WebLogic Application Server Directory @ eIT.in

WebLogic Application Server @ eIT.in

This section of eIT.in provides web resources for WebLogic application server. 

Add Links: If you have a web site that you wish to include in this database, do let us know the details by sending a note about your URL to narsi@esource.in. We’ll quickly review the web site, and if found relevant, add it to the database. We look forward to web site owners and link exchange partners to submit URL. Thanks!  

Looking for an outsourcing partner for application server programming & development? Have you talked to us?

  Other IT Web Sites from eIT.in

 Content derived from Wikipedia article on BEA Weblogic

BEA WebLogic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BEA WebLogic 

BEA WebLogic

Developer: BEA Systems

Latest release: 9.2 / June, 2006

OS: Cross-platform

Use: Application server

License: Proprietary

Website: www.bea.com

BEA WebLogic is a J2EE application server and also an HTTP web server by BEA Systems of San Jose, California, for Unix, Linux, Microsoft Windows, and other platforms.

Contents

1 History

2 Capabilities

3 Supported open standards

4 See also

5 External links

History

WebLogic, Inc., was founded by Paul Ambrose, Bob Pasker, Laurie Pitman, and Carl Resnikoff, in September, 1995.

Up until then, Paul and Carl had been developing (pre-JDBC) Oracle, Sybase, and Microsoft SQL Server database drivers for Java under the name dbKona, as well as a "three tier" server to permit applets to connect to these databases. An old dbKona/An T3 Usenet posting. This was the WebLogic 1.48 server, and was called T3Server (a bastardization of 3-Tier Server).

Concurrently, Laurie and Bob had been working on network management tools in Java. Bob had written a SNMP stack in Java and a W32 native method for ICMP ping, while Laurie worked on applets to display the management data.

One of the hidden features of the 1.48 server version was the ability to extend it by modifying a dispatcher and adding a handler for different types of messages. Bob talked Paul into sending him the source code for the server, and Bob extended it so that Applets could make SNMP and PING requests on the network, and display the results.

At this point, the founders worked together to pursue what was eventually to be called the Application Server.

Capabilities

BEA WebLogic Server is part of the BEA WebLogic Platform and supports Oracle, DB2, Microsoft SQL Server, and other JDBC-compliant databases. The other parts of WebLogic Platform are:

Portal which includes Commerce Server and Personalization Server

WebLogic Integration

WebLogic Workshop, an IDE for Java

JRockit, a JVM for Intel CPUs.

WebLogic Server includes .NET interoperability and supports the following native integration capabilities:

Native enterprise-grade JMS messaging

Java EE Connector Architecture

WebLogic/Tuxedo Connector

COM+ Connectivity

CORBA connectivity

IBM WebSphere MQ connectivity

BEA WebLogic Server Process Edition also includes Business Process Management and Data Mapping functionality. WebLogic supports security policies managed by Security Administrators. The BEA WebLogic Server Security Model includes:

Separate application business logic from security code

Complete scope of security coverage for all J2EE and non-J2EE components

Supported open standards

J2EE 1.3 & 1.4

JAAS

SNMP

XSLT & XQuery

ebXML

BPEL & BPEL-J

Native support for:

SOAP

WSDL

UDDI

WS-Security

WSRP

See also

Comparison of application servers

External links

BEA Systems Inc.

BEA acquires WebLogic, Inc.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BEA_WebLogic"

Categories: Web server software | Java enterprise platform

End of Wikipedia content, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BEA_WebLogic

Web Resources for WebLogic Application Server


About eIT.in

eIT.in is a comprehensive directory for everything IT & Software. It contains over 500 categories, and well over 10,000 web resources

eIT.in provides directory and web links resources for the IT, software, programming & software development domains. It is intended to be useful for application, applications programmers & developers, software technology programmer & developer, databases software development, administrators & DBAs, application developers, strategy architect, design specialists and architects, migration, integration, customization consultants and customisation analysts, administration, maintenance & support professionals, outsourcing consultant, bespoke solutions programming developers & coders, project management & functional analyst, and for system administrators, testing & quality control engineers. It will make an effort to provide resources on tutorial/tutorials, guide, guides, tips, faq, faqs on these topics.

eIT.in content is available under GPL: All directory content at mainframe.in is under the General Public License (GPL). Under this license, anyone is free to copy & use any amount of directory content @ eIT.in, make changes to it and use it in any way they wish, as long as they also allow the same rights to anyone else for this content. The concept of GPL has been adapted from the GNU GPL of the Free Software Movement. To those who wish to use content from eIT.in, our only request is that they acknowledge the source and provide a link back to eIT.in. This is only a request!

Countries & Cities Where eIT.in Provides Assistance

eIT Cities: Bangalore, Chennai, Mumbai, Bhubaneswar, Mysore, Kolkaka, Delhi, Pune, Trivandrum, Hyderabad

You are the $$$ Section of eIT.in

Reference

GeoDig – Get Local!

Have you checked out the GeoDig directories for over 30 countries? GeoDig provides useful local and regional web resources for over 200 cities around the world. See the list of cities and countries for which GeoDig provides locality-specific web resources.

North America

USA - Alabama (AL) > Birmingham; Alaska; Arkansas (AR) > Little Rock; Arizona (AZ) > Phoenix, Las Vegas, Tucson; California (CA) > Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento, Fresno, Bakersfield; Colorado, CO > Denver; Connecticut, CT > Hartford; District of Columbia, DC > Washington DC; Delaware (DE) > Wilmington; Florida > Miami, Orlando, Tampa, Orlando, Sarasota, West Palm Beach, Jacksonville; Georgia > Atlanta; Hawaii > Honolulu; Idaho; Illinois > Chicago; Indiana > Indianapolis; Iowa; Kansas (KS); Kentucky (KY) > Louisville; Louisiana (LA) > New Orleans, Baton Rouge; Maine; Maryland (MD) > Baltimore; Massachusetts > Boston, Springfield; Michigan > Detroit, Grand Rapids; Minnesota > Minneapolis-St. Paul; Mississippi (MS); Missouri (MO) > Kansas City, St. Louis; Montana; Nebraska (NE) > Omaha; Nevada (NV) > Las Vegas; New Hampshire; New Jersey (NJ) > Jersey City, Newark; New Mexico (NM) > Albuquerque; New York > New York, Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, Syracuse; North Carolina (NC) > Raleigh-Durham, Charlotte, Greensboro; North Dakota; Ohio> Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Toledo, Youngstown, Dayton; Oklahoma (OK) > Oklahoma City, Tulsa; Oregon > Portland; Pennsylvania > Philadelphia, Allentown, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, Scranton, ; Rhode Island (RI) > Providence; South Carolina (SC) > Greenville; South Dakota; Tennessee (TN) > Knoxville, Memphis, Nashville; Texas > Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso, Austin, McAllen; Utah (UT) > Salt Lake City; Vermont; Virginia (VA) > Norfolk, Richmond; Washington > Seattle; West Virginia; Wisconsin (WI) > Milwaukee; Wyoming

Canada - Vancouver, Montreal, Toronto, Calgary, Ottawa-Gatineau, Edmonton, Quebec City, Winnipeg, Hamilton, London

You are the $$$ Section of eIT.in

Europe - UK - London, Glasgow, Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool, Sheffield, Leeds, Bristol, Edinburgh, Leicester; France - Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse, Nice, Nantes, Strasbourg, Montpellier, Bordeaux; Germany - Frankfurt (Frankfurt am Main), Munich (München), Berlin, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Cologne (Köln), Essen, Dortmund, Stuttgart, Bremen, Duisburg, Hannover, Nürnberg (Nuremberg), Dresden, Leipzig; Italy - Milan (Milano), Rome (Roma), Napoli (Naples), Torino (Turin), Palermo, Bologna, Firenze (Florence), Genova (Genoa); Spain - Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Sevilla, Zaragoza, Malaga, Murcia, Las Palmas, Bilbao; Scandinavia - Finland - Helsinki (Helsingin), Espoo, Tampere (Tampereen), Vantaa, Turku, Oulu, Sweden - Stockholm, Goteborg (Göteborg), Malmo (Malmö), Uppsala, Vasteras (Västerås), Denmark - Copenhagen (Københavns), Aarhus (Århus), Odense, Aalborg (Ålborg), Norway - Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim; Benelux - Belgium - Brussels (Brussel), Antwerp (Antwerpen), Ghent (Gent, Gand), Charleroi, Liège (Liege), Netherlands - Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Eindhoven, Tilburg, ‘s-Gravenhage (sGravenhage), Groningen, Luxembourg - Luxembourg City; PortugalLisbon; GreeceAthens; HungaryBudapest; PolandWarsaw; Switzerland - Zürich (Zurich), Geneva (Geneve, Genève), Basel, Bern (Berne), Lausanne; Austria - Linz, Vienna (Wien), Graz, Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck; IrelandDublin

Asia - India - Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore; China & Hong Kong - Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Wuhan, Shenyang, Guangzhou, Harbin, Xian; Japan - Tokyo, Osaka, Yokohama, Nagoya, Sapporo, Kyoto, Kobe, Fukuoka, Kawasaki, Hiroshima; South Korea - Seoul, Pusa, Taegu, Incheon, Taejeon, Taiwan - Taipei; Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur; Singapore; Russia - Moscow, St Petersburg

You are the $$$ Section of eIT.in

Middle East - Turkey - Istanbul, Israel - Tel Aviv

Oceania - Australia - Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide

Africa - South Africa - Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban

 

 
  In the beginning, there were algae,
but there was no oil Then, from algae came oil.
Now, the algae are still there, but oil is fast depleting
In future, there will be no oil, but there will still be algae  
So, doesn’t it make sense to explore if we can again get oil from algae?
This is what we try to do at Oilgae.com – explore the potential of getting oil from algae