 10.1.4.2 and 10.1.4.3.0
23.1.7
Discovering Oracle Identity Manager Server 9.1.0.1
23.2
Collecting User Statistics for Oracle Internet Directory
23.3
Creating Identity Management Elements
23.3.1
Creating Identity and Access System
23.3.2
Creating Generic Service or Web Application Targets for Identity Management
23.3.3
Creating a Service Dashboard Report
Part IX Discovering and Monitoring Non-Oracle Middleware
24
Discovering and Monitoring IBM WebSphere MQ
24.1
Introduction
24.2
Requirements
24.2.1
About Jar File Requirements for Local Monitoring
24.2.2
About Jar File Requirements for Remote Monitoring
24.3
Understanding Discovery
24.3.1
Discovery Parameters
24.3.2
Discovery Prerequisites for Local Agent
24.3.3
Discovery Prerequisites for Remote Agent
24.3.4
Queue Manager Cluster Discovery
24.3.5
Standalone Queue Manager Discovery
24.4
Monitoring
24.5
IBM WebSphere MQ Metrics
25
Discovering and Monitoring JBoss Application Server
25.1
JBoss Setup
25.2
JBoss Startup
25.3
Discovery
25.3.1
Understanding JBoss Local Discovery
25.3.2
Understanding JBoss Remote Discovery
25.3.3
Adding the JBoss Application Server
25.4
Monitoring JBoss JVM Metrics
25.5
About JVM Diagnostics
25.5.1
Deploying JVMD on JBoss
25.6
Troubleshooting
Part X Managing Oracle Data Integrator
26
Configuring and Monitoring Oracle Data Integrator
26.1
Setting Up ODI
26.2
Accessing Oracle Data Integrator
26.3
Managing Oracle Data Integrator
26.3.1
Starting, Stopping, and Restarting Oracle Data Integrator Agents
26.3.2
Managing Agent Status and Activities
26.3.3
Viewing Log Messages
26.4
Monitoring ODI Components
26.4.1
Viewing General Health of ODI Components
26.4.2
Viewing ODI Agents
26.4.3
Viewing Repository Details
26.4.4
Viewing Load Plan Executions/Sessions Statistics
26.5
Monitoring Run-Time Agents
26.6
Configuring Oracle Data Integrator Console
26.6.1
ODI Console Application Configuration Page
26.6.2
Configuring an Oracle Data Integrator Domain
Part XI Using Application Dependency and Performance
27
Introduction to Application Dependency and Performance
27.1
Overview
27.1.1
Managing Complex Java EE, SOA, OSB, and Portal Applications
27.1.2
Delivering a Service-Oriented View Across Environments
27.1.3
Avoiding Involvement of Java EE, SOA, OSB, Portal, and Application Experts
27.1.4
Eliminating Repetitive Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Manual Processes
27.1.5
ADP Solution
27.2
Architecture
27.2.1
ADP Java Agents
27.2.2
ADP Manager
27.2.3
ADP User Interface
28
Exploring Application Dependency and Performance
28.1
Exploring the User Interface
28.1.1
Accessing ADP
28.1.2
General ADP UI Elements
28.1.3
Drill Down in Operational Dashboard
28.1.4
Time Frame
28.1.5
Display Interval
28.1.6
Graphs and Data Items
28.1.7
Custom Metrics
28.1.8
Functional View
28.1.9
Topology View
28.1.10
Architecture View
28.1.11
Metric Types
28.2
Exploring the Monitoring Tab
28.2.1
Monitoring ADP Entities
28.2.2
WebLogic
28.2.3
Oracle WebLogic Portals
28.2.4
Oracle BPEL Processes
28.2.5
Oracle ESB
28.2.6
Oracle WebCenter
28.2.7
Processes
28.2.8
Web Services
28.2.9
Pageflows
28.2.10
Services
28.2.11
WSRP Producers
28.2.12
Integration
28.2.13
Applications
28.2.14
Oracle WebLogic Resources
28.2.15
Oracle Resources
28.2.16
Custom Metrics
28.2.17
Status
28.2.18
Service Component Architecture (SCA)
28.3
Exploring the Configuration Tab
28.3.1
Database Configuration
28.3.2
Resource Configuration
28.3.3
Service Level Objective Configuration
28.3.4
Event Integration
28.3.5
Custom Metric Configuration
28.4
Exploring the Registration Tab
28.4.1
Using RMI Configuration for Managers
28.4.2
Adding a New Manager (RMI Configuration)
28.4.3
Editing a Previously Configured Manager (RMI Configuration)
28.4.4
Removing or Disabling a Previously Configured Manager
28.5
Using emctl to Manage the ADP Diagnostics Engine
29
ADP Methodology
29.1
ADP Methodology Activities
29.1.1
Mapping Business SLAs to Performance SLOs
29.1.2
Specifying Target Performance Characteristics
29.1.3
Improving Performance
29.2
Mapping Business SLAs to Performance SLOs
29.3
Characterizing Baseline Performance
29.4
Identifying Performance Bottlenecks
29.4.1
Determining System Level Performance
29.5
Setting SLOs on Key Metrics
29.6
Conclusion
30
Frequently Asked Questions About Application Dependency and Performance
30.1
Can I Erase the darchive Directory?
30.2
How Do I Undeploy the Agent?
A
ADP Configuration Directories and Files
A.1
Configuration Directories
A.1.1
Directory Structure
A.1.2
Config Directory
A.1.3
Deploy Directory
A.2
Acsera.properties File
A.2.1
Log Files Management
A.2.2
Multi-Domain Monitoring Configuration
A.2.3
ADP RMI Port Assignment
A.2.4
ADP Aggregation and Data Life Time Configuration
A.2.5
Aggregating Incoming Metrics On the Fly
A.2.6
Listing Applications to Be Monitored or Excluded From Monitoring
A.2.7
Firewall Mitigation (for Internal RMI Ports)
A.2.8
SLO Dampening
A.3
UrlMap.properties
B
Support Matrix for Application Dependency and Performance
Index
Scripting on this page enhances content navigation, but does not change the content in any way.