BEA AquaLogic Interaction Administration 6.5


What you will learn

This course provides technical team members with the basic knowledge required to implement and administer AquaLogic Interaction. Students learn how AquaLogic Interaction components communicate and about their interdependencies. Students use their own portal installation for hands on labs. They learn how to integrate other systems; they import LDAP users and groups, configure existing web services and configure and run content crawlers. The course provides in-depth coverage of the security system (Active Control Lists, Activity Rights, Groups, and Roles). The course also covers administrative maintenance tasks related to content, search and daily housekeeping. Finally, students learn how to personalize applications and the User Interface for end users through the implementation of features like communities, experiences and Adaptive Layouts. By the end of the course, all students have a solid foundation for implementing AquaLogic Interaction and a good understanding of what tasks can be performed by whom over the life cycle of the implementation: administrators, programmers and business users (such as community managers or content managers). Students may run an optional installation lab on the last day.



Audience
Administrator
Developer

Prerequisites
Basic Windows operating system administration experience
Familiarity with web and application servers (IIS, Tomcat, WebLogic)
Familiarity with LDAP servers
BEA AquaLogic Interaction Foundations

Course Objectives
Maintain content and its search index
Configure an LDAP authorization source that synchronizes-in groups and users
Configure a User Profile web service that synchronizes more user information
Enable the Social Computing features of AquaLogic Interaction
Import, export and edit migration packages
Monitor and troubleshoot the portal using the Logging Spy and other utilities
Install the AquaLogic Interaction portal
Create, run and troubleshoot jobs
Perform routine maintenance tasks
Create users and groups (including dynamic groups)
Manage permissions using Access Control Lists (ACLs)
Create internally and externally-facing communities
Apply Adaptive Layouts to change the User Interface
Create experiences for different target audiences
Configure web services
Create and run web and file crawlers


Course Topics

Architecture and Runtime Environment

Configuring the Automation Server and Jobs

Configuring Portal Access and Permissions

Creating Communities

Configuring Web Services

Using Adaptive Layouts

Enabling Multiple Portal Experiences

An Overview of Content Management

Building the Knowledge Directory

Securing the Knowledge Directory

Advanced Knowledge Directory Security

Creating Content Sources

Introducing Content Crawlers

Creating a Web Content Crawler

Creating a Windows File Content Crawler

Understanding Properties and Content Types

Managing Properties and Content Types

Importing Users and Groups

Managing the User Profile

Enabling Social Computing

Migrating Objects

Installing, Configuring, & Troubleshooting the Portal