Advanced Search
Start Your Free Trial

Overview

Other Readers Also Read...
IBM WebSphere: Deployment and Advanced Configuration

IBM WebSphere: Deployment and Advanced Configuration
by Bill Hines; Tom Alcott; Keys Botzum; Roland Barcia

IBM® WebSphere® System Administration

IBM® WebSphere® System Administration
by Leigh Williamson; Lavena Chan; Roger Cundiff; Shawn Lauzon; Christopher C. Mitchell

WebSphere Application Server: Step by Step

WebSphere Application Server: Step by Step
by Rama Turaga; Owen Cline; Peter Van Sickel

Enterprise Java Programming with IBM WebSphere

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

Top Sellers in this Category

Apache Cookbook, 2nd Edition

Apache Cookbook, 2nd Edition
by Rich Bowen; Ken Coar

Internet Information Services 7.0 Resource Kit

Internet Information Services 7.0 Resource Kit
by Mike Volodarsky; Olga Londer; Brett Hill; Bernard Cheah; Steve Schofield; Carlos Aguilar Mares; Kurt Meyer; Microsoft IIS Team

Microsoft® SharePoint Products and Technologies Resource Kit

Microsoft® SharePoint Products and Technologies Resource Kit
by Bill English with the Microsoft SharePoint Teams

Microsoft® Windows® SharePoint® Services Step by Step

Microsoft® Windows® SharePoint® Services Step by Step
by Olga Londer; Todd Bleeker; Penelope Coventry; James Edelen

In this book, IBM's own enterprise WebSphere experts offer authoritative, comprehensive guidance for deploying and managing WebSphere on z/OS for mainframes, UNIX®/Linux®-based distributed systems, and Windows® servers. Drawing on their extensive experience supporting enterprise customers and developing new WebSphere technologies, the authors address the entire management lifecycle: planning, installation, configuration, administration, application deployment, tuning, and troubleshooting.

This book thoroughly covers WebSphere Application Server Version 5.0 and 5.1: both IBM Base WebSphere Application Server offerings and the advanced scalability and failover capabilities built into the popular IBM Network Deployment Edition. It has been designed to serve both as a comprehensive learning tool and as a rapid reference for working professionals.

Coverage includes

  • The WebSphere Application Server architecture: a detailed introduction for working administrators

  • Installation and configuration on both distributed and z/OS platforms, from planning through security

  • Assembling, deploying, and securing applications with the Application Assembly Tool and Assembly Toolkit

  • Managing WebSphere Application Server, including clustering and workload management

  • Automating administrative tasks using the powerful WebSphere scripting tools

  • Performance monitoring/tuning using both WebSphere- and system-level tools, including real-world tuning scenarios

  • A start-to-finish methodology for WebSphere troubleshooting

  • Covering z/OS, UNIX, Linux, and Windows platforms

  • Learn all you need to know from IBM's own WebSphere development and advanced deployment teams

  • Includes the latest most thorough coverage WebSphere V5.0/5.1

© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

Amazon.com® Reader Reviews (Ranked by Helpfulness)

Average Amazon.com® Rating: 4.5 out of 5 rating Based on 5 Ratings

good cross OS reference - 2005-01-29
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
"IBM WebSphere Application Server for Distributed Platforms and z/OS" from IBM Press targets WAS admins. The book covers WAS 5.0 and 5.1, highlighting the differences. It covers almost every OS: UNIX, Linux, Windows and Z/OS. A differentiating factor from other books is that the authors focus on Network Deployment throughout, starting with chapter 2.

One thing to note is that there is a lot of duplicated information. Five (out of 26) chapters have separate chapters for distributed and Z/OS. The remaining 16 chapters, sprinkle distributed and Z/OS differences within. In a way, it is two books in one. However, if you are only using one type of OS, the book is thicker and more expensive than necessary.

The authors are quite thorough in discussing most options. They also refer to the InfoCenter, papers and redbooks for more details. There are also many tips and gotchas in each chapter. The step-by-step instructions and screenshots are very helpful.

A running example shows the steps for deploying, configuring and maintaining a sample application. The app is of sufficient complexity to seem real. Tools such as MQ, ASDK and wsadmin are shown in parallel.

The authors intend for each chapter to stand alone. As a result, there is a fair amount of repetition. Aside of one dependency on a future chapter, the book reads well linearly too. This book serves a good reference and I recommend it to those maintaining both distributed and Z/OS systems.

Administrators good night reading.... - 2005-04-27
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
"IBM WebSphere Application Server for Distributed Platforms and z/OS" is a wonderful compendium, very readable, supplies lots of background information and puts good light on the different platform implementations of WebSphere. I love it, good job!!!

Very valuable to the z/OS platform people... - 2005-02-23
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
If you're an administrator for an IBM WebSphere Application Server (WAS), you're always looking for sources of information. If you're running WAS 5.0 or 5.1, get a copy of IBM WebSphere Application Server for Distributed Platforms and z/OS (IBM Press). It's definitely full of information you'll need for installation, configuration, and administration...

Chapter List:
Part 1 - WebSphere Environment Overview: Introduction; Compare and Contrast: WebSphere on z/OS and the Distributed Platforms; WebSphere Architecture and Design; WebSphere Topology: Distributed and z/OS; WebSphere Installation - Distributed; WebSphere Installation - z/OS; Getting Started with WebSphere - An Overview
Part 2 - WebSphere Configuration: Configuring WebSphere Application Server; The WebSphere Naming Service; The Web Server Plug-in; The Java Message Service; Web Services - An Overview; WebSphere Security on the Distributed Platform; WebSphere Security on the z/OS Platform
Part 3 - Assembling and Deploying Applications in WebSphere: Assembling Applications in WebSphere; Securing Applications in WebSphere; Deploying Applications in WebSphere
Part 4 - WebSphere Management: Workload Management Overview: Distributed; Workload Management Overview: z/OS; Automated WebSphere Administration
Part 5 - WebSphere Performance: Monitoring WebSphere Performance; WebSphere Performance Tuning; WebSphere Performance Tuning - z/OS
Part 6 - Troubleshooting WebSphere: WebSphere Problem Determination Tools - Logging and Tracing; Problem Prevention and Determination Methodology; WebSphere Problem Determination and Troubleshooting for z/OS
Part 7 - Appendices: Trade3 Application; WebSphere Tooling Reference; WebSphere Plug-in Definition; WebSphere Message Component IDs; Custom Strategy Bindings File DTD; Common z/OS Terms; Comparison of Common Tasks on z/OS versus Distributed; z/Linux Considerations; Automated WebSphere Administration Examples
Bibliography; Index

Coming in at nearly 1000 pages, you can see it is a pretty comprehensive guide on getting WAS up and running on both distributed network platforms as well as mainframe z/OS systems. While I don't think that you'd find one shop running WAS on both platforms (although I could be wrong), I still found the comparison between both systems interesting. There is definitely a different mindset between the two, and the comparisons will help you understand the side you don't work with. I was impressed with the level of detail included also. If you were sitting down with the WAS CDs and this book, you'd stand a very good chance of getting the system up and running, as well as having some troubleshooting material to help you out over the hard parts. The only down side of this book is that WAS 6 has already been released, so it could be that the book is living on borrowed time. New shops will probably go straight to 6, while shops already running WAS on 5 may be stable, in which case this book becomes more of a reference manual than an aid to installation.

People running WAS on distributed platforms have a number of books and IBM redbooks to choose from. The options for z/OS platforms seem to be much more limited in terms of documentation and material, so I think this book would be far more valuable to those people than to the distributed networking side. Not to say it's not good for distributed information, but I acknowledge they have more options to choose from.

If WAS is part of your professional existence, this would be a good book to have on your shelf.

a unified platform - 2005-02-07
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
For several years, IBM has built up and refined WebSphere as one of its flagship products. Here is its latest sysadmin manual. The size of which is a good indicator of the capabilities built into it.

Maybe the biggest change from earlier versions is how much of the code base for versions running under (linux, unix, MS Windows) has now been unified with that for z/OS. The immediate and ongoing beneficiary of this is IBM itself; greatly simplifying maintenance and extensions. Opaque to outsiders. But to a WebSphere sysadmin, you also benefit. Because basically most operations are true across these operating systems, it increases your marketability.

The only minor omission I could find in the text is that the chapter on Web Services could need enhancement. Or, rather, that WebSphere itself have greater Web Services ability. The latter field is changing rapidly and perhaps WebSphere deliberately wants to stay a pace behind, in order to see what new features are actually useful, before implementing them. For example, Business Process Execution Language is rising, as a more expressive language than WSDL, to describe Web Services. If BPEL persists, perhaps the next version of WebSphere might support it?

WebSphere Network Deployment for Distributed Platforms - 2008-02-09
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
A must for any WebSphere Administrator working on large distributed systems! The best book about WebSphere Network Deployment Platform Edition! Highly recommended!

Browse Similar Topics

Top Level Categories:
Internet/Online

Sub-Categories:
Internet/Online > Web Server

Some information on this page was provided using data from Amazon.com®. View at Amazon >


About Safari Books Online • Terms of Service • Privacy Policy • Contact Us • Corporate Licenses • Help • Accessibility | See us on FacebookSee us on Linked InSee us on TwitterRSS

Copyright 2009 Safari Books Online. All rights reserved.