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IBM Websphere Portal 8: Web Experience Factory and the Cloud

You're reading from   IBM Websphere Portal 8: Web Experience Factory and the Cloud Build a comprehensive web portal for your company with a complete coverage of all the project lifecycle stages with this book and ebook.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849684040
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

IBM WebSphere Portal 8: Web Experience Factory and the Cloud
Credits
1. Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
2. www.PacktPub.com
3. Preface
1. Portal Assessment FREE CHAPTER 2. Portal Governance: Adopting the Mantra of Business Performance through IT Execution 3. Portal Requirements Engineering 4. Portal Architecture: Analysis and Design 5. Portal Golden and Cloud Architecture 6. Portal Build, Deployment, and Release Management 7. Introduction to Web Experience Factory 8. Service Layers 9. Invoking Web Services 10. Building the Application User Interface 11. The Dojo Builders and Ajax 12. WEF Profiling 13. Types of Models 14. WEF and Mobile Web Applications 15. How to Implement a Successful Portal Project with WEF 16. Portlet and Portal Testing 17. Portal and Portlet Performance Monitoring 18. Portal Troubleshooting 19. Portal, WEF, and Portlet Tuning 20. Portal Post-production

Publishing to a remote AMI instance on the Amazon Cloud


If you recall, WEF and portal development cloud were chosen as the development paradigms for the A2Z portal. A2Z portal application developers and specialists generate and customize their portlets on their local WEF unit test environment and load them to the development cloud for further development with the other integrated components, such as global security. They are expected to move their portlet application from their local systems to a remote development cloud, an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) instance. With the image used during the POV as a template and others provisioned within minutes, A2Z portal and cloud administrators instructed WEF specialists to perform the following steps to publish their portlet application to the remote AMI instance:

  1. 1. They edited their local systems hosts file and mapped the AMI public and internal host names in their hosts file (usually located at C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc\hosts or /etc/hosts...

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