Part 1 Introduction to Installing Oracle Fusion Applications
1.2 Obtain Oracle Fusion Applications Software Media
Download Oracle Fusion Applications Software from edelivery.oracle.com
1.3 Oracle Fusion Applications Basic Topology
1.4 Software Required for Oracle Fusion Applications Installation
1.5 Configurations of the Basic Topology
Number of Nodes | Components per Node | Host Names |
3 | Node 1 : FA* | fa01.mydomain.com 10.10.2.186 |
Node 2 : IDM | idm01.mydomain.com 10.10.2.187 | |
Node 3 : FA DB, IDM DB | dbnode01.mydomain.com 10.10.2.48 |
1.6 Oracle Fusion Applications Topologies
The Oracle Fusion Applications Provisioning Wizard supports three topology types as well, but unlike the Oracle Identity Management topologies, Oracle Fusion Applications topologies are not necessarily related to the type of environment being
created (development, test, production) and none of them will provide high availability out of the box. (High availability for Oracle Fusion Applications components must be done manually, as a post-install step). Instead, these topologies define how the various Oracle Fusion Applications components will be split across servers, so the main driver for this decision should be server hardware capacity (memory and processing power).
Additionally, these topologies apply only to the Mid Tier. The Web Tier can use a separate host or, if desired, share the same host with the Mid Tier.
The Oracle Identity Management Provisioning Wizard supports three topology types for Oracle Identity Management. These topologies are related to the type of environment being created (e.g. development, test, production) and the desired availability (HA, non-HA). They also play a role in defining which type of identity store will be used (OID or OVD).
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