1 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Fran Navarro
Infraestructura Optimizada Oracle: Exalogic
2 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
The following is intended to outline our general product direction. It is intended for information purposes only, and may not be incorporated into any contract. It is not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasing decisions.The development, release, and timing of any features or functionality described for Oracle’s products remain at the sole discretion of Oracle.
3 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Agenda • Oracle Engineered Systems Strategy
• Workshop Exalogic– Exalogic Hardware– Exalogic Virtualized – Exabus– Exalogic HA + DR– Exalogic – Multi Tenacy
• Exalogic Management
4 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
ENGINEERED TO WORK TOGETHER
6 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Before
A NEW ERA: ORACLE ENGINEERED SYSTEMS
HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE ENGINEERED TO WORK TOGETHER
Now
7 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
100’s of Components 1 Machine 1000’s of Hours 1 Day
GROUNDBREAKING TIME TO MARKET
FEWER PIECES TO BUY, DEPLOY & MAINTAIN
8 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
“By year-end 2015, integrated systems will account
for 35% of total server shipment value.”
THE INTEGRATED SYSTEMS TREND IS CATCHING ON
Gartner Symposium/IT Expo presentation, “Is the Concept of the Server Obsolete – or in Need of Redefining?”, November 2012
10 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Compute Appliances Have a Role Within Gartner's Fabric Continuum
OVCAExa-Systems
11 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud
EXTREME PERFORMANCE FOR JAVA APPLICATIONS
EXTREME PERFORMANCE FOR ORACLE BUSINESS APPLICATIONS
NATIVELY LEVERAGES EXADATA
BEST CONSOLIDATION PLATFORM
12 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Fusion Middleware Performance on Exalogic
SOA 11gResponse
Time
Standard Hardware Exalogic
9X
Tuxedo 11g Response
time
Standard Hardware Exalogic
7X
UCM 11gThroughput
Standard Hardware Exalogic
3X10X
0.16ms
1.1ms
58ms
520ms
5,640 tps
17,340 tps
ADF 11gConcurrent
Users
Standard Hardware Exalogic
24,000
240,000
10X
13 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Engineered Systems: Scale With Your Business
Quarter Rack
Half Rack
Full Rack
Multi-rack
• Seamless hardware upgrade• Flexible software licensing
14 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Oracle Support for Performance and Availability
• 24/7 support coverage
• Specialized Engineered Systems Support Team
• 2-hour onsite response to hardware issues1
• New updates and upgrades for Database, Server, Storage, and OS software
Complete. Integrated. Proactive. High Availability Services.No Additional Cost.
ORACLE PLATINUM SERVICES
Better support for the complete Oracle stack– Includes higher support levels for Database software
24/7 Oracle remote fault monitoring
Industry-leading response times:– 5 Minute Fault Notification
– 15 Minute Restoration or Escalation to Development
– 30 Minute Joint Debugging with Development
Patch deployment by Oracle engineers
Available now for certified configurations on Oracle SuperCluster1 Covered system must be within an Oracle two-hour service area to receive two-hour response as a standard service.
Oracle engineers perform patching services up to four times per year
15 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential
Exalogic Fundamentals
16 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Elastic Cloud Overview
• Exalogic Hardware
• Exalogic Virtualized
• Exabus (In deep in Other ppt)
• Exalogic HA + DR
• Exalogic – Multi Tenacy
• Exalogic Management
Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.17
X3-2
ExalogicStatus Quo
Applications & Middleware
OS
Virtualization &Cloud Management
Compute
Storage Layer
Networking
Exalogic vs. the Status Quo
Exalogic Hardware
Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.19
Exalogic X2-2 I Complete, Integrated
StorageDisk array and two storage heads with flash cache provides
shared storage for the Exalogic system software
I/O FabricConverged I/O fabric connects all system components together
and connects the system to the data center networks
Compute4, 8, 16 or 30 servers, each of which can run a single instance of
Operating System or multiple virtual servers
Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.20
Exalogic X3-2Converged Infrastructure
Enterprise-class, integrated Network Attached Storage ZFS Clustered for high availability 60 TB SAS disk, 4 TB read cache, 292 GB write cache Clones, snapshots, remote replication
Integrated Storage
40 Gb/sec internal I/O backplane 10 Gigabit Ethernet connectivity to datacenter
Internal I/O Fabric and Data Center Connectivity
2 socket, 8-core, 2.9 GHz Intel Xeon processors 256 GB of 1600MHz DRAM 480 cores in a Full Rack; also available in
1/2,1/4,1/8 or multi-rack configurations Redundant SSD, power, cooling, InfiniBand
Compute Power
Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.21
Exalogic X3-2Seamless Scalability
4 Nodes 8 Nodes 16 Nodes 30 Nodes 240+ Nodes1 TB RAM
800 GB SSD60 TB NAS
2 TB RAM1.6 TB SSD60 TB NAS
4 TB RAM3.2 TB SSD60 TB NAS
7.7 TB RAM6 TB SSD
60 TB NAS
61+ TB RAM48+ TB SSD
480+ TB NAS
Multi-RackFull RackHalf RackQuarter RackEighth Rack
22 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic X3-2 Hardware ArchitectureSystem Design
Data CenterService Network
Management Network (GbE)
Data CenterMgmt Network
Exalogic X3-2
Ethernet Gateways
StandardOracle
Database
Exab
us
QD
R InfiniB
and I/O B
ackplane
Direct IB Integration:• Exadata• Additional Exalogic
configurations•ZFS Storage Appliance•Backup Media ServersManagement
SwitchStorage
Compute Nodes
…
GbE
Spine Switch
10GbE
Exadata
GbE GbE
23 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Integration I Exabus (InfiniBand)
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Gateways
Management Switch
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Spine Switch
Exalogic RackInternal I/O Back-plane
– 40 Gb/s per compute node
– Built on QDR InfiniBand
– Fully redundant
– Built in security and QoS
Unique Software/Firmware– Ethernet over InfiniBand bridging
– Exabus RDMA-based APIs
Exabus
Storage System
24 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic X3-2 I Compute Node
• X3-2 – 1 RU (Rack-Unit), 4, 8, 16 or 30– (2) Intel 2.9 GHz Xeon (8-core) processors– 256 GB 1600 MHz RAM– (2) 100GB SSD/s (RAID1)– (1) Dual-port QDR InfiniBand HCA (PCIe)– ILOM and client O/S access through NET0/eth0 interface
(1GbE)
25 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic X3-2 I Infiniband Switch / Gateway
• Sun NM2-GW– Full 32-port QDR InfiniBand switch– Fully redundantly deployed in Exalogic (2 or 4)– An “appliance” within Exalogic– 8 10GbE ports – bridged (not switched) to the IB fabric– Serves 2 roles in Exalogic
• Core InfiniBand switching function – all IB-connected components are switched through these
• Connectivity to datacenter 10GbE client network
– ILOM/Mgmt access on Exalogic 1GbE management network
26 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic X3-2 I Infiniband Switch / Datacenter
• Sun NM2-36p– Full 36-port QDR InfiniBand switch– An “appliance” within Exalogic– Only populated in ½ and Full rack configurations– Only wired and used for multi-rack configurations– Serves the role in Exalogic of forming “fat-tree” fabric
architecture for scaling to multiple racks• High availability is maintained by the 36p switch in each rack
protecting each other (there is only 1 per rack)
– ILOM/Mgmt access on Exalogic 1GbE management network
27 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic X3-2 I Integrated Storage
• Enterprise-grade NAS– 60TB disk capacity,– 4TB read cache, – 73GB write cache
• ZFS clustering
• Embedded software suite– Clones– Remote replication
Exalogic Sun 7320 ZFS Storage Appliance
28 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Data CenterServiceNetwork
Exalogic Datacenter Integration I Simple View
Exalogic
Big DataAppliance SPARC
SuperClusterExadata
ZFSStorage
Standard TOR/EOR 10GbE Switches
InfiniBand
Data CenterManagement
NetworkGbE
10GbE
Power1PH or 3PH, 15 or 22 kVA, HV or LV
2.98kW-12.54kW
29 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Architecture I Fault Tolerance
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Gateways
Management Switch
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Spine Switch
Exalogic RackDual Power Distribution Units (1+1)
Dual power supplies in each component (1+1)
N+1 cooling (fan) strategy
Redundant IB switches (1+1)
Dual HCA ports in every component (bonded, 1+1)
Redundant storage heads (1+1)
All SSD and HDD RAID 1+
Storage System
GbE
Exabus
Virtualized Exalogic
31 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Virtualized Exalogic I Core Components
Hypervisor– Oracle VM 3.0.3 highly optimized for Exalogic
– Mission-critical server virtualization
Exalogic Control– Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) management
– Manage users, servers, network
Oracle VM
ExalogicControl
32 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
= Virtualized Elastic Cloud Software
Enterprise Manager
Middleware and Business Applications
CoherenceWebLogic Tuxedo
Exabus Integration
Traffic Director
Exabus Integration
Exabus Integration
Exabus Integration
Exalogic Control
Exalogic Elastic Cloud X2-2 Hardware
ExabusOracle VM 3 for Exalogic
Physical Oracle Linux/SolarisOracle Linux Guest OS
Virtualized Exalogic I Elastic Cloud Software
33 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Virtualized Exalogic I Key Use Cases
1. Application Consolidation– Deploy multiple applications on a single Exalogic system
2. Tenant Isolation– Provision secure Exalogic resources to multiple tenants
3. Deployment Simplification– Templates ease the path from test to production, scale up/down
4. Sub-capacity Licensing – Only the cores applications actually use need to be licensed
34 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Near physical performance+ for virtualized applications running on Exalogic
Raw performance advantage enables superior consolidation for transactional applications in a virtualized environment
Virtualized Exalogic I Ultra-Low-Overhead
+ ~2-4% CPU overhead, 0% throughput/latency overhead
35 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Control I What Does It Do?
IaaS Management Runtime Engine
Runs directly in the rack
Provision resources – compute network, storage
– Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) management
Create, deploy, manage, scale and monitor virtual machines
ExalogicControl
36 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Control I IaaS Roles
For Datacenter Operations– create, provision, manage and
monitor tenant “virtual data centers”
For Exalogic Tenants– provision users, virtual
machines, virtual networks and storage to applications
37 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
New Approach I Virtual Assemblies
VM images and deployment configuration and instructions
Oracle middleware and applications downloadable as ready-to-run assemblies
Develop custom assemblies with authoring tools
38 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Assemblies: Standardization with Flexibility
Capture CompleteApplication Topology
Package IntoSingle Assembly
Metadata
Oracle Virtual AssemblyBuilder Studio
Exalogic – Exabus(in deep in other track)
40 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
What is Exabus?
• An assembly of special InfiniBand gateway hardware, device drivers, device firmware, software libraries and configuration files that allow other software ("applications") to make use of the Exalogic Elastic Cloud hardware and ensure the optimal performance and reliability of the system
• Drives the extreme performance of Exalogic
• I/O subsystem inside Exalogic– Offloads expensive CPU resources from I/O and improves overall I/O efficiency– Combination of network stack optimizations (native C++ and Java I/O APIs),
kernel bypass operations (RDMA), hypervisor bypass (SR-IOV) and on-chip network virtualization
– Software is installed on the Exalogic Elastic Cloud Hardware at the time of manufacture
41 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Exalogic Elastic Cloud Software
= Exalogic Elastic Cloud Software
En
terp
rise
Man
ager CoherenceWebLogic Tuxedo
Exabus Integration
Traffic Director
Exabus Integration
Exabus Integration
Exabus Integration
Middleware and Business Applications
Exalogic Elastic Cloud Hardware
Exabus
Physical Oracle Linux/SolarisOracle VM for Exalogic
Oracle Linux Guest OS
Exalogic Control
42 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Application BufferApplication Buffer
TCP IP TransportTCP IP Transport
Kernel
Standard Hardware I/O
20% Buffer Copies40% Transport Processing
40 % Kernel Context Switches
ExabusOptimized Network Virtualization
Exabus
Zero Buffer CopyDirect Memory Access
Kernel Bypass
THROUGHPUT4x
LOWER LATENCY6x
Application Application
Exalogic – HA / DR
44 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
HA within a data-centreTypical Needs
High availability within one physical site• Cope with planned and unplanned downtime
Application survives individual failures• Redundancy - no single points of failure for an
application
Service continuity
• Capacity to maintain quality of service during failure
45 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Each rack has redundant Power Supplies, Storage Heads, Storage Disks, Network Cards, Network Switches & Network Gateways
Scales to multiple racks using InfiniBand – max. distance 100 metresRedundant Hardware
Leverage WebLogic, Coherence and Tuxedo clustering capabilities including automatic failover of requests + automated server migration
Adopt ‘Rolling Updates’ best practice for patching without downtimeMiddleware Clustering
Utilise WebLogic’s ‘Active GridLink’ connection pool feature for Oracle RAC Quick detection of database node failure and quick failover of DB connectionsHA Integration with DB
Plan for ‘N+1’ sizing for quantity of compute nodes used for a cluster - ensure even load-balancing of failed over requests to other cluster nodes
Bandwidth of InfiniBand Fabric is designed to easily accommodate maximum peak traffic, even after switch failure
Spare Capacity for Failover
HA within a data centreExalogic Capabilities & Recommendations
46 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
DR across two data-centresTypical Needs
Active/Passive data-centre• Primary data-centre runs app during normal ops
• Secondary data-centre is standby to take over if primary data-centre fails
• Assume DB is Active/Passive too
• Assume symmetric sites (same Hw, Sw & capacity)
Minimal data-loss• Recent copy of data needed in secondary site
• Complete data-consistency for secondary site
47 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Mid-Tier
DR across two data-centres
Data-Tier
Active Site Standby Site
Business Data
Transaction Logs
JMS Messages
Mid-Tier
Sw Installations
Sw Configurations
Data-Tier
Global Load Balancer
Mw ServerMw Server
Process State
Recommended Topology
Mw Server
Mw ServerMw Server
Mw Server
ZFS Periodic Replication
Oracle Data Guard
Business Data
Transaction Logs
JMS Messages
Process State
Sw Installations
Sw Configurations
Exalogic Exalogic
48 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
The database is the ‘linchpin’ of the system – ensure an Oracle MAA Database Architect is consulted
Store all critical data in the DB: Business data, XA transaction logs, JMS messages, BPEL process state
Let DB dictate DR process
Apply critical data synchronisation at one tier – i.e. the database tier To simplify DR process and to ensure data consistency in 2nd site Oracle Data Guard + apply MAA best practices for data-tier synchronisation
Aim for a single data synchronisation approach
Persistence of software installations, domain configurations & application configurations
Use ZFS periodic replication to enable 2nd site to have fairly recent copies
Leverage Exalogic’s Storage for infrequently
changing files
Is loss of what should be transient non-critical data really important and worth the investment for rare disaster scenarios?
If you really needs this, then use WebLogic WAN HTTP Session State Replication
Use asynchronous session replication if needed
DR across two data-centresSolution Recommendations
49 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Internet/Extranet(via Global LB)
Exalogic Integration I DR Network Topology
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Gateways
Storage System
Management Switch
Compute Nodes
InfiniBand Spine Switch
Exalogic Production Site
10GbE
GbE
Management Network
Exalogic DR
10GbE
GbE
DR Link A
DR Link B
ServiceNetwork
50 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Backup/Disaster Recovery
Exalogic – Multi Tenacy
52 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Multi-TenancyIB Partitions – Dynamic scalability, security & Level of Service
• Security between devices is enforced by switches– Security provisioned based on IO
device groupings called “partitions”
• Level of Service-based traffic separation– Each IO device supports up to 15
Virtual Lanes– Virtual Lanes support per-application
Quality of Service
Partition C
Partition A
Partition B
53 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Multi-TenancyMaximum density, manageability, flexiblity
Compute Node Compute Node Compute Node Compute NodeCompute Node
Partition A Partition CPartition B
WebLogicDomain
A
WebLogicDomain
B
WebLogicDomain
D
WebLogicDomain
B
WebLogicDomain
C
WebLogicDomain
C
Application A Application A
WebLogicDomain
A
• Single application• High Availability• Dedicated CPU/Memory for
maximum performance• Maximum security
• Multiple HA applications or one composite HA application
• Common Level of Service (shared CPU, Memory, failure unit, security)
• Multiple applications
• Single availability
• Maximum density
54 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Compute Node
1SOA1NM 1 SOA2 SOA3 SOA4 SOA5 OSb1 IDM1 IDM2 OPMN1
Compute Node
2SOA6NM 2 SOA7 SOA8 SOA9 SOA10 OSB2 IDM3 IDM4 OPMN2
Compute Node
3SOA11NM 3 SOA12 SOA13 SOA14 SOA15 OSB3 IDM5 IDM6 OPMN3
Compute Node
4SOA16NM 4 SOA17 SOA18 SOA19 SOA20 OSB4 IDM7 IDM8 OPMN4
App 2VerticalSlicing
Compute Node
5SOA21NM 5 SOA22 SOA23 SOA24 SOA25 OSB5 IDM9 IDM10 OPMN5
Compute Node
6SOA26NM 6 SOA27 SOA28 SOA29 SOA30 OSB6 IDM11 IDM12 OPMN6
Compute Node
7SOA31NM 7 SOA32 SOA33 SOA34 SOA35 OSB7 IDM13 IDM14 OPMN7
Compute Node
8SOA36NM 8 SOA37 SOA38 SOA39 SOA40 OSB8 IDM15 IDM16 OPMN8
App 1
• Quarter Rack
• SOA Clusters
• App 1
• App 2
55 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Compute Node
1SOA1NM 1 SOA2 SOA3 SOA4 SOA5 OSB1 IDM1 IDM2 OPMN1
Compute Node
2SOA6NM 2 SOA7 SOA8 SOA9 SOA10 OSB2 IDM3 IDM4 OPMN2
Compute Node
3SOA11NM 3 SOA12 SOA13 SOA14 SOA15 OSB3 IDM5 IDM6 OPMN3
Compute Node
4SOA16NM 4 SOA17 SOA18 SOA19 SOA20 OSB4 IDM7 IDM8 OPMN4
App 1
App 2
Horizontal Slicing
• Dedicated
servers per
Application
• Isolation
• Lower capacity
if one node
down
56 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Multi-TenancyMaximum security and fine grained resource allocation
• Multi-level application isolation– Balance performance, availability,
security and density per Application or Line of Business as required
• Security and resource allocation aligned, separable– Seamless integration with existing
processes and organization
Exalogic Management
58 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Operational Benefits of Engineered Systems
Simpler Architecture. – Single purpose with fewer options and pre-configured
Standardisation– Of components, configuration and manufacture
Self Contained– Everything needed is in the box
Single toolset– All tasks and all teams more productive and more consistent
Easier support– Single vendor with known configurations
Fewer admin jobs to do...and they are easier
• Why is it easier to manage ?Minimal new skills required
• Standard Oracle software• Standard Linux / Solaris and x86
Infrastructure components• Exadata Storage Software / Exalogic
Elastic Cloud software are self managing
59 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Potential Operational Management Benefits• Costs reduce and agility improves as use of Engineered Systems
increases
0 25 50 75 1000
20406080
100120140160
Operational Management CostsI.T. Agility
% of Oracle estate on Engineered Systems
% o
f O
rac
le e
sta
te a
dm
in
cost
s /
agil
ity
before
ES
’s
Engineered systems can be approx 20 – 30% easier to manage than ‘traditional’ AIX / Linux / HP UX / Windows platforms
As ES are used for more of a companies’ Oracle estate, the operational benefits become ever more significant.
60 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
E
xalo
gic
Exa
dat
a
Database
Storage
Servers
Network
Operating System
Virtual Machine
Analytics
Middleware
Applications • Engineered Systems are specific pre-
certified combinations of existing Oracle hardware and software. EM 12c is Engineered Systems aware
• Each Engineered system has built in tools and management systems, which are free and integrate with EM 12c.
• A single EM 12c system should be used to centrally manage both Engineered Systems and all other Oracle systems.
The Right ToolsOracle Enterprise Manager 12c provides a single integrated toolset
• Monitoring and alerting ((Performance, Availability and Configurations)
• Provisioning• Testing• S/W Problem diagnosis and resolution• H/W Fault detection and replacement• Performance Tuning• Patching and Upgrading• Backup and Recovery
• Physical and Virtual environments
• Integration with Oracle Support• Integration with other mgmt systems
• Basis for Oracle cloud computing.
Centralised, Standardised, Automated
En
terp
rise
Man
ager
61 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
The Right ToolsSingle Shared EM 12c
Exadata runs Db
Exalogic runs Apps
ELAExalogic Admin; Everything except apps
DBMADb Machine Admin; Everything
Applications Admin; Just the apps.
Business Users.
Exi
stin
g T
eam
s.N
etw
ork
/ S
ys A
dmin
/ S
ecu
rity
/ S
tora
geIn
volv
eme
nt d
ecr
eas
ing
over
tim
e.R
ole
for
Ora
cle
ES
rel
ates
mor
e to
pol
icie
s m
anag
emen
t, in
tegr
atio
n an
d st
rate
gic
plan
ning
Cloud ControlDb PacksFMW PacksApps PacksCloud MgmtOps CentreASRExalogic Control
62 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Complete and Integrated Management
CloudControl
OpsCenter
EnterpriseManager
DeployProvisioning of Firmware,
OS, Middeleware, and Applications
Clone and Scale-out
TestFunctional Testing
Load TestingTest Management
MaintainRemote Management
- Telemetry
Phone Home- Proactive Support
My Oracle Support Integration
ManageEnd-to-End Diagnostics
- Service Levels- Root Cause
Configuration Mgmt- Change Tracking
Patch Automation- Firmware, OS
63 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Enterprise ManagerFrom Application Operations to Data Center Operations
Exalogic
Application Operations
CC Agent
Drill BetweenSpecific Views
Enterprise Manager OpsCenter
Data CenterOperations
ILOM
Enterprise Manager Cloud Control
64 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Hardware Schematic overview provides visibility into Network Switches, Storage, and Compute Node ILOMs.
•Support for Oracle Exalogic virtual Configurations
– Understand how your virtual guests map to the underlying Exalogic with the Hardware Schematic overview.
Enterprise Manager Complete Stack Management
65 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
Oracle Exalogic Delivery and Support Model Assembled, Tested and Delivered
CustomerPremises
Software and Support
Oracle Hardware and Services
http://www.oracle.com/...
• System Installation Service
• Patching Service
• Startup Pack
• Customer Data and Device Retention
• Operations Management and Solution Support Center
• Deploy Oracle software as needed
• My Oracle Support
• Enterprise Manager automated services
66 | © 2012 Oracle Corporation |
67 | © 2011 Oracle Corporation – Proprietary and Confidential