Using the Administration Console to Monitor WebLogic Server Using the WebLogic Diagnostic Framework Using JMX to Monitor WebLogic Server Using WLST to Monitor WebLogic Server Resources to Monitor WebLogic Server Third-Party Tools to Monitor WebLogic Serve
7.8 Monitoring a WebLogic Server Domain
The following sections provide information on how to monitor WebLogic Server domains: ■ Section 7.8.1, Using the Administration Console to Monitor WebLogic Server ■ Section 7.8.2, Using the WebLogic Diagnostic Framework ■ Section 7.8.3, Using JMX to Monitor WebLogic Server ■ Section 7.8.4, Using WLST to Monitor WebLogic Server ■ Section 7.8.6, Third-Party Tools to Monitor WebLogic Server7.8.1 Using the Administration Console to Monitor WebLogic Server
The tool for monitoring the health and performance of your WebLogic Server domain is the Administration Console. See Monitor servers in Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help.7.8.2 Using the WebLogic Diagnostic Framework
The WebLogic Diagnostic Framework WLDF is a monitoring and diagnostic framework that defines and implements a set of services that run within WebLogic Server processes and participate in the standard server life cycle. See Overview of the WLDF Architecture in Configuring and Using the Diagnostics Framework for Oracle WebLogic Server.7.8.3 Using JMX to Monitor WebLogic Server
WebLogic Server provides its own set of MBeans that you can use to configure, monitor, and manage WebLogic Server resources. See Understanding WebLogic Server MBeans in Developing Custom Management Utilities With JMX for Oracle WebLogic Server.7.8.4 Using WLST to Monitor WebLogic Server
The WebLogic Scripting Tool WLST is a command-line scripting interface that system administrators and operators use to monitor and manage WebLogic Server instances and domains. See Understanding WebLogic Server MBeans in Developing Custom Management Utilities With JMX for Oracle WebLogic Server.7.8.5 Resources to Monitor WebLogic Server
The Oracle Technology Network at http:www.oracle.comtechnologyindex.html provides product downloads, articles, sample code, product documentation, tutorials, white papers, news groups, and other key content for WebLogic Server.7.8.6 Third-Party Tools to Monitor WebLogic Server
Oracle partners with other companies that provide production monitoring and management tools. 7-16 Performance and Tuning for Oracle WebLogic Server7.9 Tuning Class and Resource Loading
Parts
» Oracle Fusion Middleware Online Documentation Library
» Document Scope and Audience Guide to this Document
» Performance Features of this Release Tune Pool Sizes
» Understand Your Performance Objectives
» Locate Bottlenecks in Your System Minimize Impact of Bottlenecks Tune Your Application
» VM Heap Size and Garbage Collection
» Choosing a Garbage Collection Scheme Using Verbose Garbage Collection to Determine Heap Size
» Other Java HotSpot VM Options
» Specifying Heap Size Values Tuning Tips for Heap Sizes Automatically Logging Low Memory Conditions
» JVM Tuning Considerations Using JRockit Flight Recorder Tuning Considerations
» Setting Java Parameters for Starting WebLogic Server
» Development vs. Production Mode Default Tuning Values
» Tuning Muxers Tuning Network IO
» Tuning Message Size Tuning Complete Message Timeout Tuning Number of File Descriptors
» Tune the Chunk Parameters Tuning Connection Backlog Buffering
» Tuning Cached Connections Tuning Network IO
» Scalability and High Availability
» JNDI Binding, Unbinding and Rebinding Running Multiple Server Instances on Multi-Core Machines
» Filtering Loader Mechanism Class Caching
» Using the Default Persistent Store Using Custom File Stores and JDBC Stores
» Basic Tuning Information Tuning File Stores
» Best Practices When Using Persistent Stores Tuning JDBC Stores General Suggestions
» Transaction-Level Caching Caching between Transactions Ready Bean Caching
» Tuning the Stateless Session Bean Pool Tuning the MDB Pool Tuning the Entity Bean Pool
» Use JDBC Batch Operations Tuned Updates Using Field Groups include-updates
» call-by-reference Bean-level Pessimistic Locking Concurrency Strategy
» Cache Miss Ratio Lock Waiter Ratio
» Lock Timeout Ratio Pool Miss Ratio
» Destroyed Bean Ratio Pool Timeout Ratio
» Determining the Number of Concurrent MDBs Selecting a Concurrency Strategy
» Thread Utilization When Using WebLogic Destinations Limitations for Multi-threaded Topic MDBs
» Use Test Connections on Reserve with Care Cache Prepared and Callable Statements
» Read-only, One-Phase Commit Optimizations JMS Performance Tuning Check List
» Improving Message Processing Performance
» Cache and Re-use Client Resources Tuning Distributed Queues
» Quota Resources Destination-Level Quota
» Defining a Send Timeout on Connection Factories
» Tuning Topics Tuning for Large Messages Setting Maximum Message Size for Network Protocols
» Compressing Messages Oracle Fusion Middleware Online Documentation Library
» How Flow Control Works Configuring Flow Control
» Defining a Message Expiration Policy Configuring an Expiration Policy on Topics
» Configuring an Expiration Policy on Queues Configuring an Expiration Policy on Templates
» Defining an Expiration Logging Policy Expiration Log Output Format
» Best Practices Using UOO and Distributed Destinations Migrating Old Applications to Use UOO
» Messaging Performance Configuration Parameters
» Client-side Thread Pools Best Practices for JMS .NET Client Applications
» Best Practices Changing the Batch Size Changing the Batch Interval
» Changing the Quality of Service Using Multiple Bridge Instances Changing the Thread Pool Size
» Classloading Optimizations for Resource Adapters Connection Optimizations
» Disable Page Checks Use Custom JSP Tags Precompile JSPs
» Managing Session Persistence Session Management
» Thread Management InteractionSpec Interface Pub-Sub Tuning Guidelines
» Setting the Buffering Sessions Releasing Asynchronous Resources
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