Oracle® Application Server Release Notes 10g Release 2 (10.1.2) for hp-ux Itanium and Linux Itanium

Oracle® Application Server Release Notes 10g Release 2 (10.1.2) for hp-ux Itanium and Linux Itanium

This document contains the release information for Oracle Application Server 10g Release 2 (10.1.2). It describes issues associated with Oracle HTTP Server, Configuration, OC4J, Oracle Application Server TopLink (OracleAS TopLink), Oracle Application Server Web Cache (OracleAS Web Cache), and Oracle Enterprise Manager. Oracle recommends that you review contents of this document before installing, or working with the product.

Oracle Application Server
installation and configuration will not be successful unless you meet the hardware and software prerequisites before installation. Refer to Oracle Application Server 10g Installation Guide for a complete list of operating system requirements.

After completing the installation, the install*.err files in the oraInventory/logs directory may contain errors similar to following line and with java exception stack details: lsnodes: cannot get local node number This error is harmless and can be safely ignored. It does not affect any functionality. Similar errors may also happen when applying bug fixes using the OPatch utility. However, the patch succeeds and the error can be safely ignored.

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HP ProLiant BL30p server blade

HP ProLiant BL30p server blade

Density. Performance. Manageability. The HP ProLiant BL30p server blade delivers an ideal mix of manageability and high-performance computing in a compact, modular blade design. The BL30p extends the x86 workload capabilities of the HP ProLiant blade line to the most space-conscious environments. The new HP ProLiant BL30p 2-way server blade delivers the density, performance, and manageability your business demands. Powerfully compact Designed for high-performance computing, enterprise front-end, and infrastructure applications in space- conscious environments, the BL30p is the latest addition to HP’s ProLiant BL p-Class server blade line. It supports dual Intel® Xeon™ processors, dual Gigabit Ethernet network adapters, and a dual-port Fibre Channel adapter option, making it ideal for performance-hungry applications and redundant connections to external storage. Up to 96 BL30p blades can be configured in a standard rack, providing the maximum utilization of valuable data-center space.

Well-connected
The BL30p was created to help customers get the most out of their SAN solutions. Its optional dual-port Fibre Channel adapter provides powerful, heterogeneous SAN support up to 2 GB/s, and it is backward-compatible with existing 1 GB/s Fibre Channel equipment. And with HP’s fusion of SAN and network attached storage (NAS), your storage architecture can incorporate application, database, and file-serving functionality.

Outstanding management and deployment The BL30p delivers a variety of powerful, intuitive management and deployment features to ease the burden these tasks typically place on your IT personnel.

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HP BladeSystem specification for Microsoft Windows Compute Cluster Server 2003

HP BladeSystem specification for Microsoft Windows Compute Cluster Server 2003

This white paper provides a general specification for an HP BladeSystem c-Class infrastructure that can support and scale out a small-to-medium sized cluster for Microsoft® Windows® Compute Cluster Server 2003 (CCS).

CCS is Microsoft’s entry into the fast-growing High Performance Computing (HPC) market, where solutions are often deployed as clusters of relatively small servers working in parallel to solve intensive computation and mathematical problems. HPC clusters are often utilized in the development and application of complex data models used in computer-aided engineering, finance, life and materials science, scientific research, and other areas.

The specification includes an overview of solution components and usage scenarios, and outlines key benefits that can be achieved by deploying this solution on an HP BladeSystem c-Class infrastructure. Guidelines are provided for planning and implementing a CCS solution. In addition, the paper presents Bills of Material for sample configurations along with links to information that can assist the customer over the solution lifecycle.

Target audience: The intended audience includes solutions architects and technical consultants wishing to learn more about deploying CCS on an HP BladeSystem c-Class infrastructure.

The paper is not intended to teach you about CCS or the deployment of applications on top of CCS. Indeed, knowledge of CCS concepts is assumed, as is familiarity with networking topologies and the concept of head and compute nodes within a cluster.

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HP SIM 5.x Overview

HP SIM 5.x Overview

HP Systems Insight Manager (HP SIM) is an application that is used by customers to manage their infrastructure elements, such as servers, storage, blades, and networking devices. The current HP SIM version directly supports HP BNT switches. For example, HP SIM provides a basic set of BNT switch management features, such as basic discovery, fault management, data collection/reporting, and configuration.

To further enhance management of BNT switches with HP SIM, integration with BLADEHarmony Manager is now available. This paper explains how to integrate HP SIM with BLADEHarmony Manager.

HP SIM is built on Web-based client-server architecture. The client Graphical User Interface (GUI) can be launched from any standard Web browser. In addition, the architecture is flexible enough to allow users to integrate off-the-shelf or custom tools and applications.

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