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Content IntroductionThe editor of Oracle VM Implementation and Management provides detailed information on building and maintaining a dynamic virtualization platform in your enterprise. Key virtualization concepts, operational directives, examples, and best practices are described. Explore how to set up an Oracle VM server farm, build and deploy virtual machines, and handle automated deployment and cloning. Techniques for monitoring, tuning, and security are also included in this comprehensive guide. The content includes methods for designing and configuring the VM server farm to manage the daily operations required by the VM server farm. There are step-by-steps guides for many of the operations performed through VM Mana,ger, as well as multiple ways to manage Oracle VMS through OEM Grid Control, Oracle Vmmanager, Oracle VM CLI, and Xen commands. All of these tools do a good job, so choose the one that is most appropriate in your environment.[1]Author Profile Editor Edward Whalen is the founder of Performance Tuningcorporation, a consulting firm focused on database performance, management, virtualization, and disaster recovery solutions. Prior to founding Performancetuning, he worked as an operating system developer at Compaq Computercorporation and then as a database performance engineer. He has extensive experience in database system design and * * Performance tuning. During his career, he has worked on hardware, operating systems, and database development projects for many different companies. Edwardwhalen has authored several books on Oracle RDBMS and MS SQL Server. Book catalogue edit Section Ⅰ introduction
The 1th chapter introduction of Virtualization
1.1 What is Virtualization
1.2 Reasons for using virtualization
1.2.1 Server Consolidation
1.2.2 Server Auto-Configuration
1.2.3 Functional Isolation
1.2.4 Performance Improvement
1.2.5 Backup/Restore
1.2.6 Hosting services and cloud computing
1.2.7 training, testing, quality assurance and practice
1.3 Overview of Virtualization Technologies
1.3.1 Pure Software Virtualization
1.3.2 Hardware-assisted virtualization of software
1.3.3 Quasi-virtualized
1.3.4 Hybrid Virtualization Technology
1.3.5 Component or resource virtualization
1.3.6 Other Virtualization Technologies
1.4 Management procedures
1.4.1 Type 1 hypervisor
1.4.2 Type 2 hypervisor
1.5 Comparison of hardware virtualization and quasi-virtualization
1.5.1 Advantages of hardware-assisted software virtualization
1.5.2 Disadvantages of hardware-assisted software virtualization
1.5.3 the benefits of quasi-virtualization
1.5.4 the disadvantages of quasi-virtualization
1.6 Summary of this chapter
2nd Introduction to Oracle VMS
2.1 History of 0racle VMS
Features of the 2.2 0racle VM
2.2.1 0racle VM Server
2.2.2 0racle VM Manager
2.3 0racle support for virtual machines
2.4 0racle Virtual Machine Template Library
2.4.1 0racle 64-bit virtual machine template
2.4.2 0racle 32-bit virtual machine template
2.5 Summary of this chapter
Chapter 3rd Oracle VM Architecture
3.1 0racle VM Architecture
3.1.1 Server and server pools
3.1.2 Oracle VM Manager
3.2 Xen Architecture
3.2.1 DomO
3.2.2 DOmU
3.2.3 Domu and Dom0 interactions
3.2.4 Network
3.2.5 Comparison of hardware virtual machines and quasi-virtual machines
3.2.6 Virtual machine monitor or Xen hypeⅳisor
Features of the 3.3 0racle VM
Hardware support for 3.4 0racle VMS
3.5 Summary of this chapter
Chapter 4th Oracle VM Lifecycle Management
4.1 0racle VM Virtual machine life cycle
4.1.1 Creating and deleting
4.1.2 Start and stop
4.1.3 Pausing and suspending
4.1.4 cloning, creating templates, and migrating
4.2 State Management and transformation
4.2.1 Shutdown Status
4.2.2 Running Status
4.2.3 Paused State
4.2.4 Suspend State
4.3 Summary of this chapter
5th. Enterprise-Class VM server farm planning and scale design
5.1 Planning VM Server farm
5.1.11 server pools or multiple server pools
5.1.2 Planning Server Pool
Configuration of the 5.1.3 server pool
5.2 Scale and capacity planning
5.2.1 Scale Design
5.2.2 Capacity Planning
5.2.3 Monitoring and capacity planning
5.3 Chapter Summary Section Ⅱ Installing and configuring an Oracle VM
6th. Installing the Oracle VM Senrer
6.1 Hardware requirements for 0racle VM server
6.2 Installing VM Server
6.2.1 Installing from CD-ROM
6.2.2 Installing from a non-CD-ROM
6.3 Upgrading VM Server
6.4 Summary of this chapter
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Section Ⅲ managing Oracle VM Server and clients
Section Ⅳ Installing and configuring guest operating systems
Section Ⅴ Appendices and Glossary
Appendix A configuring Linux support features
Appendix B Oracle VM log files
Vocabulary List
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Oracle VM implementations and management PDF