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The Topic & Partition page appears.6.Configure the following in the Topic & Partition page.a.In the Select a Topic list, choose the Apache Kafka topic from which you want to query and fetch messages.b.Select a partition from the Specify the Partition list, or use the Default selection.c.Specify the consumer group to use in the Consumer Group field.d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe. |
6.Configure the following in the Topic & Partition page.a.In the Select a Topic list, choose the Apache Kafka topic from which you want to query and fetch messages.b.Select a partition from the Specify the Partition list, or use the Default selection.c.Specify the consumer group to use in the Consumer Group field.d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic. |
a.In the Select a Topic list, choose the Apache Kafka topic from which you want to query and fetch messages.b.Select a partition from the Specify the Partition list, or use the Default selection.c.Specify the consumer group to use in the Consumer Group field.d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe. |
b.Select a partition from the Specify the Partition list, or use the Default selection.c.Specify the consumer group to use in the Consumer Group field.d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate . |
c.Specify the consumer group to use in the Consumer Group field.d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate . |
d.Select the Read latest option under Specify the option for consuming messages .e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated. |
e.In the Maximum Number of Records to be fetched field, specify the number of messages to be read.f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe. |
f.In the Do you want to specify the message structure?field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow. |
field, select No.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-7g.In the Do you want to specify the headers for the message?field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now . |
field, select No.h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears. |
h.Click Next and then click Done .See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter. |
See Add the Kafka Adapter Connection to an Integration in Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration .7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field. |
7.On the Integration editor, click Save .8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka . |
8.Click Close to return back to the Configuration Editor.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit . |
Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration, you can activate and run the recipe.Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run. |
Note: Before activating and running the recipe, ensure that there are some messages in the Apache Kafka topic.1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration. |
1.Activate the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking . |
a.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate .b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully. |
b.On the Activate Package dialog, click Activate .You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket. |
You get a confirmation message that the integration is activated.2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files. |
2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page. |
a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages. |
b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly. |
The Schedule Parameters window appears.c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers. |
c.In the Schedule Parameters window, specify a value for the AmazonS3BucketName parameter.Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data. |
Enter the name of the Amazon S3 bucket to which you want to export Apache Kafka messages in the New Value field.For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application. |
For example, oracle-kafka .d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store. |
d.Click Submit .You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only. |
You've successfully submitted the integration for a test run.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free. |
3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe. |
a.On the Oracle Integration navigation pane, click Home , then Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce. |
b.On the Track Instances page, you can see the integration being triggered and executed successfully.The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter. |
The recipe now fetches predefined number of messages from the specified Apache Kafka topic and exports them as JSON files into the Amazon S3 bucket.4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package. |
4.Check if the Apache Kafka messages are exported into the Amazon S3 bucket as JSON files.a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application. |
a.Log in to your AWS Management Console, and navigate to the Amazon S3 page.Appendix A Cloud Storage/Content Management Recipes A-8b.Select the Amazon S3 bucket from the Buckets section of the page.c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce. |
c.In the bucket details page, check if there are JSON files for the corresponding Apache Kafka messages.You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered. |
You can open one of the JSON files using a text editor such as Notepad++ and compare the content of the file with the corresponding Apache Kafka message to see if it is exported correctly.Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe. |
Related Documentation Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes Oracle Integration includes a set of recipes that help you integrate applications related to managing the relationship with your customers.These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance. |
These recipes handle common business tasks such as converting opportunities to quotes to orders, dispatching service technicians, managing membership, and synchronizing customer data.Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration. |
Topics: Attach Files to Salesforce Records Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Create Box Folders for Zendesk Organizations Create Orders in Oracle B2B Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities Create Salesforce Cases for Jira Issues Create Zendesk Tickets for Jira Issues Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Import Marketo Leads to Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse Integrate Oracle Internet of Things Intelligent Applications Cloud with Oracle Field Service Cloud Manage ServiceNow Incidents Post Slack Notifications for New Marketo Leads Post Slack Notifications for ServiceNow Activities Send Compliance Documents from DocuSign to New ServiceNow Users Send Documents from Salesforce to DocuSign Send Notifications to Salesforce Lead Owners Using Twilio Send SurveyMonkey Surveys to Salesforce Contacts by Email Sync Customer Data Between Oracle Loyalty Cloud and Oracle Responsys Sync Data Between Oracle CPQ Transactions and Salesforce Quotes Sync Incidents and Resources Between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle B2C Service Sync Orgs and Contacts Between Oracle B2C Service and Oracle Marketing CloudAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-9Attach Files to Salesforce Records Use this recipe to attach files to a Salesforce record from an external application.Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration. |
Note: This recipe is available as REST Salesforce | Attach Files to Records in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version. |
Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files. |
The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks. |
No support is provided for this recipe.Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI. |
Overview When this recipe receives a REST request containing a file from an external application or from another integration flow in Oracle Integration, it attaches the file to the specified record in Salesforce.The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI. |
The recipe contains an app-driven orchestration integration, which uses the standard REST Adapter and the Salesforce Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic . |
To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connection and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role. |
Subsequently, you can activate the integration flow of the package and send a POST request (containing a file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file) to the integration's endpoint URL from an external application.When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration. |
When triggered, the integration flow attaches the file received to the specified record in Salesforce.If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane. |
If your REST request doesn't contain a file, the integration flow isn't triggered.Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles . |
Note: You can attach more than one file at a time with this recipe.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile . |
System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 21.2.1.0.0 or higher Salesforce An account on Salesforce with the Administrator role Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the RecipeAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-10Before You Install the Recipe To access Salesforce using Oracle Integration and attach files to records, you must perform certain configuration tasks on your Salesforce instance.You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field. |
You must create a user account on Salesforce for Oracle Integration.You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save . |
You'll use the credentials of this user account while configuring the Salesforce connection in Oracle Integration.In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed. |
In addition, you must identify your Salesforce instance type and your current Salesforce API version.Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page. |
Finally, you must obtain the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected. |
Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and execute the following tasks.Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions. |
Note: The steps provided here apply to the Salesforce Classic UI.If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked. |
If you're using the Lightning Experience UI on your Salesforce instance, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box. |
See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked. |
1.Create an API-enabled custom role.You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box. |
You'll assign this role to the user account you'll subsequently create for Oracle Integration.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked. |
a.On the Salesforce Setup page, expand Manage Users under the Administer section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked. |
b.Click Profiles .c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes. |
c.On the Profiles page, click New Profile .d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save . |
d.On the resulting page: i.Select Standard User in the Existing Profile field.ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account. |
ii.Enter a name for the new profile, for example, API Enabled , and click Save .The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account. |
The new profile is now saved, and the Profile Detail page of the new profile is displayed.e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users . |
e.Click Edit on the Profile Detail page.f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page. |
f.On the Profile Edit page: i.Scroll to the Administrative Permissions section and ensure that the API Enabled check box is selected.ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 . |
ii.Scroll to the Standard Object Permissions section and perform the following actions.In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address. |
In the Accounts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field. |
Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name. |
In the Contacts row, leave the Read , Create , Edit, and Delete boxes checked.Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce . |
Additionally, select the ViewAll check box.In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled . |
In the Price Books row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save . |
Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-11In the Products row, leave the Read box checked.Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account. |
Additionally, select the Create , Edit, and Delete check boxes.iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce. |
iii.Scroll to the end of the page and click Save .2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account. |
2.Create a user account for Oracle Integration and assign the custom role created previously to this account.Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same. |
Note: If you have already created a user account for Oracle Integration, you can assign the API-enabled custom role to the existing account.a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account. |
a.On the Profile Detail page of the API Enabled profile, click View Users .b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI. |
b.Click New User in the resulting page.c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic . |
c.On the New User page: i.Enter a first name and last name for the user, for example, Integration User05 .ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account. |
ii.In the Email field, enter a valid email address.The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration. |
The email address you enter is automatically populated in the Username field.Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu. |
Note down this user name.iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information . |
iii.In the User License field, select Salesforce .iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane. |
iv.In the Profile field, select the profile you created previously, that is, API Enabled .v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button. |
v.Scroll to the end of the page, ensure that the Generate new password and notify user immediately check box is selected, and click Save .The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account. |
The user account is now created, and a verification email is sent to the email address you provided for the account.d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token. |
d.Log in to the corresponding email account and click the Verify Account button in the email message from Salesforce.You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu. |
You're redirected to the Salesforce instance to set a password for the new user account.e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator . |
e.Set a password and note down the same.Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version. |
Subsequently, you're signed in to the Salesforce instance with the new account.Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane. |
Note: If you're shown the Lighting Experience UI, switch to the Salesforce Classic UI.See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Develop , and then API. |
See Toggle or switch between Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic .f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Develop , and then API.c.On the API WSDL page, click the Generate Enterprise WSDL link. |
f.Generate a security token for the new user account.You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Develop , and then API.c.On the API WSDL page, click the Generate Enterprise WSDL link.The WSDL is displayed in a new browser tab, and your current API version is present in the second line. |
You'll need this security token along with the password to access Salesforce using Oracle Integration.i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Develop , and then API.c.On the API WSDL page, click the Generate Enterprise WSDL link.The WSDL is displayed in a new browser tab, and your current API version is present in the second line.For example: Salesforce.com Enterprise Web Services API Version 52.0 d.Note down the API version. |
i.Stay signed in as the new user, and click the user name at the top of the page to open a menu.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-12ii.Click My Settings in the menu.iii.On the My Settings page, in the Quick Links section, click Edit my personal information .iv.On the resulting page, click Reset My Security Token in the left navigation pane.v.Click the Reset Security Token button.A new security token is sent to the email address associated with the account.Note down the security token.vi.On the Salesforce instance, click the user name again and select Logout from the menu.Log back in as the Administrator .3.Identify your current Salesforce API version.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, scroll to the Build section in the left navigation pane.b.Click Develop , and then API.c.On the API WSDL page, click the Generate Enterprise WSDL link.The WSDL is displayed in a new browser tab, and your current API version is present in the second line.For example: Salesforce.com Enterprise Web Services API Version 52.0 d.Note down the API version.4.Identify your Salesforce instance type. |
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