Introduction to Oracle EnterpriseOne (E1)
Technically I guess the name should be Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne (E1). How’s that for a name. Anyway, the main system that I work on during the day is EnterpriseOne (E1). It is what my employer uses for their ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning – a fancy name for accounting) system.
It was originally a JD Edwards product called OneWorld (the new version of JDE’s very stable product “World”). Then JD Edwards was purchased by PeopleSoft to try and avert a take-over by Oracle and was named EnterpriseOne (E1) (combining PeopleSoft’s product name, “Enterprise”, with “OneWorld”). However, in the end, Mr. Ellison won the battle to acquire PeopleSoft, which resulted in the name JD Edwards EnterpiseOne.
Ok, enough with the name…
Currently, we have two installations with the following configurations:
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E1 Software | ||
E1 Version | Tools Release | |
InstallationA | 8.11 SP1 | 8.95.P1 |
InstallationB | 8.11 SP1 | 8.95.P1 |
Enterprise Server – IBM iSeries 550 | |||||
OS | CPU | Disk | RAM | NIC | |
InstallationA | V5R3 | 1.4 | 1.5TB | 25GB | 1GB |
InstallationB | V5R3 | 0.6 | 600GB | 17GB | 1GB |
Deployment Server – MS Windows Server 2003 | ||||
CPU | Disk | RAM | NIC | |
InstallationA | Dual Intel Xeon 2.8 GHz | 136 GB | 2 GB | 1 GB |
InstallationB | Dual Intel Xeon 3.2 GHz | 136 GB | 2 GB | 1 GB |
Java Application Server – MS Windows Server 2003 | ||||||
CPU | Disk | RAM | NIC | JAS | HTTP | |
InstallationA | Dual Intel Xeon 2.8 GHz | 68 GB | 2 GB | 1 GB | IBM WAS 5.0.2 | IBM HTTP 2.0 |
InstallationB | Dual Intel Xeon 3.2 GHz | 68 GB | 3.2 GB | 1 GB | IBM WAS 5.0.2 | IBM HTTP 2.0 |
Although 70-270 or 646-204 is not a prerequisite in 70-620 or the proceeding advanced exams like 220-601 and 70-649, but eventually one suffers because of ill preparation in SY0-101.
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