This is the fourth tutorial in the Oracle Real-Time Integration Business Insight Series that focuses on the basic administration tasks of creating and managing user roles and data connections needed for Insight applications users to sign in and develop Insight models and implementations.
You will need:
This is the third of several tutorials in the Oracle Real-Time Integration Business Insight series, where you take the role of a business user to explore preconfigured dashboards for an Insight model and create custom dashboards to gain business insight into the data captured by the AstraTeq Help Desk application.
Oracle Real-Time Integration Business Insight (Insight) is designed for business users to model, collect and monitor business level metrics. Insight is fully integrated with Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle Service Bus.
Insight puts the business owner in control of the content, timing and format of metrics that they need to make informed decisions on daily basis. By simply identifying the key points within their business integrations, stakeholders immediately have access to detailed and actionable data, in real-time, with no costly engineering engagements or production redeployments. The tutorial series contains several how to examples of how to defined an Insight model, map a model to its implementation, view pre-configured dashboards, and create custom dashboards to display valuable business information.
This is the second of several tutorials in the Oracle Real-Time Integration Business Insight series, where you take the role of an integration architect to map an Insight model to its implementation of the AstraTeq Help Desk application.
This is the first of several tutorials in the Oracle Real-Time Integration Business Insight series, where you take the role of a business user to define the Insight model for the AstraTeq Help Desk application.
This tutorial shows you how to provision an Oracle API Manager Cloud Service instance.
In this tutorial you integrate REST operations as service-binding components and reference-binding components in SOA composite applications. You REST-enable a service by using Oracle SOA Suite 12c and an application that validates credit cards. The application validates the requested authorization amount for the credit card number, and it returns the response in XML or JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format, the common data formats for mobile devices.
These tutorials show you two different ways to REST-enable existing SOAP services with Oracle SOA Suite 12c.
The REST-Enabling SOA with Oracle Service Bus tutorial shows you how to REST-enable an existing SOAP service from an Oracle Service Bus project. Then you test the REST service by using the Service Bus Console.
The REST-Enabling SOA with Oracle SOA Suite tutorial shows you a generic way to REST-enable an existing SOAP service from a composite project by using Oracle SOA Suite 12c. After you deploy the application to Integrated WebLogic Server you then test the REST services through Oracle Enterprise Manager.
In this tutorial, you REST-enable a service by using an application that validates credit cards. The application validates the requested authorization amount for the credit card number, and it returns the response in XML or JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format, the common data formats for mobile devices.
This OBE tutorial describes and shows how to use Oracle BPEL PM with Oracle E-Business suite. It shows how to:
- Create a BPEL process to publish a Sales Order into Oracle E-Business Suite Open interface tables using AppsAdapter. Oracle Adapter for Oracle Applications exposes both Open Interface Tables and Concurrent Programs as Web Services that can in turn be invoked from a BPEL process.
- Create a BPEL Process to query and delete the published Sales order using an Order Management stored procedure API.
This OBE leverages AppsAdapter Tutorial shipped with SOA suite. Note, the version of SOA Suite is 10g.