Oracle Application Server 10g Migrating from WebLogic 10g (9.0.4) Part Number B10425-01 |
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This preface contains these topics:
Oracle Application Server 10g Migrating From WebLogic is intended for administrators, developers, and others whose role is to deploy and manage Oracle Application Server with high availability requirements.
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The following chapters make up this guide:
This chapter provides an overview of the issues involved in migrating J2EE web applications from WebLogic Server 7.0 to Oracle Application Server, and the effort required.
This chapter provides a comparison between Oracle Corporation's implementation of Sun Microsystems' J2EE platform and component specifications and that of BEA Systems.
This chapter provides the information you need to migrate Java servlets from WebLogic Server 7.0 to Oracle Application Server. It addresses the migration of simple servlets, WAR files, and exploded Web applications.
This chapter provides the information you need to migrate JavaServer pages from WebLogic Server 7.0 to Oracle Application Server. It addresses the migration of simple JSP pages, custom JSP tag libraries, and WebLogic custom tags.
This chapter provides the information you need to migrate Enterprise JavaBeans from WebLogic Server 7.0 to Oracle Application Server. It addresses the migration of stateful and stateless session beans and container-managed persistence and bean-managed persistence entity beans.
This chapter provides the information you need to migrate database access code from WebLogic Server 7.0 to Oracle Application Server. It addresses the migration of JDBC drivers, data sources, and connection pooling.
This appendix summarizes additional features between Oracle Application Server and WebLogic Server.
For more information, see these Oracle resources:
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http://oraclestore.oracle.com/
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For additional information, see:
http://ibm.com/
for more information on WebLogic Server
http://java.sun.com/
for more information on J2EE
This section describes the conventions used in the text and code examples of this documentation set. It describes:
We use various conventions in text to help you more quickly identify special terms. The following table describes those conventions and provides examples of their use.
Code examples illustrate SQL, PL/SQL, SQL*Plus, or other command-line statements. They are displayed in a monospace (fixed-width) font and separated from normal text as shown in this example:
SELECT username FROM dba_users WHERE username = 'MIGRATE';
The following table describes typographic conventions used in code examples and provides examples of their use.
The following table describes conventions for Microsoft Windows operating systems and provides examples of their use.
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