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Specify other settings such as notification services and mapping recommendations.See Configure Settings for Error Logs in Administering Oracle Integration Classic and Upload an SSL Certificate in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart The Try a Recipe banner at the top of the Home page showcases an integration recipe for employee onboarding and a QuickStart App for a travel approval process.These two prebuilt solutions are from the extensive collection of recipes, accelerators, QuickStart Apps, and samples included in Oracle Integration.You can use any available prebuilt solution to get a head start in building integrations or process applications instead of creating them from scratch.Chapter 2 Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart 2-6Integration Recipe - Employee Onboarding To view the integration flow, position your cursor on Employee Onboarding and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications . |
See Configure Settings for Error Logs in Administering Oracle Integration Classic and Upload an SSL Certificate in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart The Try a Recipe banner at the top of the Home page showcases an integration recipe for employee onboarding and a QuickStart App for a travel approval process.These two prebuilt solutions are from the extensive collection of recipes, accelerators, QuickStart Apps, and samples included in Oracle Integration.You can use any available prebuilt solution to get a head start in building integrations or process applications instead of creating them from scratch.Chapter 2 Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart 2-6Integration Recipe - Employee Onboarding To view the integration flow, position your cursor on Employee Onboarding and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart . |
Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart The Try a Recipe banner at the top of the Home page showcases an integration recipe for employee onboarding and a QuickStart App for a travel approval process.These two prebuilt solutions are from the extensive collection of recipes, accelerators, QuickStart Apps, and samples included in Oracle Integration.You can use any available prebuilt solution to get a head start in building integrations or process applications instead of creating them from scratch.Chapter 2 Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart 2-6Integration Recipe - Employee Onboarding To view the integration flow, position your cursor on Employee Onboarding and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs. |
These two prebuilt solutions are from the extensive collection of recipes, accelerators, QuickStart Apps, and samples included in Oracle Integration.You can use any available prebuilt solution to get a head start in building integrations or process applications instead of creating them from scratch.Chapter 2 Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart 2-6Integration Recipe - Employee Onboarding To view the integration flow, position your cursor on Employee Onboarding and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color. |
You can use any available prebuilt solution to get a head start in building integrations or process applications instead of creating them from scratch.Chapter 2 Try an Integration Recipe or a Process QuickStart 2-6Integration Recipe - Employee Onboarding To view the integration flow, position your cursor on Employee Onboarding and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card. |
After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Accelerators and Recipes page.You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you. |
You can now install the recipe, configure the connections, activate the integration, and explore how the integration works.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks. |
See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time. |
Process QuickStart - Travel Approval To view the process flow, position your cursor on Travel Approval and click Run Demo .After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days. |
After the demo, click Get Started to go to the Gallery page.Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area. |
Search for and open the Travel Approval application to customize the process for your organization.See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page. |
See Create Your First Application (a Quick Start) in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones. |
Tips To hide the banner and free up space on the Home page, click the Up Arrow icon.To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration . |
To find other recipes that you can use to create an integration, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page and click Search All .To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations. |
To find other QuickStart Apps that you can use to create process applications, open the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Processes , and then click Process Applications .Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area. |
Click Create and then click Start with a QuickStart .The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing. |
The Gallery lists both QuickStart Apps and Sample applications that you can use as is or adapt to fit your business needs.Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration . |
Get Stats at a Glance The Summary section on the Home page, which is a mini dashboard, gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your tasks, processes, integrations, and Insight models.Chapter 2 Get Stats at a Glance 2-7To see a break down of the total numbers, position the cursor over a color.To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models. |
To get quick access to more details, click an individual card.Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area. |
Summary Item Description Click to... My Tasks Shows the total number of tasks assigned to you.Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area. |
Open the My Tasks page and work on your assigned tasks.Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states. |
Processes Shows the total number of process instances that have been activated over a specified time.Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models. |
Use the drop-down menu to select a period of the last 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days.To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 . |
To see the number of completed processes, position the cursor over the green area.To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications. |
To see the number of processes that are in progress, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Process Applications page.On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications. |
On this page, you can create and activate process applications, or work on existing ones.See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones. |
See Tour the Process Applications Page in Using Processes in Oracle Integration .Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration . |
Integrations Shows the total number of messages and failed activations.To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes . |
To see the number of failed messages, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems. |
To see the number of successful messages of active integrations, position the cursor over the green area.Open the Dashboards page and get a comprehensive view of how your integrations are performing.See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package . |
See View the Dashboards in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration .Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed . |
Insight Shows the total number of Insight models.To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages. |
To see the number of failed models, position the cursor over the red area.To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle. |
To see the number of deactivated models, position the cursor over the yellow area.To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes. |
To see the number of activated models, position the cursor over the blue area.Open the Models page, which provides access to all the models in all lifecycle states.On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card. |
On this page, you can create new models and work with existing models.See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe. |
See Work with the Models Page in Using Integration Insight in Oracle Integration Generation 2 .Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration. |
Visual Applications Shows the total number of visual applications.Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter. |
Hover over each pie section to see the number of applications in that category.Opens the Visual Builder page, which provides access to all visual applications.On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration. |
On this page, you can create new applications and work with existing ones.See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package. |
See Getting Started with Oracle Visual Builder in OIC in Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration .Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe. |
Explore Accelerators and Recipes Oracle Integration offers a rich set of run-ready business and technical integrations called accelerators , and also sample templates called recipes .Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe. |
Accelerators andChapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-8recipes give you a head start in creating your integrations and provide end-to-end connections for critical business problems.In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All . |
In Oracle Integration, you can group one or more integrations into a single structure called a package .Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use. |
Because you created the package, its type is developed .Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card. |
Accelerators and recipes are other types of packages.An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set. |
An accelerator package or a recipe package consists of a series of prebuilt integrations developed by Oracle.The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes. |
The Accelerators & Recipes section on the Home page displays some of the available accelerators and recipes.To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations. |
To learn about a particular accelerator or recipe, review the information on its card.A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently. |
A card: Lists the two applications that the integration connects to, followed by a brief purpose of the accelerator or recipe.Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes. |
Uses images and + number to indicate the adapters used by the integration.Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off. |
Position the cursor over the images to see the name of an adapter.Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work. |
Displays INSTALLED to indicate that the accelerator or recipe, as well as all its dependent resources, are already deployed in Oracle Integration.Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you. |
Displays ACCELERATOR or RECIPE to indicate the type of package.Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks. |
Lists who produced the accelerator or recipe.Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you. |
Provides a full description of the accelerator or recipe.To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane. |
To browse the entire collection, click Search All .You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is. |
You can then search, filter, and sort the list to find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration. |
To get quick access to one of the accelerators or recipes listed on the Home page, click its card.Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner. |
Note that the Accelerators and Recipes page now only displays the accelerator or recipe you selected because the search parameters were automatically set.Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications. |
Clear the search criteria to see all the accelerators and recipes.You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance. |
You can install the accelerator or recipe, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions? |
See Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Chapter 2 Explore Accelerators and Recipes 2-9Open Recently Worked on Items The Recent section on the Home page lists the items that you worked on recently.Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration. |
Perhaps you edited several integrations or built some new processes.No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant. |
No need to navigate the menus and search for where you left off.Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant. |
Instead, click the card in the Recent section to return to your work.It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation. |
It's fast, direct, and personalized for you.See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder. |
See Your Process Tasks The My Tasks section on the Home page displays your process tasks.Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for. |
Click the task to open it in workspace, view details, or work on the task if it's assigned to you.Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration". |
Start Developing by Feature Use the Go to section on the Home page to jump directly to the appropriate page and tools for developing processes, integrations, B2B integrations, visual apps, or Insight models.Chapter 2 Open Recently Worked on Items 2-10You can use these shortcuts instead of traversing the menu in the navigation pane.For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way. |
For direct access: Click Processes to create an application from scratch, or select a sample or QuickStart App from the gallery that you can customize or activate as is.Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time. |
Click Integrations to create connections and an integration that uses them, or activate a ready-to-use sample integration.Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves. |
Click B2B to use an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) format in an orchestrated integration to exchange documents in a secure and reliable manner.Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions? |
Click Visual Builder to create and publish custom web and mobile applications.Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information. |
Click Insight to create and edit models that describe the milestones of a business process that are key for tracking business performance.Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant. |
Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions? |
Ask Oracle Assistant Oracle Assistant is a digital assistant that can answer common questions about Oracle Integration.If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package. |
If you have questions about Oracle Integration, ask Oracle Assistant.Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration. |
Oracle Assistant joined Oracle Integration in August 2021 and was developed using Oracle Digital Assistant.You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate. |
You can ask questions in full sentences and Oracle Assistant will try getting the best answer for you, even searching the product documentation.You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start. |
You can ask general questions about Oracle Integration or specific questions about Integrations, Process, Integration Insight, File Server, B2B, or Visual Builder.When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes. |
When you ask questions, try to be as specific as you can in what you're looking for.For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch). |
For example, if you're looking for information on three-legged Oauth configuration, tell the assistant "Oauth three-legged configuration", instead of "Oauth integration".You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures). |
You'll get better answers that way.Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start. |
Oracle Assistant is constantly improving, so the assistant does get better with time.The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes. |
The more you use the assistant, the more the assistant improves.You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions. |
You can tell Oracle Assistant:Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section. |
Ask Oracle Assistant 2-11"Find" with a keyword to immediately search the product documentation for information."Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All . |
"Not helpful", to make a note so that the team can improve Oracle Assistant.If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens. |
If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new position.Chapter 2 Questions?Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view. |
Ask Oracle Assistant 2-123 Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators and recipes are pre-assembled solutions that bundle all the resources required by the integrations, such as the connections and lookups, into one package.Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed. |
Use an accelerator or recipe to quickly get started building your first integration.Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe. |
Topics: Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Find Accelerators and Recipes Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes Install Accelerators and Recipes Configure Resources Activate All the Integrations in the Accelerator or Recipe Uninstall Accelerators and Recipes Learn About Differences Between Accelerators and Recipes Accelerators are run-ready business integrations or technical patterns that you can configure and activate.Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation. |
Recipes are templates or samples that give you a head start.Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane. |
Here's a comparison of accelerators and recipes.Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package. |
Accelerators Recipes A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package.These resources include the connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and libraries. |
A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for example, sending alerts on failures).They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package.These resources include the connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and libraries.Note: Oracle Integration comes with the Resequence Messages technical accelerator automatically installed. |
They are meant to be called by another integration.A recipe is a sample or template that gives you a head start.Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package.These resources include the connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and libraries.Note: Oracle Integration comes with the Resequence Messages technical accelerator automatically installed.Therefore, this accelerator will already be listed as INSTALLED on the Accelerators and Recipes page when you sign in. |
Managed and supported by the producer Not supported Configurable and extendable Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Upgrades provided by producer Cant auto-upgrade to new versions Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS Configurator in Oracle Integration Paid offering (as decided by producer) Always free 3-1Find Accelerators and Recipes The Home page displays a partial listing of the available accelerators and recipes.It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package.These resources include the connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and libraries.Note: Oracle Integration comes with the Resequence Messages technical accelerator automatically installed.Therefore, this accelerator will already be listed as INSTALLED on the Accelerators and Recipes page when you sign in.To install accelerators and recipes: 1.Find the accelerator or recipe that you want to install. |
It also provides access to the Accelerators and Recipes page, where you can search through the entire portfolio of pre-assembled solutions.To find an accelerator or a recipe: 1.On the Home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .The Accelerators and Recipes page opens.Note that you can toggle the display between a list view and a grid view.3.Use the options in the toolbar to narrow your search, filter and sort the list, update the list, and change how the list is displayed.You can: Search the list by any text string Filter the list by type (all, recipe, accelerator) or by provider, and sort the list by name or last updated Refresh the list Switch between a list view or a grid view Get More Details About Accelerators or Recipes The Accelerators and Recipes page displays useful information to help you decide whether you want to use a particular accelerator or recipe.At a glance, you can see which applications the integration connects to, what's the purpose of the integration, what adapters are used, who built it, what type of package it is (ACCELERATOR or RECIPE), and whether it's already installed.Chapter 3 Find Accelerators and Recipes 3-2You can also get other details, such as the package name, version number, and publication date, as well as a link to documentation.To see more information, hover over the card, then click Open Details to expand the information pane.Install Accelerators and Recipes When you install an accelerator or a recipe, Oracle Integration deploys all the resources required by the integrations in the package.These resources include the connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and libraries.Note: Oracle Integration comes with the Resequence Messages technical accelerator automatically installed.Therefore, this accelerator will already be listed as INSTALLED on the Accelerators and Recipes page when you sign in.To install accelerators and recipes: 1.Find the accelerator or recipe that you want to install.2.Hover over the accelerator or recipe card, then Install . |
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