text
stringlengths
65
20k
7.Copy the token's value.Configure Zendesk You can create a user account on Zendesk exclusively for integration purposes.To avoid access-related issues, assign the administrator role to this account.You can use the credentials of this integration user account to access Zendesk using Oracle Integration and create tickets for Jira issues.For information on creating a new Zendesk user account with the administrator role, see Adding agents and admins .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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.
Configure Zendesk You can create a user account on Zendesk exclusively for integration purposes.To avoid access-related issues, assign the administrator role to this account.You can use the credentials of this integration user account to access Zendesk using Oracle Integration and create tickets for Jira issues.For information on creating a new Zendesk user account with the administrator role, see Adding agents and admins .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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.
To avoid access-related issues, assign the administrator role to this account.You can use the credentials of this integration user account to access Zendesk using Oracle Integration and create tickets for Jira issues.For information on creating a new Zendesk user account with the administrator role, see Adding agents and admins .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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.
You can use the credentials of this integration user account to access Zendesk using Oracle Integration and create tickets for Jira issues.For information on creating a new Zendesk user account with the administrator role, see Adding agents and admins .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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.
For information on creating a new Zendesk user account with the administrator role, see Adding agents and admins .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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.
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.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.
1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .
2.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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.
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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.
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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.
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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .
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 Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.
Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.
Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection Note: Optionally, you can configure the following lookup tables in the package.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.
ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_PRIORITY : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue priorities to Zendesk ticket priorities.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.
Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.
ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_TYPE : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue types to Zendesk ticket types.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.
Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .
ORACLE-BRT-JIRA_ZENDESK_STATUS : This lookup table contains a mapping of Jira issue statuses to Zendesk ticket statuses.Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.
Edit the table if you require to change the preset mappings.Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
Configure the Oracle REST Jira Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Jira Connection .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-412.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.
The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .
Connection URL Enter your Atlassian instance URL, for example, https://myinstance.atlassian.net/ .Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .
Enable two way SSL for outbound connections (Optional)Select No.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.
4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.
Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.
Username Enter the email ID associated with your Atlassian account.Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .
Password Enter the API token you created in your Atlassian account.See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.
See Create an API Token in Your Atlassian Account.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.
5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.
If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.
6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .
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.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.
7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.
Configure the Oracle REST Zendesk Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle REST Zendesk2 Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
Field Information to Enter Connection Type Leave REST API Base URL selected.Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
Connection URL Enter your Zendesk URL, for example, https:// my.zendesk.com/ .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.
Field Information to Enter Security Policy Leave Basic Authentication selected.Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.
Username Enter the user name of the integration user account created on Zendesk.See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.
See Configure Zendesk .Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-42Field Information to Enter Password Enter the password of the integration user account created on Zendesk.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.
5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.
If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .
6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.
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.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.
Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.
Note: The recipe's integration flow contains the following property: emailNotification : This integration property holds the email address to which notifications of errors in the integration's execution are sent.Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.
Optionally, you can add or update the value for this property after the integration flow has been activated.For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.
For the procedure to update integration properties, see Steps 6 to 9 in Override Design-Time Properties in an Integration 2.Run the recipe.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .
a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.
b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.
The Schedule Parameters page is displayed, where you can specify a value for the lastRun parameter.This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.
This parameter stores the date and time of the most-recent successful run of the integration flow.For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.
For the initial run, it contains a default value.The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.
The parameter's value is automatically updated after each successful run, and only the Jira issues created or updated after the date-time stamp stored as parameter's Current Value are processed by the integration in each run.If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.
If you want to change the date-time stamp for a specific scenario, enter the date and time of your choice in the New Value field in the format, yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm .Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.
Generally, no input is required.c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.
c.Click Submit on the Schedule Parameters page.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices 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.
Note: You can also schedule this integration to run at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices 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.
See Define the Integration Schedule.Appendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-433.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.
a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.
b.Click Run , then click Track Instances .c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.
c.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flow of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.
In the first run, the recipe creates corresponding tickets in Zendesk for all of your Jira issues.In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.
In subsequent runs, it creates tickets for new Jira issues and also propagates updates made in earlier Jira issues to the corresponding Zendesk tickets.4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.
4.Log in to your Zendesk instance and check for the new (or updated) tickets.In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.
In the Tags field within a ticket record, you'll find the corresponding Jira issue ID.Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.
Using these tags of the ticket records, you can verify if all the required tickets have been created or updated.Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .
Related Documentation Using the Jira Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the REST Adapter with Oracle Integration Export Invoices from PayPal to an FTP Server Use this recipe to export invoices created in PayPal to an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .
Note: This recipe is available as PayPal FTP | Export Invoices in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.
Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.
The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.
No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.
Overview This recipe exports invoices created in PayPal as JSON files to an FTP server, according to a schedule specified in Oracle Integration.Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.
Each JSON file contains data of a single invoice.The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.
The recipe uses the standard PayPal Adapter and the FTP Adapter.To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.
To use the recipe, you must install the recipe and configure resources such as connections and lookups within the recipe.After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .
After you activate and run the integration, the integration uses a schedule parameter to filter out already exported invoices, fetches the latest invoices from PayPal, and writes them as JSON files to the specified location on the FTP server.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.
System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Version 21.2.1.0.0 (210129.2200.39462) or higher An account on PayPal (REST API version 2) A secure FTP (sFTP) serverAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-44An FTP client to access the sFTP server Topics: Before You Install the Recipe Install and Configure the Recipe Activate and Run the Recipe Before You Install the Recipe Follow these steps to enable and configure other systems that this recipe needs to run: 1.Configure PayPal 2.Access Your FTP Server Configure PayPal You must perform certain tasks on your PayPal instance in order to successfully connect to it using Oracle Integration and export invoices.Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .
Get PayPal API Credentials Create Invoices Get PayPal API Credentials You have to get the PayPal API credentials, that is, the client ID and client secret which youll use for establishing connections to PayPal from Oracle Integration.1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .
1.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard with your account username and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.
PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applications 2.In the left menu, under DASHBOARD , click My Apps & Credentials .3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .
3.In the page that displays, under App Name, click Default Application .The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .Optionally, click the Pay & Get Paid tab on the top of the page, and select Create & Manage invoices .
The Sandbox API credentials section displays the Sandbox account name, Client ID and Secret.Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .Optionally, click the Pay & Get Paid tab on the top of the page, and select Create & Manage invoices .4.Click Create Invoice .
Click the Show link under Secret to view the client secret.4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .Optionally, click the Pay & Get Paid tab on the top of the page, and select Create & Manage invoices .4.Click Create Invoice .5.In the Create invoice page, configure the invoice fields.
4.Note the client ID and client secret.You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .Optionally, click the Pay & Get Paid tab on the top of the page, and select Create & Manage invoices .4.Click Create Invoice .5.In the Create invoice page, configure the invoice fields.a.In the Bill to field, enter the customer's name.
You'll use these later while configuring the PayPal connection in Oracle Integration.Create Invoices Create invoices in your PayPal Sandbox account.1.Get your Sandbox business account credentials.a.Log in to the PayPal Developer Dashboard using your account user name and password.PayPal Developer Dashboard URL: https://developer.paypal.com/developer/applicationsAppendix A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-45b.In the left menu, under SANDBOX , click Accounts .The default (system generated) personal and business accounts are listed.c.Select the account of type Business , click in the Manage accounts column, and then select View/edit account .d.In the resulting Account details dialog, note the Email ID and the System Generated Password .2.Log in to your PayPal Sandbox account using the business account credentials (Email ID and Password) obtained in step 1.PayPal Sandbox URL: https://www.sandbox.paypal.com/ 3.In the Home page, select Invoicing under Quick Links .Optionally, click the Pay & Get Paid tab on the top of the page, and select Create & Manage invoices .4.Click Create Invoice .5.In the Create invoice page, configure the invoice fields.a.In the Bill to field, enter the customer's name.For example, John Doe.