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4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1475.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 FTP Read-Write Connection Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection Configure the Integration Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle FTP Read Write Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .
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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 FTP Read-Write Connection Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection Configure the Integration Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle FTP Read Write Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.
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Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection Configure the Integration Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle FTP Read Write Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
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Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection Configure the Integration Configure the Oracle FTP Read-Write Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle FTP Read Write Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.
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2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.
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The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
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3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.
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Field Information to Enter FTP Server Host Address Enter the host address of your sFTP server.FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .
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FTP Server Port Enter 22.SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .
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SFTP Connection Select Yes from the list.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.
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4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .
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Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select FTP Server Access Policy .User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.
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User Name Enter the user name to connect to your sFTP server.Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .
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Password Enter the password to connect to your sFTP server.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.
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5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.
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If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .
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6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.
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In the resulting dialog, click Test again.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.
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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 NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.
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7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.
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Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.
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Configure the Oracle NetSuite Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle NetSuite Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.
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2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.
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The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.
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3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the following details.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-148Field Information to Enter WSDL URL Enter the NetSuite WSDL URL; for example, https:// webservices.netsuite.com/wsdl/ <NetSuite_application_version> /netsuite.wsdl .where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.
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where <NetSuite_application_version> is the version of the NetSuite application.For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.5.Click Save .
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For example, v2015_1_0 .See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.
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See Assemble the Oracle NetSuite WSDL URL.4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
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4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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.
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Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Token Based Authentication .Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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.
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Consumer Key Enter the consumer key of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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.
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See Create an Integration Record for Oracle Integration.Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.
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Consumer Secret Enter the consumer secret of the integration record in Oracle NetSuite.Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.
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Token Enter the token ID provided by Oracle NetSuite.See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .
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See Create an Access Token for the User Account.Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.
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Token Secret Enter the token secret provided by Oracle NetSuite.Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.
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Account ID Enter your Oracle NetSuite account identifier.See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.
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See Make a Note of the NetSuite Account ID.Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.
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Note: You must enter this information in capital letters.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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.
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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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.
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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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.
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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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.
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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 Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.
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7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.
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Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.
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Configure the Integration Create a schedule for your integration to pick up files from the FTP server at a date, time, and frequency of your choosing.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.
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1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration.2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.
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2.Click Actions , then click Add Schedule .The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe 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.
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The page for defining the execution schedule is displayed.3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe 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.
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3.For this example, let's create a basic schedule, so leave the Simple radio button selected under the Define recurrence section.4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.
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4.In the Frequency field, select Hours and Minutes , and change the hours field to 6.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-149You've now created a schedule that runs the integration every six hours.Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.
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Similarly, you can schedule the integration to run on particular days or weeks.5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.
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5.Additionally, you can specify the start and end dates for this schedule.In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.
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In the This schedule is effective section, click the From field and select Modify start date to specify a date and time from when this schedule should run.Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .
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Similarly, specify an expiry date and time in the Until field.In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.
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In addition, you can also specify your preferred timezone.6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.
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6.Click Save , and then click Back twice to return to the Configuration Editor page.To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.
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To create advanced schedules, see Define the Integration Schedule.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.
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Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the integration flow, activate the recipe and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .
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1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .
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In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.
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A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.
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Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration.2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .
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2.Update the integration property values.Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.
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Configure the property values necessary for the successful execution of the integration.Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.
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Using the property values, you can specify the FTP server directory from which the files must be read, the format of the files to be read, and the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.
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a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.
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b.Click Actions , then click Update Property Values .c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .
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c.In the Update Property Values pane, enter the appropriate values for the following integration properties.Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.
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Click on a property row to expand it, and enter a suitable value in the New Value field.Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.
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Repeat for all property rows.FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.
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FTPDirectory: Specify the path of the directory on your FTP server from where the files must be read.For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.
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For example: /home/user2/FTP .See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .
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See Access Your FTP Server and Upload the Files .FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.
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FolderInternalId: Specify the internal ID of the Oracle NetSuite directory into which the files must be written.For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.
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For example: 705.See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.
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See Configure NetSuite .FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.
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FileNamePattern: Enter the format of the files to be read from the FTP server.For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.
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For example: *.pdf or *.* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).
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* and so on.NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries in the Integration Store.
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NotificationMail (Optional): Enter an email ID on which you'd like to be notified about the errors in the integration's execution.d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
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d.Click Submit .A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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.
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A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration properties have been updated successfully.3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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.
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3.Run the recipe.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-150The recipe is now ready to use.Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.
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Run it to import your files from the FTP server to the NetSuite instance.a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.
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a.On the Configuration Editor page, select the integration flow.b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.
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b.Click Run , then click Submit Now .c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.
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c.In the resulting dialog, click Submit Now again.Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.
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Note that the Ad hoc request radio button is selected by default.You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.
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You've now successfully submitted the integration for execution.4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.
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4.Log in to your NetSuite instance and check for the imported file(s) in your File Cabinet folder.Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.
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Related Documentation Using the FTP Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle NetSuite Adapter with Oracle Integration Import Financial Journal Entries from Amazon S3 to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an Amazon S3 location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.
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The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .
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Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud Amazon S3 | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.
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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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).
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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 reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud FTP Server | Import Financial Journal Entries in the Integration Store.
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No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud FTP Server | Import Financial Journal Entries in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
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Overview This recipe reads a file from an Amazon S3 location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud FTP Server | Import Financial Journal Entries 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.
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The message flow of business data goes from Amazon S3 through Oracle Integration to Oracle ERP Cloud, and then back to the Amazon S3 location.The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud FTP Server | Import Financial Journal Entries 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.
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The integration uses a scheduled orchestration pattern to download the file from the Amazon S3 location, process it, and import it into Oracle ERP Cloud.In a scheduled orchestration, you can configure when and how often the download occurs.The import process records the results in a log file.To send this log file back to the Amazon S3 location, the integration uses an app-driven orchestration.The trigger to start an app- driven orchestration is based on an event happening.In this case, the log file is ready for export.The integration uses the standard REST and Oracle ERP Cloud Adapters available in Oracle Integration.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration, Version 19.3.1.0.0 (190624.1100.29532) or later Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning, Version 19A (11.13.19.01.0) or laterAppendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-151Amazon S3 Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .Related Documentation Overview | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Use Case | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) User Guide | V0 Import Journal Entries | Amazon S3/Oracle Financials Cloud (ERP Cloud) Import Financial Journal Entries from an FTP server to Oracle ERP Cloud Use this recipe to import financial journal entries from an FTP Server location to Oracle ERP Cloud.The recipe uses File-Based Data Integration (FBDI).Note: This recipe is available as Oracle ERP Cloud FTP Server | Import Financial Journal Entries 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 reads a file from an FTP location, does a simple transformation, and then imports the financial journal entries into Oracle ERP Cloud.
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