Index_J


J

J2EE application integration. See legacy systems integration
J2EE database integration
Container Managed Persistence (CMP), 414 “415
persistence layer implementation, 414 “427
J2EE environment
Web container as component of, 59 “60
J2EE-based application
NFS as a solid data sharing technology for, 347 “350
J2EE-based application server environment
container as key component of, 371 “372
key areas that affect application performance, 27
JACs. See Java application clients (JACs)
Java
management of memory allocation and deallocation by, 158
Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) applications
the need for performance in, 1 “5
Java application clients (JACs)
effect on memory consumption, 471 “472
Java Application Clients (JACs)
failover support for in WebSphere, 306
Java components
in WebSphere business tier , 400
Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) and pooling
requests serviced by the application server, 59
Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) pool
effect on performance, 8
Java IIOP vs. RMI-IIOP, 456
Java Message Service (JMS), 27
interfacing WebSphere-based J2EE applications with, 455 “456
requests serviced by the application server, 59
Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) services
requests serviced by the application server, 59
Java Native Interface (JNI)
problems with using it on its own, 470 “471
Java Server Pages (JSPs)
Web container processing of, 59 “60
Java Virtual Machine (JVM)
effect on performance, 8
Java Virtual Machine (JVM) profiler
HPjmeter from Hewlett-Packard, 511 “513
Java/J2EE environments
performance degradation caused by garbage collection in, 249 “250
Java/JVM memory and object management
management of application queues with, 27
JavaMail components
provided by WebSphere, 215
JavaMail services
requests serviced by the application server, 59
Java/Swing-based Graphical User Interface (GUI)
WebSphere version 4 managed by, 53
JBOD (Just a Basic Old Disk), 136
JCA container
function of in WebSphere 5, 75
JDBC
function of, 423 “426
JDBC Application Programming Interface (API)
support for exception messages to perform events, 359
JDBC connection pool data source
setting the Idle Timeout to tune, 448
setting the Orphan Timeout to tune, 448
JDBC connection pool manager
main areas to tune to gain performance, 444
WebSphere queue settings, 286 “287
JDBC Connection Pool Manager settings
tuning in WebSphere, 27 “28
JDBC connection pool tuning
in WebSphere 5, 449 “451
JDBC pool manager
cause of a StaleConnectionException on, 216
JDBC resources
importance of releasing when no longer needed, 407 “408
JDBC type 1 driver
as JDBC-ODBC bridge, 423 “424
JDBC type 2 drivers
implementation of, 424
JDBC type 3 drivers
implementation of, 425
JDBC type 4 driver (JDBC thin driver)
implementation of, 425 “426
JDBC URL configuration file
example of, 367
JDBC-based database interface
provided by WebSphere, 215 “216
JDBC/Container Managed Persistence (CMP), 27
Jinsight
Web site address for downloading, 516
JMS server
function of in WebSphere 5, 75 “76
JProbe profiling tool (Quest Software), 243
extended memory profiler screen example, 510
getting an application operation statistical profile with, 504 “505
memory profiler screen example, 509
plug-in support for most leading IDEs, 510
specifications, 511
using, 508 “511
Web site address for downloading, 508
JRocket JVM. See BEA JRocket JVM
<jsp: usebean ()> tag
importance of using carefully in applications, 400
JVM (Java Virtual Machine)
garbage collection monitoring, 159 “160
memory characteristics, 157 “161
multiapplication single-channel topology, 183 “190
obtaining verbose garbage collection from, 249
operating system thread to JVM thread ratio, 93
other memory issues to consider, 160 “161
rules of thumb to follow for, 159
threading characteristics, 161 “162
tuning, 287 “288
JVM environments
advantages of multiple, 188
considerations for multiple, 184 “186
disadvantages of, 189
JVM implementation vendors , 158
JVM tuning and performance options, 288 “290
JVP Performance Interface (JVMPI) requests serviced by the application server, 59



Maximizing Performance and Scalability with IBM WebSphere
Maximizing Performance and Scalability with IBM WebSphere
ISBN: 1590591305
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 111
Authors: Adam G. Neat

flylib.com © 2008-2017.
If you may any questions please contact us: flylib@qtcs.net