IBM WebSphere: Deployment and Advanced Configuration
by Bill Hines; Tom Alcott; Keys Botzum; Roland Barcia
WebSphere Application Server: Step by Step
by Rama Turaga; Owen Cline; Peter Van Sickel
Enterprise Messaging Using JMS and IBM® WebSphere®
by Kareem Yusuf - Ph.D.
Enterprise Java Programming with IBM WebSphere
by Peter M. Jakab; Russell Stinehour; Kyle Brown; Jim Amsden; David Pitt; Gary Craig; Mark Weitzel; Greg Hester; Daniel Berg
Java Web Services: Up and Running, 1st Edition
by Martin Kalin
Hadoop: The Definitive Guide, 1st Edition
by Tom White
Java Message Service, 2nd Edition
by Mark Richards; Richard Monson-Haefel; David A. Chappell
RESTful Java with JAX-RS
by Bill Burke
Maven: The Definitive Guide, 1st Edition
by Sonatype Company
Make the most of completely revamped administration tools in WebSphere Version 5
IBM WebSphere Version 5 offers a completely rewritten, radically improved infrastructure for administering servers and applications. Now, its creators have written the definitive WebSphere Version 5 administration reference and tutorial: everything you need to manage WebSphere to the highest levels of performance and efficiency.
The authors systematically cover all four WebSphere administration toolsets: command-line utilities, the new Administrative Console, scripting tools, and Java management APIs. You’ll find a complete library of code examples, plus powerful new insider’s tips for maximizing your productivity as a WebSphere administrator.
Whether you’re managing WebSphere Version 5 or incorporating administrative support into new WebSphere applications, this book provides you with the techniques, examples, and tips you need to do it right.
Fundamentals of WebSphere administration: servers, nodes, node agents, cells, clusters, and the deployment manager
Revamped package structure of WebSphere Version 5 and its implications
Process internals, distributed administration features, administrative security, and XML configuration file structure
Command-line tools: a complete reference with practical examples
Web-based graphical management with the new Administrative Console
Scripting the management features of WebSphere Version 5 with wsadmin
Writing custom management programs
Extending the native WebSphere administrative system with new managed options
Using Java administrative APIs to manage WebSphere applications from other products
Sum Includes extensive code examples, real-world scenarios, and best practices
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Based on 4 Ratings
Big improvements over Version 4 - 2004-10-12
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The authors describe Version 5 of the WebSphere Application Server in straightforward terms. They contrast it with the now passe Version 4. The changes are manifold enough that even if you have run a V4 system, much of this book will be new and useful to you.
Amusingly, the Foreword talks of V4 as "unstable, unextensible, inconsistent across editions". Whew! Kudos for the belated candour. I doubt if any extant V4 literature described it in such terms.
If you're totally new to WebSphere sysadmining, then the book clearly requires that you be familiar with XML, EJBs, SOAP and JMX, at a minimum. It goes quickly into using these, with little preamble setup. Quite understandable from the authors' vantage, but you need to be prepared.
A big change from V4 is the extensive use of JMX. Reassuring for JMX. It's been around some 3 years. Good to see an important package like WebSphere using it. Seems that the V4 combination of EJBs and a relational database to hold parameters may have been too slow. Too heavyweight perhaps for the task? EJBs can have a big computational or network cost. Anyway, V5 replaced these with XML files and JMX. Much faster perhaps.
Scripting is also heavily used in the book. Extensive examples that you might find useful. To me, all scripting languages tend to blur into one. This particular language does not seem any tougher than the Korn or C shells.
Moving beyond the Admin Console - 2004-11-18
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Once you have used the admin console.... it's pretty easy. I then started to move over to running commands from the command line within the 'bin' directory. This book takes the administrator past this into the scripting realm. You can get an excellent handle on using Wsadmin scripts just by modifying some of the many examples presented in this book.
I found this book to be more of a solid reference manual for the WebSphere Administrator. It has several scripts for common tasks. In addition, you will find quick reference charts for taks, functions and AdminControl commands (to mention a few). I would consider this book to be an essential quick reference guide for any WebSphere Application Server administrator.
Too much walk-throw/screenshot based - 2005-01-07
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This book was defined as a reference and tutorial, but I have found it to bee too much screeshot based. As an analogy I could say this book has too many phrases similar to "click on the VIEW button to view the details". These things are redundant and I would have preferred to obtain deeper level details instead of high level.
This book is too much oriented on the admin console of Websphere, instead of detailing the whole variety of possible system configurations. I have sincerely found the freely available IBM Redbooks more useful.
A good book for WebSphere Administrative Scripting - 2008-02-10
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I found the title of the book a bit misleading. Though it provides a very high level overview of WebSphere system from administration point of view it mainly focuses on wsadmin scripting (which is then explained well).
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