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1.On the Oracle Integration home page, scroll to the Accelerators & Recipes section.2.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.
2.Click Search All .3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .
3.Find the recipe package that you want to install.4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.
4.Select the package, and then click the Install icon.5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .
5.After the package is installed, click the Configure icon on the recipe card to configure the resources deployed by the package.The Configuration Editor page opens, displaying all the resources of the recipe package.Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
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 ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.
Configure the following resources before you activate and run the recipe.Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.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.
Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection Configure the Oracle ATP Connection Configure the Lookup Table Configure the Oracle ERP Cloud Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ERP Cloud Connection .2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.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.
2.Click Edit .The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.
The connection configuration page appears.3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .
3.In the Connection Properties section, enter the Oracle ERP Cloud host name.For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.
For example: https://your_domain_name.fa.DC.oraclecloud.com .4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.
4.In the Security section, enter the following details.Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .
Field Information to Enter Security Policy Select Username Password Token .User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .
User Name Enter the user name of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.
See Configure Oracle ERP Cloud .Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .
Password Enter the password of the account created for Oracle Integration on Oracle ERP Cloud.5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.
5.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .
If prompted, click Save for a second time.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-1816.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.A confirmation message is displayed if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.
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 Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .
7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
Click Save again if prompted.Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.
Configure the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle Apache Kafka Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.
2.Click Edit .The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
The Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window appears.3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.
3.In the Bootstrap Servers field, enter the Bootstrap Server URL you obtained earlier while configuring Apache Kafka.See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .
See Configure Apache Kafka .4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.
4.In the Security Policy field, select No Security Policy .5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.
5.Select the agent group under the Agent Group section.a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .
a.Click Configure Agents .b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.
b.On the Select an Agent Group dialog, select the agent group that you had configured while installing the connectivity agent.See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.
See Install the Connectivity Agent .c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.
c.Click Use.6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.
6.On the Oracle Apache Kafka Connection window, click Save .7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .
7.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.
In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.
You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.
8.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.
Configure the Oracle ATP Connection 1.On the Configuration Editor page, select Oracle ATP Connection.2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
2.Click Edit .The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.
The Oracle ATP Connection window appears.3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .
3.Under Connection Properties, in the Service Name field, enter the service name of your Oracle ATP instance.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.
See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.
4.Under the Security section, enter the following details: In the Security Policy field, select JDBC Over SSL from the drop-down list.In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.
In the Wallet field, click Upload to upload the credential wallet file that you obtained earlier.Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .
Enter the password for your credential wallet file in the Wallet Password field.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-182Enter your Oracle ATP account username in the Database Service Username field.Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.
Enter your Oracle ATP account password in the Database Service Password field.See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.
See Configure Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing (ATP) .5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.
5.Click Save on the connection window.6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.
6.Click Test to ensure that your connection is successfully configured.In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.
In the dialog that displays, click Test again.You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.
You get a confirmation message if your test is successful.7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.
7.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.
Configure the Lookup Table Edit the lookup table to enter the necessary details.1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.
1.On the Configuration Editor page, select the lookup table and click Edit .2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .
2.Edit a lookup.For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.
For example, against the toEmail field, enter the email address to which run time exception emails are to be sent.You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.
You can update and modify the lookups as per your requirement.3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.
3.Click Save .If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.
If prompted, click Save for a second time.4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.
4.Click Back to return to the Configuration Editor page.Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.
Activate and Run the Recipe After you've configured the connections and the lookup table, activate the recipe package and run it.1.On the Configuration Editor page, click Activate in the title bar.In the Activate Package dialog, click Activate again.A confirmation message is displayed informing that the integration has been submitted for activation.Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .
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 flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.
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 flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.
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 flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.
Refresh the page to view the updated status of the integration flow.2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.
2.Run the recipe.a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.
a.Log in to the Oracle ERP Cloud instance as a user with the Procurement Manager role.b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.
b.Click the Procurement tab from the navigator in the home page, and then select Suppliers .c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories in the Integration Store.
c.In the resulting page, select Manage Suppliers Task and then search for a supplier you want to update.d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
d.In the supplier details, update one of the fields.For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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.
For example, update the value in the D-U-N-S Number field.You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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.
You've now successfully triggered the recipe.3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.
3.Monitor the execution of the integration flow in Oracle Integration.a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 .
a.Return to the Oracle Integration home page.In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.
In the left navigation pane, click Monitoring , then Integrations , and then Tracking .b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users in the Integration Store.
b.On the Track Instances page, you'll see the integration flows of the recipe being triggered and executing successfully.Appendix A Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-183The recipe now updates the corresponding supplier's D-U-N-S Number in the Oracle ATP database table.4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
4.Log in to the Oracle ATP instance and check for the updated supplier data.a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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.
a.Open the V_SUPPLIER SQL worksheet and execute the following query: "SELECT * FROM V_SUPPLIER" b.In the query result, verify that the value in the supplier's v_dunsnumber column matches the value that was updated in Oracle Procurement Cloud.If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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.
If the value matches, then synchronization is achieved successfully.Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.
Related Documentation Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Apache Kafka Adapter with Oracle Integration Using the Oracle Autonomous Transaction Processing Adapter with Oracle Integration Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes The Human Capital Management (HCM) recipes help you integrate applications related to recruiting, managing, and developing the employees in your company.Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.
Topics: Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Export Employee Data from Oracle HCM Cloud to an Identity Management System Use this recipe to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.
Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Identity Management | Sync Directories 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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.
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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, Configure, and Run the Recipe For more information and steps to install, configure, and run recipes, see Get Started with Integration Accelerators and Recipes .
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 demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.
No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers in the Integration Store.
Overview This recipe demonstrates how to build an outbound integration to a customer identity management system when a new hire is created in Oracle HCM CloudAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-184Using the ATOM feed within the Oracle HCM Cloud Adapter, this recipe illustrates the ability to subscribe to New Hire notifications, build a full data set of profile data using additional REST calls, and then write the results in a different format to a third-party system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later FTP server DateTimeLib4_1.0.jar getEmployeeResponse.json newEmployeeFile.csv 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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.
Related Documentation PDF documentation and supporting files Import Users from Oracle HCM Cloud to Okta Use this recipe to create Okta users based on new hire information in Oracle HCM Cloud.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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.
Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud Okta | Generate Okta Users 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.
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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.
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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.
No support is provided for this recipe.Overview This recipe demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.
Overview This recipe demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create users in Okta based on the information for newly hired employees in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.
The integration performs the following actions: Retrieves the information for newly hired employees via the HCM Cloud ATOM feed.Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 .
Enriches and transforms the data using additional REST calls.Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 PDF documentation and supporting filesAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-186Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Use this recipe to generate and format an ANSI 834 benefits provider input file, based on an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract file loaded from an FTP server.
Generates the new users in the Okta access management system.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 PDF documentation and supporting filesAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-186Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Use this recipe to generate and format an ANSI 834 benefits provider input file, based on an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract file loaded from an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Export Benefits ANSI 834 in the Integration Store.
System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle HCM Cloud, Release 13 or later Okta instanceAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-185Install, 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 PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 PDF documentation and supporting filesAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-186Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Use this recipe to generate and format an ANSI 834 benefits provider input file, based on an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract file loaded from an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Export Benefits ANSI 834 in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.
Related Documentation PDF documentation and supporting files Import Worker Records from an FTP Server to Oracle HCM Cloud Use this recipe to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud based on hiring data from an external system.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 PDF documentation and supporting filesAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-186Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Use this recipe to generate and format an ANSI 834 benefits provider input file, based on an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract file loaded from an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Export Benefits ANSI 834 in the Integration Store.Oracle provides this recipe as a sample only.The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-free.
Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Create Workers 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 demonstrates how to use Oracle Integration to create workers in Oracle HCM Cloud.The integration handles different types of workers including permanent employees, contingent workers, and pending workers.The integration performs the following actions: Reads a file from an external FTP server that contains data for new workers.Transforms and formats the file to generate the REST payload.Create the appropriate individuals with worker types within Oracle HCM Cloud.System and Access Requirements Oracle Integration Oracle Fusion Cloud Human Capital Management, Release 13 or later FTP server Employee record payload files 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 PDF documentation and supporting filesAppendix A Human Capital Management (HCM) Recipes A-186Transform an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract File to an ANSI 834 Benefits File Use this recipe to generate and format an ANSI 834 benefits provider input file, based on an Oracle HCM Cloud Extract file loaded from an FTP server.Note: This recipe is available as Oracle HCM Cloud FTP Server | Export Benefits ANSI 834 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.