Skip to main content

By clicking Submit, you agree to the developerWorks terms of use.

The first time you sign into developerWorks, a profile is created for you. Select information in your developerWorks profile is displayed to the public, but you may edit the information at any time. Your first name, last name (unless you choose to hide them), and display name will accompany the content that you post.

All information submitted is secure.

  • Close [x]

The first time you sign in to developerWorks, a profile is created for you, so you need to choose a display name. Your display name accompanies the content you post on developerworks.

Please choose a display name between 3-31 characters. Your display name must be unique in the developerWorks community and should not be your email address for privacy reasons.

By clicking Submit, you agree to the developerWorks terms of use.

All information submitted is secure.

  • Close [x]

WebSphere Process Server made easy, Part 3: Application deployment and server resource configuration

Addison Goering (agoering@us.ibm.com), Software Engineer, IBM
Author photo
Addison Goering is a member of the WebSphere Education development team. He has been involved in the development of administration courses for WebSphere Application Server, WebSphere Portal, WebSphere Process Server, and WebSphere ESB. He has delivered courses to internal IBM users, business partners and customers. Prior to joining IBM, he worked as a software developer for a large consulting company. And, many years ago, he taught elementary and middle school. Addison resides in the Chicago area with his wife, five children, four dogs, and four cats.
(An IBM developerWorks Contributing Author)

Summary:  This tutorial is the last in a series of three on WebSphere Process Server. It focuses on the deployment of business integration applications and the configuration of server resources. You will follow a sample business integration application from the design phase through deployment. The Business Process Explorer is used as the interface to test and verify the deployed business process. Common Base Event Browser, one of the business integration applications installed with WebSphere Process Server, is used to view events emitted to the common event infrastructure by the business process. The final section discusses procedures for uninstalling and versioning business processes.

View more content in this series

Date:  06 Feb 2007
Level:  Intermediate PDF:  A4 and Letter (755 KB | 24 pages)Get Adobe® Reader®

Activity:  6782 views
Comments:  

Before you start

About this series

IBM® WebSphere® Process Server is the deployment and runtime environment for business integration applications. It enables the deployment of applications built in a Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) structure. This series of three tutorials explores the architecture, installation, configuration, application deployment, and system resource configuration of WebSphere Process Server.


About this tutorial

This tutorial is the third in a series of three. It focuses on the deployment of a business integration application. Particular emphasis is placed on the management of the business integration application once deployed to WebSphere Process Server.

Throughout this tutorial, WebSphere Process Server will be referred to Process Server. WebSphere Application Server will be referred to as Application Server.


Prerequisites and system requirements

This tutorial is written for administrators whose skills and experience are at the intermediate level. You should have a general familiarity with the administration of WebSphere Application Server before you begin. No particular system requirements are needed to complete this tutorial.

1 of 9 | Next

Comments



Help: Update or add to My dW interests

What's this?

This little timesaver lets you update your My developerWorks profile with just one click! The general subject of this content (AIX and UNIX, Information Management, Lotus, Rational, Tivoli, WebSphere, Java, Linux, Open source, SOA and Web services, Web development, or XML) will be added to the interests section of your profile, if it's not there already. You only need to be logged in to My developerWorks.

And what's the point of adding your interests to your profile? That's how you find other users with the same interests as yours, and see what they're reading and contributing to the community. Your interests also help us recommend relevant developerWorks content to you.

View your My developerWorks profile

Return from help

Help: Remove from My dW interests

What's this?

Removing this interest does not alter your profile, but rather removes this piece of content from a list of all content for which you've indicated interest. In a future enhancement to My developerWorks, you'll be able to see a record of that content.

View your My developerWorks profile

Return from help

static.content.url=http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/js/artrating/
SITE_ID=1
Zone=WebSphere
ArticleID=193285
TutorialTitle=WebSphere Process Server made easy, Part 3: Application deployment and server resource configuration
publish-date=02062007
author1-email=agoering@us.ibm.com
author1-email-cc=

Tags

Help
Use the search field to find all types of content in My developerWorks with that tag.

Use the slider bar to see more or fewer tags.

Popular tags shows the top tags for this particular content zone (for example, Java technology, Linux, WebSphere).

My tags shows your tags for this particular content zone (for example, Java technology, Linux, WebSphere).

Use the search field to find all types of content in My developerWorks with that tag. Popular tags shows the top tags for this particular content zone (for example, Java technology, Linux, WebSphere). My tags shows your tags for this particular content zone (for example, Java technology, Linux, WebSphere).

Try IBM PureSystems. No charge.