Book Image

Oracle SOA Suite 12c Administrator's Guide

Book Image

Oracle SOA Suite 12c Administrator's Guide

Overview of this book

Oracle SOA Suite 12 c is the most comprehensive and integrated infrastructure on the market today that is used for building applications based on service-oriented architecture. With the vast number of features and capabilities that Oracle SOA Suite 12c has to offer comes numerous complexities and challenges for administration. Oracle SOA Suite 12c Administrator's Guide covers all the core areas of administration needed for you to effectively manage and monitor the Oracle SOA Suite environment and its transactions, from deployments, to monitoring, to performance tuning, and much, much more. Manage, monitor, and troubleshoot SOA composites and OSB services from a single product set. Understand core administrative activities such as deployments, purging, startup and shutdown, configuration, backup, and recovery. Also learn about new features such as Oracle Enterprise Scheduler, lazy loading, work manager groups, high availability, and more.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Oracle SOA Suite 12 Administrator's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Verifying server startup


There are numerous ways to verify whether a particular server component of the infrastructure is up and running. This varies by the operating system. The majority of instructions in this book are specific to Linux, the predominant, preferred, and recommended operating system on which Oracle SOA Suite 12c is installed.

Verifying Node Manager

You can use one or all of the following approaches to confirm that Node Manager is running. This includes checking the running operating system process, confirming the startup from the log file, and verifying that the port is being listened on.

You can run a simple Linux command to check whether the Node Manager process is running:

ps -ef | grep NodeManager | grep –v grep

If nothing is returned, then Node Manager is likely not running. Otherwise, you will find two startNodeManager.sh processes running and a third child Java process similar to what is shown here:

oracle   24081 21990  0 05:38 pts/1    00:00:00 /bin/sh ./startNodeManager...