This video demonstrates Coherence management using REST and introduce the Coherence metrics available over HTTP.
In this tutorial you will learn how to install, configure and work with Oracle Coherence Persistence 12.2.1.
The Oracle Coherence Persistence feature enables Coherence to be a system-of-record and improves time-to-recovery from planned or unplanned, partial or total cluster outages. Persistence can be configured to work in an on-line mode persisting changes as they are made to the cluster, or to take a snapshot of a data grid. Local disk configuration maximizes scalability, while network-attached storage maximizes availability. Both data and metadata (indexes, listeners, expiry, locks, etc.) are stored, and recovery is completely automatic.
An overview of the new features and strategy behind the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the zero configuration clustering and networking features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the authorizing & auditing features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the Asynchronous API features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the generics features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the support for the Java 8 Stream API included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the persistence features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the support for Java 8 Lambdas included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
An overview of the federated caching features included in the Oracle Coherence 12c (12.2.1) release.
This video explains the 3 different types of cache used in Oracle Coherence. Video put together by Simon Cook of Oracle.
The objective of this tutorial is to provide a hands-on experience with the Managed Coherence Servers functionality available in WebLogic Server with Coherence 12.1.2 and later. Managed Coherence Servers, or MCS, allows the Coherence instances to be defined, controlled and managed within the WebLogic Server framework. Coherence effectively is now a subsystem of WebLogic Server rather than the historic method of being deployed as separate class being called by a script. Coherence clusters can now be defined within a WebLogic Server domain and associated with WebLogic Server clusters and managed servers. And a new artifact, a Grid ARchive, or GAR file, is now deployable as a individual component, as part of an Enterprise ARchive (EAR) file, or as a shared library, or certain combinations. The GAR file contains the classes and configuration to support both storage enabled and storage disabled cluster resource
This interactive upgrade guide used animation, audio and other interactive features to guide the viewer through the Coherence upgrade process. The guide presents an overview of Coherence upgrade paths as well as details, pointers, pitfalls and resources helpful to anyone looking to upgrade Oracle Coherence.