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How can the administrator ensure that the attributes configured on the new data source are used by the applica

A developer created an enterprise application which contained data source and security role
information. The developer asked a system administrator to install this application to an application
server where global security is enabled using the Integrated Solutions Console (ISC). A new data
source was configured at the server scope for the use of this application. While load testing the
application, the developer noticed that the attributes configured on the new data source were
ignored by the application server.
How can the administrator ensure that the attributes configured on the new data source are used
by the application server?

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A.
Create the data source under cell scope instead of server scope.

B.
Delete any data source of the same name defined under node, cluster or cell scope.

C.
Reinstall the application and clear the Process embedded configuration check box.

D.
Correct the component-managed and container-managed authentication aliases set on the data
source.

13 Comments on “How can the administrator ensure that the attributes configured on the new data source are used by the applica

  1. ibmsucks says:

    I think D is wrong. Wrong authentication aliases do not lead to the mentioned symptom. It seems that the application does not “see” the datasource at all.
    It´s more probable that the embedded config contains errors. So C ist right.




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  2. certhunt says:

    Process embedded configuration
    Specifies whether the embedded configuration should be processed. An embedded configuration consists of files such as resource.xml and variables.xml. When selected or true, the embedded configuration is loaded to the application scope from the .ear file.




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  3. Pravesh says:

    C is correct one

    Process embedded configuration

    Specifies whether the embedded configuration should be processed. An embedded configuration consists of files such as resource.xml, variables.xml, and deployment.xml. You can collect WebSphere Application Server-specific deployment information and store it in the application EAR file. Such an EAR file can then be installed into a WebSphere Application Server configuration, using application management interfaces that are described in the topic, Installing an application through programming.

    One such application EAR file is an enhanced EAR file, which is created when you export an already installed application. The embedded configuration check box identifies such an enhanced EAR file. By default, the check box for “process embedded configuration” is checked if the application is detected to be an enhanced EAR. The application install options are prepopulated with the information from the embedded configuration whether the check box for “process embedded configuration” is checked or not. Users can overwrite these values during the deployment process.

    https://www-01.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSAW57_8.0.0/com.ibm.websphere.nd.doc/info/ae/ae/urun_rapp_installoptions.html




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  4. indus says:

    A is the Right Answer
    Avoid trouble Avoid trouble: In a distributed operating system environment, the scope of the pathmap variable starts from the nodeagent-level scope instead of from a server-level scope. If the variable is not found in the nodeagent-level scope, then the variable is looked up in the node-level scope and finally in the cell-level scope.

    Ref: https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSAW57_8.0.0/com.ibm.websphere.nd.doc/info/ae/ae/urun_rapp_installoptions.html




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