Sponsored Content
Top Forums Web Development What is the maximum users we can go in weblogic and Oracle? Post 303017582 by jim mcnamara on Friday 18th of May 2018 10:46:54 AM
Old 05-18-2018
Do you mean simultaneous processes from one user?
As much as the system load will tolerate. This is a matter of available memory, process slots, and I/O resources.

Do you mean different simultaneous usernames?
The comment above applies about resources, plus there is an upper limit to the number of usernames a UNIX system can have. Ex Solaris 10 allows 65000 usernames by default.

I think maybe you misunderstand. Weblogic runs as a user and creates processes that connect into oracle. So the oracle kernel has to deal with how many simultaneous users in any case. Oracle scales very well but there are limits to performance.

Guessing you are trying to do some preliminary work on setting up a weblogic server.
Anything like this requires a lot of information - number of users, kinds of transactions and so on. The list is not small.

When you ask a question, giving us the OS, system hardware configuration (memory, disk, etc) is the base requirement. I worked in a place that runs weblogic on servers that are separate from the oracle kernel, for example. We had 500-700 users online.

So in reality there is no decent answer to the questions as asked. Sorry.
 

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Maximum number of users allowed

How do i determen (what command) the max. number of users allowed Thanks in advance (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: siza
10 Replies

2. Solaris

oracle and weblogic startup

Hi All, i am facing problem after restart my Unix Box PC i should to startup oracle manual and weblogic also how yo make it start automatic (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xxmasrawy
1 Replies
DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Oracle::WhereJoins(3)	User Contributed Perl Documentation	  DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Oracle::WhereJoins(3)

NAME
DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Oracle::WhereJoins - Oracle joins in WHERE syntax support (instead of ANSI). PURPOSE
This module is used with Oracle < 9.0 due to lack of support for standard ANSI join syntax. SYNOPSIS
DBIx::Class should automagically detect Oracle and use this module with no work from you. DESCRIPTION
This class implements Oracle's WhereJoin support. Instead of: SELECT x FROM y JOIN z ON y.id = z.id It will write: SELECT x FROM y, z WHERE y.id = z.id It should properly support left joins, and right joins. Full outer joins are not possible due to the fact that Oracle requires the entire query be written to union the results of a left and right join, and by the time this module is called to create the where query and table definition part of the SQL query, it's already too late. METHODS
See DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::OracleJoins for implementation details. BUGS
Does not support full outer joins. Probably lots more. SEE ALSO
DBIx::Class::SQLMaker DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::OracleJoins DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Oracle::Generic DBIx::Class AUTHOR
Justin Wheeler "<jwheeler@datademons.com>" CONTRIBUTORS
David Jack Olrik "<djo@cpan.org>" LICENSE
This module is licensed under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.18.2 2013-07-12 DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Oracle::WhereJoins(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:34 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy