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Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 - A Hands-on Tutorial

You're reading from   Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 - A Hands-on Tutorial Your step-by-step, hands-on guide to Oracle SOA BPEL PM 11gR1

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849688987
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 – A Hands-on Tutorial
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Creating Basic BPEL Processes 2. Configuring BPEL Processes FREE CHAPTER 3. Invoking a BPEL Process 4. Orchestrating BPEL Services 5. Test and Troubleshoot SOA Composites 6. Architect and Design Services Using BPEL 7. Performance Tuning – Systems Running BPEL Processes 8. Integrating the BPEL Process Manager with Service Bus, Registry, and SOA Deployment 9. Securing a BPEL Process 10. Architecting High Availability for Business Services 11. The Future of Process Modeling 12. Troubleshooting Techniques Index

Load balancers


Most of the enterprise implementations of web services will demand high availability. In some cases it will be a global high availability that is usually achieved via the system architecture's designs and deployments leveraging multi sites in active-active or active-passive. The passive site is either standby (manual process to fail over and fail back) or hot standby (automatic process to fail over and fail back) to provide the services if the primary site goes down. The load balancers are also used to achieve the horizontal scalability. Load balancers for web services are implemented at either L7 (application Layer) also known as Global Server Load Balancer (GSLB) or Global Traffic Manager (GTM), or at L4 (Transport Layer) also known as Local Server Load Balancer (LSLB) or Local Traffic Manager (LTM) to achieve high availability and scalability. Layer 7 forwards the user to the appropriate local load balancer, any further requests for the user will directly go the local...

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