Overview of Procedures for Moving from a Test to a Production Environment

21-10 Oracle Fusion Middleware Administrators Guide

21.4 Moving Oracle Fusion Middleware Components

The following sections describe the steps you must take to move Oracle Fusion Middleware components. In many cases, the steps use the common procedures described in Section 21.3 . All components require additional steps as described in the following topics: ■ Moving Identity Management Components to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle SOA Suite to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle WebCenter to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Hyperion Enterprise Performance Management System to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Enterprise Content Management to a Production Environment ■ Moving the Web Tier to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Business Intelligence to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Real-Time Decisions to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Portal, Oracle Forms Services, Oracle Reports, and Oracle BI Discoverer to a Production Environment ■ Moving Oracle Data Integrator to a Production Environment

21.4.1 Moving Identity Management Components to a Production Environment

The following topics describe how to move Identity Management from a test environment to a production environment: ■ Moving Identity Management to a New Production Environment ■ Moving Identity Management to an Existing Production Environment In both scenarios, you have performed the following in the test environment: ■ Installed a database to be used for Identity Management components such as Oracle Internet Directory, Oracle Directory Integration Platform which depends on Oracle Internet Directory, and Oracle Identity Federation. ■ Created needed schemas using RCU. ■ Installed and configured Identity Management, including some or all of the following components: Oracle Internet Directory, Oracle Virtual Directory, Oracle Web Services Manager, or Oracle Adaptive Access Manager. ■ For Oracle Internet Directory, created the desired LDAP trees and entries, in particular, users and groups. ■ For Oracle Virtual Directory, created adapters to various data sources, such as LDAP and databases, and you may have configured a Local Store Adapter LSA to create local LDAP data, which resides in the local file system. In addition, you may have made other configuration changes such as adding ACLs, changing schemas, the Listener configuration, server configuration, plug-ins, mappings, auditing, logging, and keystores. ■ For Oracle Directory Integration Platform, created synchronization profiles to various targets. These profiles are in the form of LDAP entries residing in Oracle Internet Directory.