text
stringlengths
65
20k
For example, https:// XXXXXX .cxunity.ocs.oraclecloud.com .The URL is provided when you subscribe to Oracle Unity.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-2Configure Connection Security Configure security for your Oracle Unity Adapter connection by selecting the security policy and specifying security details.You must satisfy the Oracle Unity Adapter prerequisites before you can successfully create a connection.See Prerequisites for Creating a Connection .1.Go to the Security section.2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.
The URL is provided when you subscribe to Oracle Unity.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-2Configure Connection Security Configure security for your Oracle Unity Adapter connection by selecting the security policy and specifying security details.You must satisfy the Oracle Unity Adapter prerequisites before you can successfully create a connection.See Prerequisites for Creating a Connection .1.Go to the Security section.2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.
You must satisfy the Oracle Unity Adapter prerequisites before you can successfully create a connection.See Prerequisites for Creating a Connection .1.Go to the Security section.2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.
See Prerequisites for Creating a Connection .1.Go to the Security section.2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.
1.Go to the Security section.2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.
2.Select the Resource Owner Password Credentials security policy.3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.
3.Enter your login credentials: Element Description Access Token URI Enter the authorization server that generates the access token: https:// IDCS_URL /oauth2/v1/token Client ID Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.
Client Secret Enter the unique random string that matches the API console project.Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.
Username Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service username of the OAuth token request.Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.
Password Enter the Oracle Identity Cloud Service password of the OAuth token request.Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.
Scope Enter the list of authorization permissions for the target application.For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.
For example, read write .4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.
4.Click OK. Test the Connection Test your connection to ensure that it's configured successfully.1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .
1.In the page title bar, click Test.What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.
What happens next depends on whether your adapter connection uses a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) file.Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.
Only some adapter connections use WSDLs.If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.
If Your Connection... Then... Doesnt use a WSDL The test starts automatically and validates the inputs you provided for the connection.Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.
Uses a WSDL A dialog prompts you to select the type of connection testing to perform: Validate and Test : Performs a full validation of the WSDL, including processing of the imported schemas and WSDLs.Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.
Complete validation can take several minutes depending on the number of imported schemas and WSDLs.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .
No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.
Test: Connects to the WSDL URL and performs a syntax check on the WSDL.No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).
No requests are sent to the operations exposed in the WSDL.Chapter 2 Create a Connection 2-32.Wait for a message about the results of the connection test.If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.
If the test was successful, then the connection is configured properly.If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.
If the test failed, then edit the configuration details you entered.Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.
Check for typos, verify URLs and credentials, and download the diagnostic logs for additional details.Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.
Continue to test until the connection is successful.3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.
3.When complete, click Save .Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.
Upload an SSL Certificate Certificates are used to validate outbound SSL connections.If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.
If you make an SSL connection in which the root certificate does not exist in Oracle Integration, an exception is thrown.In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.
In that case, you must upload the appropriate certificate.A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.
A certificate enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.
If the external endpoint requires a specific certificate, request the certificate and then upload it into Oracle Integration.To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.
To upload an SSL certificate: 1.In the left navigation pane, click Home > Settings > Certificates .All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.
All certificates currently uploaded to the trust store are displayed in the Certificates dialog.The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.
The link enables you to filter by name, certificate expiration date, status, type, category, and installation method (user-installed or system-installed).Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.
Certificates installed by the system cannot be deleted.2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.
2.Click Upload at the top of the page.The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .
The Upload Certificate dialog box is displayed.3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.
3.Enter an alias name and optional description.4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.
4.In the Type field, select the certificate type.Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.
Each certificate type enables Oracle Integration to connect with external services.X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.
X.509 (SSL transport) SAML (Authentication & Authorization) PGP (Encryption & Decryption)Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-4X.509 (SSL transport) 1.Select a certificate category.a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .
a.Trust : Use this option to upload a trust certificate.i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.
i.Click Browse , then select the trust file (for example, .cer or .crt) to upload.b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.
b.Identity : Use this option to upload a certificate for two-way SSL communication.i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.
i.Click Browse , then select the keystore file ( .jks) to upload.ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.
ii.Enter the comma-separated list of passwords corresponding to key aliases.Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.
Note: When an identity certificate file (JKS) contains more than one private key, all the private keys must have the same password.If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.
If the private keys are protected with different passwords, the private keys cannot be extracted from the keystore.iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.
iii.Enter the password of the keystore being imported.c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.
c.Click Upload .SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.
SAML (Authentication & Authorization) 1.Note that Message Protection is automatically selected as the only available certificate category and cannot be deselected.Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.
Use this option to upload a keystore certificate with SAML token support.Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.
Create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations are supported with this type of certificate.2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.
2.Click Browse , then select the certificate file ( .cer or .crt) to upload.3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.
3.Click Upload .PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.
PGP (Encryption & Decryption) 1.Select a certificate category.Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.
Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for communication.PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.
PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting files.You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.
You can select the private key to use for encryption or decryption when configuring the stage file action.a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.
a.Private : Uses a private key of the target location to decrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.
i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.
ii.Enter the PGP private key password.b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.
b.Public : Uses a public key of the target location to encrypt the file.i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.
i.Click Browse , then select the PGP file to upload.ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.
ii.In the ASCII-Armor Encryption Format field, select Yes or No.Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.
Yes shows the format of the encrypted message in ASCII armor.ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.
ASCII armor is a binary-to- textual encoding converter.ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.
ASCII armor formats encrypted messaging in ASCII.This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.
This enables messages to be sent in a standard messaging format.This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.
This selection impacts the visibility of message content.No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.
No causes the message to be sent in binary format.Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-5iii.From the Cipher Algorithm list, select the algorithm to use.Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.
Symmetric- key algorithms for cryptography use the same cryptographic keys for both encryption of plain text and decryption of cipher text.c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.
c.Click Upload .Chapter 2 Upload an SSL Certificate 2-63 Add the Oracle Unity Adapter Connection to an Integration When you drag the Oracle Unity Adapter into the invoke area of an integration, the Adapter Endpoint Configuration Wizard is invoked.This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.
This wizard guides you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter endpoint properties.The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.
The following sections describe the wizard pages that guide you through configuration of the Oracle Unity Adapter as an invoke in an integration.The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.
The Oracle Unity Adapter cannot be configured as a trigger in an integration.Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.
Topics: Basic Info Page Invoke Operations Page Invoke Ingest Config Page Invoke Ingest Fields Page Invoke Export Config Page Invoke Export Segment Config Page Invoke Export 360 Config Page Summary Page Basic Info Page You can enter a name and description on the Basic Info page of each adapter in your integration.Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.
Element Description What do you want to call your endpoint?Provide a meaningful name so that others can understand the responsibilities of this connection.You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.
You can include English alphabetic characters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens in the name.You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.
You cant include the following characters: No blank spaces (for example, My Inbound Connection ) No special characters (for example, #;83& or righ(t)now4 ) except underscores and hyphens No multibyte characters What does this endpoint do?Enter an optional description of the connection's responsibilities.For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.
For example: This connection receives an inbound request to synchronize account information with the cloud application.3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .
3-1Invoke Operations Page Select to either ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity or export data from Oracle Unity.Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.
Element Description Type Ingest (Ingest data into Unity) : Select to ingest (import) data into Oracle Unity.Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.
Export (Export data out of Unity) : Select to export data from Oracle Unity.Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.
Invoke Ingest Config Page Configure the ingest operation by selecting the entities into which to ingest data.You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.
You can select more than one entity if data must be ingested into multiple entities.You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.
You can select a maximum of five entities.Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.
Element Description Filter By Name Enter letters to filter the display of entities by name.Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.
Available Entities Displays the list of entities available for selection.Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.
Select up to five entities.Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.
Selected Entities Displays the list of entities selected for ingestion.Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.
Invoke Ingest Fields Page Select the fields for each entity into which to ingest data.Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.
Different tabs are displayed for each of the entities selected on the Ingest Config page.Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.
Use the resource name for the entity in the mapper.For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.
For example, if the entity selected on the Ingest Config page was customers , the resource name to use in the mapper is named customers .Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.Invoke Export Segment Config Page Select the step to execute when invoking the API to request data.
Element Description Filter By Field Name Enter letters to filter the display of fields by name.Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.Invoke Export Segment Config Page Select the step to execute when invoking the API to request data.This page is displayed if you selected Segment on the Export Config page.
Available Fields Displays the list of fields available for selection for each entity into which to ingest data.Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.Invoke Export Segment Config Page Select the step to execute when invoking the API to request data.This page is displayed if you selected Segment on the Export Config page.Each step requires its own Oracle Unity Adapter connection to complete the segment data export functionality.
Selected Fields Displays the list of fields selected for each entity into which to ingest data.There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.Invoke Export Segment Config Page Select the step to execute when invoking the API to request data.This page is displayed if you selected Segment on the Export Config page.Each step requires its own Oracle Unity Adapter connection to complete the segment data export functionality.For example: Add an initial Oracle Unity Adapter connection to the integration and select the Initiate Data Query option.
There is no limit on the number of fields you can select.Chapter 3 Invoke Operations Page 3-2Invoke Export Config Page Select the export operation to perform.Based on your selection, you are then prompted to select the associated segment, rule, or entity.Element Description Segment Select to export data for the selected segment from Oracle Unity.360 Data Select to export the complete profile of a selected customer from Oracle Unity.If you select this option, the rule and subrule you are prompted to select must be created in the Oracle Unity instance you specified on the Connections page.Metadata Export the schema of a selected entity from Oracle Unity.Select Unity Segment (Appears if Segment is selected.)Select the segment to export from Oracle Unity.Select Rule (Appears if 360 Data is selected.)Select the rule.Invoke Export Segment Config Page Select the step to execute when invoking the API to request data.This page is displayed if you selected Segment on the Export Config page.Each step requires its own Oracle Unity Adapter connection to complete the segment data export functionality.For example: Add an initial Oracle Unity Adapter connection to the integration and select the Initiate Data Query option.Add a second Oracle Unity Adapter connection to the integration and select the Check the Status of the Query option.