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To use the bulk extract feature, you must choose the SELECT operation from the Perform an Operation On a Table list on the Basic Info page.Operations on Table Page Element Description Schema Select the database schema that includes the tables to process.Table Name Enter a filter with which to search the schema (for example, %TAB to search for tables with TAB in the name).Table Type Specify the table type filter to get a subset of the appropriate database objects, then click Search.ALL TABLE VIEW Filter By Enter the initial letters to filter the display of table names.Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.
Operations on Table Page Element Description Schema Select the database schema that includes the tables to process.Table Name Enter a filter with which to search the schema (for example, %TAB to search for tables with TAB in the name).Table Type Specify the table type filter to get a subset of the appropriate database objects, then click Search.ALL TABLE VIEW Filter By Enter the initial letters to filter the display of table names.Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.
Table Name Enter a filter with which to search the schema (for example, %TAB to search for tables with TAB in the name).Table Type Specify the table type filter to get a subset of the appropriate database objects, then click Search.ALL TABLE VIEW Filter By Enter the initial letters to filter the display of table names.Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.
Table Type Specify the table type filter to get a subset of the appropriate database objects, then click Search.ALL TABLE VIEW Filter By Enter the initial letters to filter the display of table names.Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.
ALL TABLE VIEW Filter By Enter the initial letters to filter the display of table names.Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .
Available Lists the tables that meet the selection criteria.Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.
Selected Lists your table selection.Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.
Import Tables Click to import the tables.The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.
The page is refreshed for you to select the parent database table.Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .
Primary Keys Appears when you select tables without a primary key defined.Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.
Select the virtual primary key for the table.Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.
Note: Having the primary key at the database level is the best practice.Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.
Select the parent database table Select the parent (root) table from the list.If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.
If using multiple related tables, this is the top-level parent table in the relationship.After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.
After making your selection, the page is refreshed for you to view and edit the table relationships.Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.
Add || Remove Tables Click to add more tables or remove tables no longer in use.Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).
Review and manage parent database table relationshipsClick Edit to view and edit the table relationships.The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.
The relationships automatically identified by the adapter are displayed.See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.
See Review and manage parent database table relationships Option .Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.
Review and filter columns from selected database tablesClick Edit to view and edit the table attributes.You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.
You can deselect any attributes to exclude from the database queries.Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.
Primary key attributes cannot be excluded.See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.
See Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option .Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.
Review and edit SQL query (Displayed only if the Select operation is selected on the Basic Info page.)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.
)Click Edit to view and edit the default SQL query.See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.
See Review and edit SQL query Option .Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-7Review and manage parent database table relationships Option Review and manage the parent database table relationships.Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.
Element Description Create New Click to create a new relationship.Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .
Parent Table Select the parent table.Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).
Child Table Select the child table.Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).
Relationship Select the relation type (one-to-many, one-to- one, or one-to-one with the foreign key on the child table).For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.
For example, if you selected Employees as the parent table and Departments as the child table, the following options are displayed: Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments Employees has a 1:1 Relationship with Departments (Foreign Key on Child table) Employees has a 1:M Relationship with Departments Attribute Name Applies attributes to the table relationship.Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.
Mapping Displays the mapping for the table relationship.Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.
Detach Opens the Relationships list in a new window.Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.
Review and filter columns from selected database tables Option Review and filter columns from the selected database tables option.Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.
Element Description Attributes Tree View and deselect attributes automatically created by the adapter.Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.
Deselect any attributes to exclude from the database query.Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.
Review and edit SQL query Option Review and edit the SQL query.Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.
Note: This is only applicable for a Select operation on a table.Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.
Element Description SQL Edit Click to manually edit the query in the SQL Query field.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-8Element Description Edit using Expression Builder Click to edit the query in the Expression Builder.Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.
Add New : Click to add new criteria to the SQL query.1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.
1.Click Add New .2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.
2.In the First Argument field, click Edit, and select the argument to add (for example, deptno).3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.
3.In the Operator field, select the operator to use for the comparison from the dropdown list (for example, EQUAL).4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.
4.In the Second Argument field, select the option to use: Literal: Click to specify a value.If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.
If selected, you are prompted to select the data type (for example, integer) and specify the value.Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.
Parameter : Click to specify a bind parameter.Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.
Query Key : Click to run the comparison against another column in the table.New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.
New criteria is appended to the SQL query with a WHERE clause.If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.
If you add subsequent SQL queries, they are appended to the SQL query with an AND clause.Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.
Add Nested : Click to add nested criteria to the SQL query.Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.
Edit: Click to edit the SQL criteria you specified.Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.
Remove: Click to remove the SQL criteria you specified.Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.
Maximum Number of Records to be fetched Select the number of records to fetch with this SQL query.Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.
Enable Pagination Select the checkbox.When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.
When you must fetch a large number of results/records, you can implement the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter's pagination feature and receive sorted results/ records in chunks.Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.
Offset and Limit fields are displayed in the mapper.You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.
You can specify the number of results per page by providing the offset and limit values according to your requirement.Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.
Enter a starting value in the Offset field and an end value in the Limit field to receive sorted results.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations On Table Page 3-9Summary Page You can review the specified adapter configuration values on the Summary page.Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.
Element Description Summary Displays a summary of the configuration values you defined on previous pages of the wizard.The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.
The information that is displayed can vary by adapter.For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.
For some adapters, the selected business objects and operation name are displayed.For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.
For adapters for which a generated XSD file is provided, click the XSD link to view a read-only version of the file.To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.
To return to a previous page to update any values, click the appropriate tab in the left panel or click Back.To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.
To cancel your configuration details, click Cancel.Chapter 3 Summary Page 3-104 Implement Common Patterns Using the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter You can use the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter to implement the following common pattern.Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.
Topics: Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application Note: Oracle Integration offers a number of pre-assembled solutions, known as recipes, that provide you with a head start in building your integrations.You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.
You can start with a recipe, and then customize it to fit your needs and requirements.Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.
Depending upon the solution provided, a variety of adapters are configured in the pre-assembled solutions.See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.
See the Recipes page on the Oracle Help Center.Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).
Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application The SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter enables you to extract a large volume of data from the SAP ASE database.For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.
For example, you can extract Leads and Custom Objects data from an SAP ASE database and import it into a Marketo application.To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.
To do so, you need to create a table with columns such as FirstName, LastName, Company, email, phoneNumber, title, and status flag in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database.This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.
This use case describes how the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter extracts a large volume of leads data and imports it into the Marketo application.Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .
Configure an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter trigger endpoint and select the polling operation.Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.
Configure a Marketo invoke endpoint to import leads data into Marketo using the import bulk data operation.This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.
This implementation pattern provides an overview of the steps.1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.
1.Create an app-driven orchestrated integration.2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.
2.Drag an SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter into the integration as a trigger connection.3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .
3.Configure the SAP ASE (Sybase) endpoint with the required details for inbound polling.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.
a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name for the trigger endpoint connection.b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .
b.On the Polling page, import the table from which to poll and send data into Marketo.c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.
c.On the Polling Strategy and Options page, enter the required details as follows: Logical Delete Field : Select a field (column) in the root database table to logically poll.4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.
4-1Read Value: Specify the value to indicate a row has been read (for example, PROCESSED or READ ).Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.
Unread Value : Specify the value to indicate the rows to process.Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .
Rejected Value : Specify the value to indicate rejected records.Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.
Polling Frequency (Sec) : Set the polling frequency (in seconds) for new records.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .
d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.
4.Drag a Marketo Adapter into the integration canvas as an invoke connection.5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .
5.Configure the Marketo endpoint with the required operation on the Operations page.For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.
For this example, import bulk data is selected, which is invoked when there is a new record in the table that needs to be imported into the Marketo application.a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.
a.On the Basic Info page, provide an endpoint name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.
b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.
c.On the Operations page, select the Import Lead operation, and select the Leads object.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.
d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .
6.In the mapper, perform the required mappings to import bulk data into Marketo.7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.
7.Drag another Marketo Adapter below the first Marketo Adapter and configure it with the Final Submit operation.a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.
a.On the Basic Info page, provide a name.b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.Topics: Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure Primary Key Error While Importing Table for the Merge Operation Failed to Update Stored Procedure Page Error Invalid SQL Query Error Additional integration troubleshooting information is provided.
b.On the Action page, select Import Bulk Data .c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.Topics: Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure Primary Key Error While Importing Table for the Merge Operation Failed to Update Stored Procedure Page Error Invalid SQL Query Error Additional integration troubleshooting information is provided.See Troubleshoot Oracle Integration in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration Generation 2 and the Oracle Integration Troubleshooting page in the Oracle Help Center.
c.On the Operations page, select the Final Submit operation in the Select Operation field.d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.Topics: Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure Primary Key Error While Importing Table for the Merge Operation Failed to Update Stored Procedure Page Error Invalid SQL Query Error Additional integration troubleshooting information is provided.See Troubleshoot Oracle Integration in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration Generation 2 and the Oracle Integration Troubleshooting page in the Oracle Help Center.Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure You encounter errors when you use text and unitext datatypes as an output parameter of a stored procedure in the SAP ASE database.
d.Review your selections on the Summary page, and click Done .The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.Topics: Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure Primary Key Error While Importing Table for the Merge Operation Failed to Update Stored Procedure Page Error Invalid SQL Query Error Additional integration troubleshooting information is provided.See Troubleshoot Oracle Integration in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration Generation 2 and the Oracle Integration Troubleshooting page in the Oracle Help Center.Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure You encounter errors when you use text and unitext datatypes as an output parameter of a stored procedure in the SAP ASE database.Solution : Text and unitext datatypes cannot be used as output parameters of a stored procedure.
The completed integration looks as follows.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-2 8.Activate the integration.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-3a.Click Home > Integrations > Integrations .b.Go to the row of the integration to activate.c.Click Activate to activate the integration.d.If needed, check the Enable Tracing check box.The Include Payload check box is displayed.e.If needed, check the Include Payload check box.f.Click Activate .The integration is deployed.The integration is invoked when a new lead record is created in the SAP ASE (Sybase) database and the same record details are imported into the Marketo application.Chapter 4 Extract Bulk Data from an SAP ASE (Sybase) Database and Import it into a Marketo Application 4-45 Troubleshoot the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter Review the following topics to learn about troubleshooting issues with the SAP ASE (Sybase) Adapter.Topics: Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure Primary Key Error While Importing Table for the Merge Operation Failed to Update Stored Procedure Page Error Invalid SQL Query Error Additional integration troubleshooting information is provided.See Troubleshoot Oracle Integration in Using Integrations in Oracle Integration Generation 2 and the Oracle Integration Troubleshooting page in the Oracle Help Center.Error When Using Text and Unitext Datatypes as an Output Parameter of a Stored Procedure You encounter errors when you use text and unitext datatypes as an output parameter of a stored procedure in the SAP ASE database.Solution : Text and unitext datatypes cannot be used as output parameters of a stored procedure.Avoid using them.