Oracle Enterprise Manager includes three releases:
Oracle Enterprise Manager Database Control Oracle Enterprise Manager Database Control, the oldest and arguably the best-known release, aims to manage
Oracle databases. It originated as a
Java client able to configure and manage databases.
Oracle Enterprise Manager Application Server Control Oracle Application Server also has a web-interface to manage the application server.
Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control To manage many databases and application servers (according to Oracle Corporation, preferably in a
grid solution), the Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control can be used. It can manage multiple instances of Oracle deployment
platforms; the most recent edition also allows for management and monitoring of other platforms such as
Microsoft .NET,
Microsoft SQL Server,
NetApp filers,
BEA Weblogic and others. Partners and IT organizations can build extensions to Oracle Enterprise Manager, and make them available to other Enterprise Manager users via an Oracle hosted web site called Oracle Enterprise Manager Extensibility Exchange.
System monitoring features include monitoring functionality that supports detection and notification of impending IT problems. It monitors Oracle
Database instances, Oracle Real Application Clusters, and Oracle Application Server Farms and Clusters. OEM Grid Control comes with a set of performance and
health metrics that allow monitoring of technology components such as applications, application servers, databases, as well as the back-end components on which they rely, such as hosts, operating systems and storage. The architecture of the OEM for Grid Control has three distinct components: • the collection agent (Oracle Management Agent or OMA) • the aggregation agent (
Oracle Management Server or OMS) • the repository agent (Oracle Management Repository or OMR) The OMA runs on the target host and collects information on the hardware,
operating system, and applications that run on the target. The OMS runs on one or two servers and collects the data generated by the OMAs. The OMS pulls the information from the OMAs and aggregates the collections into the
repository. The OMS also acts as the user-interface — by generating web-pages for
database administrators to view the status of systems and services. The OMR comprises an instance of the Oracle database that stores the data collected by the OMS. Installers can make the OMR highly available or
fault-tolerant by running it on an
Oracle RAC instance across multiple nodes. Plug-ins on each of the OMAs can customise or manipulate the data presented by the OEM by extending the data that the OMAs collect. Administrators can customize the analysis of the data with "management packs" to look at specific collections of data to display a system's performance. The release of OEM allows for the design and configuration of custom Plug-ins to monitor any application desired. OMAs collect the data using the custom-built plug-in and transmit the results in XML format back to the OMS, which then stores and analyzes the data as desired. Oracle Enterprise Manager continues to expand its monitoring scope by offering management plug-ins for non-Oracle components, that are both Oracle-developed and developed in partnership by third-party vendors. For example, Plug-ins for
Veritas Storage Foundation,
VMWare vSphere, and
EMC Clariion are available. Key features of OEM Grid Control: • System Monitoring • Managing Groups • Job System • Information Publisher • Compliance Management • Extending Enterprise Manager • Managing Targets
Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control This is Oracle's release since 13c ==Functionality==