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Tuning Hardware, Operating System, and Network Performance
The following sections describe issues related to optimizing hardware, operating system, and network performance:
When you examine performance, consider your hardware capacity and configuration first. BEA certifies WebLogic Server on multiple hardware platforms. BEA only certifies platforms that pass rigorous internal testing. Table 1-1 presents links to further information about hardware tuning.
The Platform Support page is frequently updated and contains the latest certification information on various platforms. Check this page often for the most current platform information. |
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For BEA WebLogic Server and Solaris-specific details, see "Sun Microsystems Solaris on SPARC" on the Platform Support page. See also Sun Microsystems Information. |
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For BEA WebLogic Server and HP-UX-specific details, see "WebLogic HP-UX Platform Support" on the Platform Support page See also Hewlett-Packard Company Information. |
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The Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation provides a set of standardized benchmarks and metrics for evaluating computer system performance. |
Tune your operating system according to your operating system documentation. BEA certifies WebLogic Server on multiple operating systems. Table 1-2 presents links to further information about operating system tuning.
The Platform Support page is frequently updated and contains the latest certification information on various platforms. Check this page often for the most current operating system information. |
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On the UNIX platform, each socket connection to the server consumes a file descriptor. You need to configure your operating system to have the appropriate number of file descriptors. See "Tuning Solaris File Descriptor Limits" on the "Sun Microsystems Solaris on SPARC" Platform Support page. |
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See "Setting Solaris Tunable Parameters" on the "Sun Microsystems Solaris on SPARC" Platform Support page. |
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Check your operating system documentation for the maximum memory available for a user process. In some operating systems, this value is as low as 128 MB. For more information, see your operating system documentation. |
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When running WebLogic Server on Windows NT/2000 you can specify that WebLogic Server use the native operating system call TransmitFile instead of using Java methods to serve static files such as HTML files, text files, and image files. Using native I/O can provide performance improvements when serving larger static files. See "Using Native I/O for Serving Static Files" in the BEA WebLogic Server Administration Guide for more information. |
Network performance is affected when the supply of resources is unable to keep up with the demand for resources. Table 1-3 presents some issues to consider.
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Copyright © 2000 BEA Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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