Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 576 pages
- Published by: Apress
- Edition: 1st Edition December 1, 2003
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1590591305
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1590591307
-
Book Dimensions:
9.2 x 7 x 1.2 inches
- Weighs: 2 pounds
Product Description
Maximizing Performance and Scalability with IBM WebSphere is the only comprehensive performance management book focusing on WebSphere versions 4.0 and 5.0. The book addresses the operational aspects with both a proactive and reactive view. No other WebSphere book written focuses on ensuring that your implementation of WebSphere can scale and operate with such a high degree of performance.
This book doesnt attempt to show you how to administer WebSphere. Instead, this reference walks you through proven steps to plan, design, implement, optimize, and manage your platforms performance and scalability. It focuses on proven architectures, optimization approaches, scalability considerations, and best practices for you to develop high-performing and scalable WebSphere-based applications in both Unix and Windows environments.
About The Author
Adam G. Neat is a consulting manager for one of the world's leading management and IT consultancy firms. He is the Australian and New Zealand e-Infrastructure lead, covering technical architectures such as host systems, storage systems, and operating systems (and all things in between), within the communications and technology industry. He is recognized as a global expert in infrastructure architectures, and he
provides specialty expertise in technical architectures covering
technologies such as J2EE/Java, various forms of middleware (MQ, CORBA,
etc), large-scale systems, application design and architecture, and the
deployment, configuration, and management of enterprise application
servers such as IBM's WebSphere, BEA's WebLogic, and Sun's SunOne
Application Server. Adam is also heavily involved in the integration and
production optimization of large-scale UNIX-based systems and databases
such as DB2 and Oracle.
Adam is a member of the Australian Institute of Management and holds
a degree in computing systems from Monash University.