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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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production . |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox . |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts . |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/). |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources. |
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.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All . |
For example: Salesforce.com Enterprise Web Services API Version 52.0 d.Note down the API version.4.Identify your Salesforce instance type.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install. |
4.Identify your Salesforce instance type.a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon. |
a.If you use the URL https://login.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Production .b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package. |
b.If you use the URL https://test.salesforce.com to log in to your Salesforce account, your instance type is Sandbox .5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package. |
5.Identify the Salesforce record to which you want to attach files and obtain the record's ID.As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe. |
As an example, we'll use an account record.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection. |
a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection . |
Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit . |
b.On the Accounts Home page, click an account to open it.c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured. |
c.In the account page's URL, note down the string after the last forward slash (/).This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful. |
This is the account record's Salesforce ID.You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save . |
You'll specify this ID while sending a REST request with the file attachment from an external application to the integration flow of this recipe.Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time. |
Install and Configure the Recipe On your Oracle Integration instance, install the recipe package to deploy and configure the integration and associated resources.1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page. |
1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-132.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted. |
3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection . |
4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit . |
5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears. |
The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details. |
Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type. |
Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection Configure the Oracle REST Trigger Connection Test and save the Oracle REST Trigger Connection.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version. |
1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Trigger Connection .2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe . |
2.Click Edit .3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details. |
3.On the Oracle REST Trigger Connection page, click Test to ensure that your connection is correctly configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected. |
A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce. |
4.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce. |
If prompted, click Save for a second time.5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account. |
5.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save . |
Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time. |
Configure the Oracle Salesforce Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Salesforce Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured. |
2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again. |
The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful. |
3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page. |
Field Information to Enter Select Salesforce.com Instance TypeSelect Production or Sandbox based on your Salesforce instance type.API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted. |
API Version Enter your current Salesforce API version.To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it. |
To obtain the API version, see Before You Install the Recipe .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar. |
4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again. |
Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Salesforce Username Password Policy selected.Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation. |
Username Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration. |
See Before You Install the Recipe .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-14Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Salesforce.Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application. |
Note: To the password, you must also append the security token generated for the same account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run . |
5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link. |
If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value. |
6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL. |
In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file. |
A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} . |
7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution. |
Click Save again if prompted.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration. |
Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration. |
1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test. |
In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed. |
A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file. |
Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe . |
2.Run the recipe from an external application.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer. |
a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration and click Run .b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test. |
b.On the resulting pop-up dialog, click the Metadata URL link.c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record. |
c.From the new tab that opens, copy the Endpoint URL value.This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution. |
This is the integration flow's endpoint URL.d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true . |
d.From the external application, send a POST request to this endpoint URL along with the necessary file and the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record. |
Upload the file in the POST request's Body field and specify the Salesforce record's ID as a template parameter at the end of the integration's endpoint URL, replacing the placeholder {salesforceObjectId} .The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment. |
The integration flow attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record and returns 200 OK as a response, which indicates a successful execution.3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab. |
3.Test the recipe in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts . |
a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request. |
b.Click Run , then click Test.The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section. |
The page to test the integration with a sample file is displayed.c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section. |
c.In the Request section of the test page, enter the following details:Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-15i.On the URI Parameters tab, against the salesforceObjectId field, enter the ID of the Salesforce record to which you want to attach the file.To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter. |
To obtain the Salesforce ID of a record, see Before You Install the Recipe .ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) in the Integration Store. |
ii.On the Body tab, upload a file from your computer.d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only. |
d.Click Test.The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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. |
The integration flow now attaches the file you uploaded to the specified Salesforce record.The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID. |
The Activity Stream pane appears displaying the status of the integration instance's execution.e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve. |
e.In the Response section of the test page, you should see the status as 200 OK and "success" : true .4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization. |
4.Log in to your Salesforce instance as an Administrator and check if the file has been attached to the specified record.Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country. |
Because we've used an account record as an example in this document, the following steps detail how to navigate to an account record on Salesforce and check for the file attachment.a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization . |
a.On the Salesforce Setup page, click the Accounts tab.Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes . |
Note: If you don't see the Accounts tab on the Setup page, click the Plus icon to the right of your current tabs, and then click Accounts .b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration . |
b.On the Accounts Home page, click the account whose ID you specified in the REST request.c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration . |
c.On the account's page, scroll to the Notes & Attachments section.You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow. |
You'll find the file you sent through the REST request under this section.Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents in the Integration Store. |
Related Documentation Using the Salesforce Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Create and Retrieve Organization Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Use this recipe to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) using the SOAP adapter.Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only. |
Note: This recipe is available as Create and Retrieve Org Details from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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. |
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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow. |
The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number. |
No support is provided for this recipe.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-16Overview The integration in this recipe uses the SOAP adapter to retrieve an organization from Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) based on its ID.The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number. |
The SOAP adapter request contains the ID of the organization to retrieve.The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number.Also, the Id of the folder created in Box gets updated in the custom field created in ServiceNow. |
The response contains the ID and the address of the organization.The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number.Also, the Id of the folder created in Box gets updated in the custom field created in ServiceNow.The recipe uses the standard ServiceNow Adapter and the standard Box Adapter. |
The address includes the street, city, postal code, and country.The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number.Also, the Id of the folder created in Box gets updated in the custom field created in ServiceNow.The recipe uses the standard ServiceNow Adapter and the standard Box Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connections and other resources within the package. |
The integration that results from installing this recipe is named: Oracle SOAP ServiceCloud Get Organization .System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number.Also, the Id of the folder created in Box gets updated in the custom field created in ServiceNow.The recipe uses the standard ServiceNow Adapter and the standard Box Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connections and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate and run the recipe manually. |
System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Before you run the integration created with this recipe, you must configure the connections to the SOAP service and Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow): To create a connection to the SOAP service, follow the steps described in Create a SOAP Adapter Connection in Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration .To create a connection to Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow), follow the steps described in Create an Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter Connection in Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration .Related Documentation To learn more about the adapters used in this recipe see: Using the SOAP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Service Cloud (RightNow) Adapter with Oracle Integration Create Box Folders for ServiceNow Incidents Use this recipe to create a folder in Box when an incident is created in ServiceNow.Note: This recipe is available as ServiceNow Box | Create Folders for Incidents 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.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-17Overview This recipe creates respective folders in Box for incidents created in ServiceNow.Each ServiceNow incident has a unique system generated number.The name of the folder that gets created in Box for the ServiceNow incident matches the ServiceNow incidents unique number.Also, the Id of the folder created in Box gets updated in the custom field created in ServiceNow.The recipe uses the standard ServiceNow Adapter and the standard Box Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe package and configure the connections and other resources within the package.Subsequently, you can activate and run the recipe manually.When the integration flow gets triggered by an incident created in ServiceNow, it checks if a folder with the same name as the newly created incident's unique number already exists in Box. |
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