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Top Forums Web Development What is the maximum users we can go in weblogic and Oracle? Post 303018369 by ded325 on Monday 4th of June 2018 09:57:06 PM
Old 06-04-2018
hi

Hi Friend

Thanks a lot for your reply.

My quesitons is . i have web applciation that runs on weblogic and database resides on oracle.
so question from client is how many maximum users can create in my application.

OS is SUN Solaris
does it depend on no of processors in oracle


Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
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.
 

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LIMITS.CONF(5)							 Linux-PAM Manual						    LIMITS.CONF(5)

NAME
limits.conf - configuration file for the pam_limits module DESCRIPTION
The pam_limits.so module applies ulimit limits, nice priority and number of simultaneous login sessions limit to user login sessions. This description of the configuration file syntax applies to the /etc/security/limits.conf file and *.conf files in the /etc/security/limits.d directory. The syntax of the lines is as follows: <domain><type><item><value> The fields listed above should be filled as follows: <domain> o a username o a groupname, with @group syntax. This should not be confused with netgroups. o the wildcard *, for default entry. o the wildcard %, for maxlogins limit only, can also be used with %group syntax. If the % wildcard is used alone it is identical to using * with maxsyslogins limit. With a group specified after % it limits the total number of logins of all users that are member of the group. o an uid range specified as <min_uid>:<max_uid>. If min_uid is omitted, the match is exact for the max_uid. If max_uid is omitted, all uids greater than or equal min_uid match. o a gid range specified as @<min_gid>:<max_gid>. If min_gid is omitted, the match is exact for the max_gid. If max_gid is omitted, all gids greater than or equal min_gid match. For the exact match all groups including the user's supplementary groups are examined. For the range matches only the user's primary group is examined. o a gid specified as %:<gid> applicable to maxlogins limit only. It limits the total number of logins of all users that are member of the group with the specified gid. <type> hard for enforcing hard resource limits. These limits are set by the superuser and enforced by the Kernel. The user cannot raise his requirement of system resources above such values. soft for enforcing soft resource limits. These limits are ones that the user can move up or down within the permitted range by any pre-existing hard limits. The values specified with this token can be thought of as default values, for normal system usage. - for enforcing both soft and hard resource limits together. Note, if you specify a type of '-' but neglect to supply the item and value fields then the module will never enforce any limits on the specified user/group etc. . <item> core limits the core file size (KB) data maximum data size (KB) fsize maximum filesize (KB) memlock maximum locked-in-memory address space (KB) nofile maximum number of open files rss maximum resident set size (KB) (Ignored in Linux 2.4.30 and higher) stack maximum stack size (KB) cpu maximum CPU time (minutes) nproc maximum number of processes as address space limit (KB) maxlogins maximum number of logins for this user except for this with uid=0 maxsyslogins maximum number of all logins on system priority the priority to run user process with (negative values boost process priority) locks maximum locked files (Linux 2.4 and higher) sigpending maximum number of pending signals (Linux 2.6 and higher) msgqueue maximum memory used by POSIX message queues (bytes) (Linux 2.6 and higher) nice maximum nice priority allowed to raise to (Linux 2.6.12 and higher) values: [-20,19] rtprio maximum realtime priority allowed for non-privileged processes (Linux 2.6.12 and higher) All items support the values -1, unlimited or infinity indicating no limit, except for priority and nice. If a hard limit or soft limit of a resource is set to a valid value, but outside of the supported range of the local system, the system may reject the new limit or unexpected behavior may occur. If the control value required is used, the module will reject the login if a limit could not be set. In general, individual limits have priority over group limits, so if you impose no limits for admin group, but one of the members in this group have a limits line, the user will have its limits set according to this line. Also, please note that all limit settings are set per login. They are not global, nor are they permanent; existing only for the duration of the session. One exception is the maxlogin option, this one is system wide. But there is a race, concurrent logins at the same time will not always be detect as such but only counted as one. In the limits configuration file, the '#' character introduces a comment - after which the rest of the line is ignored. The pam_limits module does report configuration problems found in its configuration file and errors via syslog(3). EXAMPLES
These are some example lines which might be specified in /etc/security/limits.conf. * soft core 0 * hard nofile 512 @student hard nproc 20 @faculty soft nproc 20 @faculty hard nproc 50 ftp hard nproc 0 @student - maxlogins 4 :123 hard cpu 5000 @500: soft cpu 10000 600:700 hard locks 10 SEE ALSO
pam_limits(8), pam.d(5), pam(8), getrlimit(2)getrlimit(3p) AUTHOR
pam_limits was initially written by Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com> Linux-PAM Manual 09/19/2013 LIMITS.CONF(5)
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