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Oracle WebLogic Server 12c Advanced Administration Cookbook

You're reading from   Oracle WebLogic Server 12c Advanced Administration Cookbook If you want to extend your capabilities in administering Oracle WebLogic Server, this is the helping hand you've been looking for. With 70 recipes covering both basic and advanced topics, it will provide a new level of expertise.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849686846
Length 284 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Dalton Iwazaki Dalton Iwazaki
Author Profile Icon Dalton Iwazaki
Dalton Iwazaki
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Oracle WebLogic Server 12c Advanced Administration Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Install, Configure, and Run FREE CHAPTER 2. High Availability with WebLogic Clusters 3. Configuring JDBC Resources for High Availability 4. Configuring JMS Resources for Clustering and High Availability 5. Monitoring WebLogic Server 12c 6. Troubleshooting WebLogic Server 12c 7. Stability and Performance 8. Security Index

Introduction


The Java Message Service (JMS) is a standard Java API that enables an enterprise application to communicate asynchronously with other applications by sending and receiving messages. The Oracle WebLogic Server 12c messaging subsystem is fully compatible with the JMS 1.1 specification.

The JMS API defines two models of communication: point-to-point and publisher/subscriber. Point-to-point communication uses a JMS queue and publisher/subscriber communication uses a JMS topic. Although similar in configuration, JMS queues and JMS topics are destinations that work in very different ways.

In the point-to-point model, a sender first publishes and enqueues a message to the queue. The message is then dequeued and processed by the single consumer that is listening to this queue. The enqueue and dequeue processes are independent, loosely coupled, and asynchronous. The message can be held by the queue until a consumer starts listening for incoming messages. In the point-to-point model, the...

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