getting-started-oracle-integration-3
getting-started-oracle-integration-3
F45535-29
February 2025
Oracle Cloud Getting Started with Oracle Integration 3,
F45535-29
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Contents
Preface
Audience v
Documentation Accessibility v
Diversity and Inclusion v
Related Resources v
Conventions vi
iii
Questions? Ask Oracle Assistant 2-9
A Recipes Reference
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes A-1
Create Orders in Oracle Fusion Cloud Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities A-1
Integrate Oracle Fusion Cloud IoT Intelligent Applications with Oracle Field Service
Cloud A-2
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes A-3
Process Inventory, Order, and Shipping Info Between Oracle ERP/SCM Cloud and
Oracle WMS Cloud A-3
Other Recipes A-5
iv
Preface
This document describes how business analysts and integration specialists get started working
with Oracle Integration 3.
Topics:
• Audience
• Documentation Accessibility
• Related Resources
• Conventions
Audience
This guide is intended for business analysts and developers who want to get an overview of
Oracle Integration 3, what it can do, and how to use recipes to build their first integration.
Documentation Accessibility
For information about Oracle's commitment to accessibility, visit the Oracle Accessibility
Program website at https://www.oracle.com/corporate/accessibility/.
Related Resources
For more information, see these Oracle resources:
• Oracle Integration documentation on the Oracle Help Center.
v
Preface
Conventions
The following text conventions are used in this document.
Convention Meaning
boldface Boldface type indicates graphical user interface elements associated with an
action, or terms defined in text or the glossary.
italic Italic type indicates book titles, emphasis, or placeholder variables for which
you supply particular values.
monospace Monospace type indicates commands within a paragraph, URLs, code in
examples, text that appears on the screen, or text that you enter.
vi
1
Welcome to Oracle Integration 3
Oracle Integration 3 is a cloud-native version of Oracle Integration. It delivers improved
performance and time to market for new features, a new look and feel, and improvements in
provisioning new instances by more deeply leveraging the power of Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure.
Oracle Integration 3 remains a fully managed, preconfigured environment that gives you the
power to integrate your cloud and on-premises applications. Select from our growing portfolio
of hundreds of adapters and recipes to connect with Oracle and third-party applications.
Topics:
• A Quick Introduction to Oracle Integration
• Connect to Everything
• Automate and Optimize End-to-End Business Processes
• Build Web and Mobile Apps in Minutes
• Supported Browsers
• Resources to Grow Your Expertise
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Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
• Establish connectivity between the many applications and people that are part of the entire
business process life cycle.
• Assemble existing technologies into new business services to better align with the
changing pace of new business demands.
• Deliver new business innovations faster by rapidly connecting diverse applications and key
business roles.
• Gain 360-degree views across your entire business. Easily monitor and analyze every
application, automation solution, and workflow spanning the business process life cycle.
Connect to Everything
Oracle Integration solves the application silo problem. It brings together data and workflows
between disparate software applications for them to function as one.
Oracle Integration provides several tools for automating business processes, including
integrations and robots, which perform this work in different ways:
• An integration gets information from an application by calling its APIs.
• A robot gets information from an application by opening the application and completing a
task in the user interface as a person does.
Integrations and robots deal with live operational data. Data can be processed either in real-
time or in batch, and between two or more applications, events, or application programming
interfaces (APIs).
Deployment Flexibility
With integrations and robots, you can connect to anything without getting bogged down in
technical implementation details.
You can bring data and applications together across on-premise and cloud systems: cloud to
cloud, cloud to on-premises (ground), and on-premises to on-premises (ground to ground).
1-2
Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
For a full list of adapters currently supported by Oracle Integration, see Adapters. New
adapters are added all the time.
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Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
adapters for Oracle Integration. An adapter built using the Rapid Adapter Builder can offer the
same capabilities as an Oracle-provided adapter. You can implement behaviors similar to those
available in the existing adapters on Oracle Integration.
The Rapid Adapter Builder is available as a Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extension, which
helps you generate the code required to build an adapter. Using this extension, you can
iteratively develop your adapter and publish it to Oracle Integration. See Using the Rapid
Adapter Builder with Oracle Integration 3.
For a full list of recipes and accelerators currently available for Oracle Integration, see Recipes
and Accelerators in the Oracle Help Center. The collection is growing all the time.
1-4
Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
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Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
Business-to-Business Communications
B2B for Oracle Integration provides support for business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce. You
can communicate with trading partners, and send and receive data in integrations with B2B.
1-6
Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
1-7
Chapter 1
Connect to Everything
– Use preloaded, standard HL7 message schemas (versions 2.3.1 through 2.9).
• Healthcare action
– Parse, validate, and transform native HL7 messages in your integrations with a
healthcare action in the integration canvas.
• FHIR Adapter
– Consume external FHIR resources from your integration.
– Define and invoke the remote FHIR API through a simple wizard-driven approach.
– Perform create, read, update, delete, and search operations.
• MLLP Adapter
– Allows bidirectional (trigger and invoke) connections supporting the TCP-based MLLP
protocol.
– Supports native transport of HL7 version 2 messages.
• Extended data retention
– Supports activity stream data retention for six months.
See Introduction to Oracle Integration for Healthcare in Using Oracle Integration for Healthcare
in Oracle Integration 3, FHIR Adapter Capabilities in Using the FHIR Adapter with Oracle
Integration 3, and MLLP Adapter Capabilities in Using the MLLP Adapter with Oracle
Integration 3.
1-8
Chapter 1
Automate and Optimize End-to-End Business Processes
• About Creating Hybrid Integrations Using Oracle Integration in Using Integrations in Oracle
Integration 3.
Note:
If you are using Oracle SOA Suite on-premises, you can reduce your overhead by
moving fully to the cloud. Migrating to Oracle SOA Suite on Marketplace provides a
Platform as a Service (PaaS) computing platform solution for running applications in
the cloud. It includes a complete set of service infrastructure components for
designing, deploying, and managing composite applications. See Differences
Between Oracle SOA Suite On-Premises and Oracle SOA Suite on Marketplace in
Oracle SOA Suite on Marketplace.
For documentation about the Oracle SOA Suite offerings on different platforms, see Oracle
SOA Suite on the Oracle Help Center.
1-9
Chapter 1
Build Web and Mobile Apps in Minutes
Visual Builder provides all the necessary tools for you to build, publish, and host modern web
and mobile applications:
• Configure and customize Oracle Cloud applications using the same development
environment that Oracle Cloud applications are built on.
• Use cloud-based visual tools to rapidly create and host web and mobile applications with
minimal coding required.
– Use the what-you-see-is-what-you-get (WYSIWYG) page designer to drag and drop UI
components and visually create your pages.
– Create custom reusable business objects that store data and implement business
logic.
– Publish your application with the push of a button and make it available to users.
• Easily connect REST APIs to integrate data from other applications into yours. For more
complex needs, developers can extend the functionality of the application using standard
JavaScript, HTML, and CSS.
Visual Builder also provides the infrastructure for securing access to your application, data, and
the Oracle Cloud services that your application consumes.
To use Visual Builder in Oracle Integration, you must first complete prerequisite tasks. See Use
Visual Builder in Oracle Integration in Provisioning and Administering Oracle Integration 3.
The following Visual Builder documentation is available on the Oracle Help Center:
• Administering Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration 3
• Developing Applications with Oracle Visual Builder in Oracle Integration 3
• Developing Integrated Spreadsheets Using Oracle Visual Builder Add-in for Excel
• Managing Data Using Oracle Visual Builder Add-in for Excel
• Oracle Visual Builder Page Model Reference
• Accessing Business Objects Using REST APIs
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Chapter 1
Build Web and Mobile Apps in Minutes
Step Description
1 Connect your data sources
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Chapter 1
Build Web and Mobile Apps in Minutes
Step Description
3 Display backend data
1-12
Chapter 1
Supported Browsers
Step Description
4 Go live
And just like that, you're done. Your first mobile app built specifically to meet your needs. You can
use the app on both Android and Apple iOS devices. You can share just within your company or via
Google Play and Apple App Stores if needed.
Supported Browsers
Oracle Integration 3 supports the following browsers.
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Chapter 1
Resources to Grow Your Expertise
1-14
2
Navigate and Explore
After your system is provisioned and user roles are assigned, begin exploring the rich features
of Oracle Integration.
Topics:
• Get Familiar with the Home Page
• View Oracle Integration Announcements
• Explore the Navigation Pane
• Get Stats at a Glance
• Explore Recipes and Accelerators
• Open Recently Worked On Items
• Keep Everything Organized with Projects
• Questions? Ask Oracle Assistant
Take a moment to get familiar with all you can do on the Home page.
2-1
Chapter 2
View Oracle Integration Announcements
Note:
You can't change the shape after you
create the instance. However, you can
move data to another instance using the
export and import features.
Announcements icon Click to display links that show the status of connectivity agents, active
integrations, and certificate expiration dates. See View Notification Alert
Announcements.
Click to display the current progress of some asynchronous, design-time
operations. This view eliminates the need to constantly refresh the page
to check progress concerning this Oracle Integration instance. See View
the Progress of Asynchronous, Design-Time Operations.
Alerts icon Click to display alerts. For example, an alert is visible if you have
activated more than 90% of the allowed limit of 700 integrations. The
alert provides a link to the Integration dashboards page for details.
Create and monitor Gives you a snapshot of key metrics for your integrations and visual
applications. For a break down of the total numbers, hover over a color
on the circle graphic. For quick access to more details, click an individual
card.
Create integration Click to select either Application or Schedule to open the Create
integration pane for creating a new application or schedule integration.
If you want to create the new integration in a project, select the project
name from the Project drop-down list, or type a new project name to
create a new project that includes your new integration. If you do not
want to create the integration in a project, see Create an Integration in
Using Integrations in Oracle Integration 3.
Get started Lists the recipes and accelerators available in Oracle Integration, which
you can use to jump-start your integration development. Filter the list by
clicking the Filter by product icons. To browse the entire collection, click
Browse store.
Recent activity Provides direct access to the integrations most recently updated. This
provides a quick and easy way to return to your work.
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Chapter 2
Explore the Navigation Pane
1. In the upper corner of the Home page, click to display the Announcements window,
which lists important items for your Oracle Integration instance.
A number on the icon indicates the number of upcoming announcements that are unread.
(Unread announcements that have passed their dates are not reflected in the number.)
Note:
Announcements must be enabled for your instance. If you see a message that
there are no announcements, contact your Oracle Integration administrator.
In the Announcements window, items are listed by publish date, with most recent items at
the top. Announcements typically indicate required actions (such as tagging) or upcoming
maintenance, and the list is refreshed every hour. A blue dot appears next to unread
announcements.
2. Mark an item as read by hovering over the item's row and selecting Mark as Read from
the options menu that is displayed.
Browse the menu and submenu selections, which give you access to the Oracle Integration
runtime environment, design-time environment, development tools, and administration settings.
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Chapter 2
Explore the Navigation Pane
2-4
Chapter 2
Explore the Navigation Pane
2-5
Chapter 2
Get Stats at a Glance
2-6
Chapter 2
Explore Recipes and Accelerators
To browse the entire collection, click Browse store, and then search, filter, and sort the list to
find the accelerator or recipe you want to use.
2-7
Chapter 2
Open Recently Worked On Items
You can install a recipe or accelerator, configure its connections, and activate its integrations.
See Get Started with Integration Recipes and Accelerators.
2-8
Chapter 2
Questions? Ask Oracle Assistant
2-9
Chapter 2
Questions? Ask Oracle Assistant
If you want to move the icon a different place on the page, click on it and drag it to a new
position.
2-10
3
Get Started with Integration Recipes and
Accelerators
Recipes and accelerators, collectively known as prebuilt integrations, are preassembled
integration solutions.
A recipe or accelerator contains all the resources required for a specific integration scenario.
The resources include integration flows, connections, lookups, and certificates. Use a recipe or
accelerator to quickly get started building an integration.
Recipes are either project-based or package-based:
• When you install a project-based recipe, you can access it on the Projects page in Oracle
Integration. All recipes made available since the Projects feature was introduced are
project-based.
• When you install a package-based recipe, you can access it on the Packages page in
Oracle Integration. Before the Projects feature was introduced, all recipes were package-
based. If you want to convert one of the package-based recipes into a project, you can
import the recipe's integration flows (IAR files) into a new project.
To determine whether a recipe in the Integration Store is project-based or package-based
before you install it, hover over the recipe card and click Open Details to expand the
information pane. The recipe details show either Project code (for a project-based recipe) or
Package name (for a package-based recipe).
3-1
Chapter 3
Learn About Differences Between Recipes and Accelerators
Topics:
• Learn About Differences Between Recipes and Accelerators
• Find Recipes, Accelerators, or Adapters
• Get More Details About Recipes and Accelerators
• Install Recipes, Accelerators, or Adapters
• View Details About a Resource
• Configure Resources
• Activate Recipes and Accelerators
• Uninstall Recipes and Accelerators
3-2
Chapter 3
Find Recipes, Accelerators, or Adapters
Recipes Accelerators
A recipe is a sample use case that gives you a A business accelerator provides an end-to-end business process or use
head start. case (for example, marketing to lead, hire to retire, or concept to launch).
A technical accelerator provides a common technical solution (for
example, sending alerts on failures). They are meant to be called by
another integration.
Not supported by the producer Managed and supported by the producer
Fully editable in the Oracle Integration designer Configurable and extendable
Can't auto-upgrade to new versions Upgrades provided by producer
Configurator in Oracle Integration Configurator in Oracle Integration and as native SaaS
Always free Paid offering (as decided by producer)
2. Use the Search , Filter , and view tools to narrow your search, filter and sort the
list, and change how the list is displayed.
3-3
Chapter 3
Get More Details About Recipes and Accelerators
To see more information, such as a full description, package or project name, version,
publication date, and a link to the associated adapter documentation, hover over the card and
click Open Details to expand the information pane.
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Chapter 3
Install Recipes, Accelerators, or Adapters
Note:
For accelerators and third-party adapters, newer versions may be available
periodically on the Integration Store. Click Get latest to install the latest version.
• You can upgrade an installed accelerator project to a newer version automatically
without making manual changes to your existing installation. For accelerators,
you can upgrade to any of the available new versions. See Upgrade an
Accelerator Project.
• For third-party adapters, you can only upgrade to the latest version.
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Chapter 3
Configure Resources
Configure Resources
After you install a recipe (or accelerator), you need to configure the integration flow(s) and
associated resources within the recipe.
You can perform the following configuration actions for a recipe (or accelerator):
• You can edit integrations flows, connections, certificates (PGP keys), lookups, and
libraries. You must have administrator privileges to edit certificates.
• You can replace connections and certificates in some recipes. However, you can't replace
them if an integration flow in the recipe is either active or locked. You can't replace them if
they are included in a business or technical accelerator.
• You can update integration property values for any integration flow in which properties
have been defined.
• You can add schedules to any integration flow that uses a Scheduled Orchestration style
(also called pattern). These integration flows run according to the schedule you define.
To configure a recipe (or accelerator), hover over an installed recipe in the Integration Store,
2. Hover over a row to reveal the options for configuring, editing, or replacing a resource.
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Chapter 3
Configure Resources
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Chapter 3
Configure Resources
3. Make the necessary edits to the resources and save your changes, then click Go back to
return to the Configuration Editor.
4. Continue to edit each resource. When you are ready, you can activate the package from
the Configuration Editor or the Integration Store.
2. Within a section (for example, Connections), click Actions on a resource to reveal the
options for editing, configuring, or deleting a resource.
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Chapter 3
Activate Recipes and Accelerators
3. Make the necessary edits to the resources and save your changes, then click Go back to
return to the Project Workspace.
4. Continue to edit each resource. When you are ready, you can activate the project from the
workspace or the Integration Store.
• From the Integration Store: Hover over the recipe card and click Activate .
• From the Configuration Editor or Project Workspace: Click Activate in the title bar. In
the Activate Package or Activate project panel, click Activate again.
A message confirms that the integrations in the prebuilt have been activated. Refresh the
page to view the updated status of the integrations.
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Chapter 3
Uninstall Recipes and Accelerators
Note that you can't edit the integration flows in an accelerator. In this case, you can reinstall to
restore an accelerator.
To uninstall a recipe or accelerator:
1. Find the recipe or accelerator that you want to uninstall.
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A
Recipes Reference
Oracle Integration includes a growing portfolio of recipes for integrating different applications
for customer relationship management and customer experience (CRM/CX), enterprise
resource planning (ERP), human capital management (HCM), social networking, and more.
For an overview of recipes and accelerators and how to use them, see Get Started with
Integration Recipes and Accelerators. In this section, you'll find more information about some
of the Oracle Integration recipes. For a full list of recipes and accelerators currently available
for Oracle Integration, see Recipes and Accelerators on the Oracle Help Center.
Topics:
• Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes
• Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes
• Other Recipes
Topics:
• Create Orders in Oracle Fusion Cloud Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities
• Integrate Oracle Fusion Cloud IoT Intelligent Applications with Oracle Field Service Cloud
For documentation on all available CRM recipes, explore our Recipes and Accelerators page
in Oracle Help Center.
Create Orders in Oracle Fusion Cloud Service for Oracle CPQ Opportunities
Use this recipe to streamline the entire opportunity-to-quote-to-order process by integrating
Oracle Fusion Cloud Service and Oracle Configure, Price, and Quote (Oracle CPQ).
Note:
This recipe is available as Oracle B2B Service — Oracle CPQ | Convert
Opportunity-to-Quote-to-Order in the Integration Store. Oracle provides this recipe
as a sample only. The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be
error-free. No support is provided for this recipe.
A-1
Appendix A
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Recipes
Overview
This recipe allows users to create quotes and sales orders for an opportunity. It provides a
consistent user interface flow that originates in Oracle Fusion Cloud Service.
Transaction data is passed seamlessly between the two applications, ensuring accuracy and
allowing Oracle Fusion Cloud Service users to take advantage of the on-demand configuration,
pricing, and quoting capabilities of Oracle CPQ.
The benefits include:
• Allows users to create quotes with accurate pricing and generate company specific
proposals
• Simplifies quoting and reduces duplicate entry for sales reps managing opportunities that
require quotes
• Enables sales reps to accurately configure and price complex products in an intuitive and
easy to use manner
Related Documentation
• Oracle CPQ Cloud-Oracle Sales Cloud Integration through Oracle Integration Cloud
Service Implementation Guide
Integrate Oracle Fusion Cloud IoT Intelligent Applications with Oracle Field
Service Cloud
Use this recipe to automate the process of dispatching technicians to jobs based on alerts from
Internet of Things (IoT) enabled devices. It integrates Oracle Fusion Cloud IoT Intelligent
Applications and Oracle Field Service Cloud.
Note:
This recipe is available as Oracle IoT Cloud — Oracle Field Service Cloud |
Dispatch Technicians in the Integration Store. Oracle provides this recipe as a
sample only. The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is not warranted to be error-
free. No support is provided for this recipe.
Overview
This recipe enables you to dispatch technicians quickly and increase productivity by having
activities automatically created, without any manual interventions, from Oracle Fusion Cloud
A-2
Appendix A
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes
IoT Intelligent Applications to Oracle Field Service Cloud. You can also keep better track of
incidents and activities by minimizing human errors.
The capabilities include:
• End-to-end integration between Oracle Field Service Cloud and Oracle Fusion Cloud IoT
Intelligent Applications
• Automatic activity creation based on alerts from IoT enabled devices
• Display IoT device details within Oracle Field Service Cloud
Related Documentation
• Oracle Field Service Cloud / IoTCS Integration using OIC
Topic:
• Process Inventory, Order, and Shipping Info Between Oracle ERP/SCM Cloud and Oracle
WMS Cloud
For documentation on all available ERP recipes, explore our Recipes and Accelerators page in
Oracle Help Center.
A-3
Appendix A
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Recipes
(ERP)/Supply Chain & Manufacturing (SCM) Cloud and Oracle Warehouse Management
(WMS) Cloud.
Note:
This recipe is available as Oracle ERP/SCM Cloud — Oracle WMS Cloud |
Process Inventory, Order, and Shipping Info in the Integration Store. Oracle
provides this recipe as a sample only. The recipe is meant only for guidance, and is
not warranted to be error-free. No support is provided for this recipe.
Overview
This recipe syncs inventory, and maps receipts to purchase orders, receipts to receiving, and
shipments to orders.
It includes the following individual integrations in one package:
• OCWMS_INVENTORY_ADJUSTMENT: Makes inventory adjustments from Oracle WMS Cloud to
Fusion inventory.
• OCWMS_RECEIPT_ADVICE: Takes purchase order receipts in Oracle Inventory Management
Cloud and maps them to purchase orders in Oracle WMS Cloud.
• OCWMS_RECEIPT_CONFIRMATION: Maps receipt confirmation from Oracle WMS Cloud to
Fusion receiving.
• OCWMS_SHIPMENT_REQUEST: Maps shipment requests from Fusion shipping to orders in
Oracle WMS Cloud.
• OCWMS_SHIPMENT_CONFIRMATION: Maps shipments from Oracle WMS Cloud to the
confirmation in Fusion shipping.
• OCWMS_ECHO_LGFDATA: Used for internal XML transformation. No user configuration is
necessary.
The integration uses the standard REST Adapter available in Oracle Integration to create a
connection to a specific instance of Oracle WMS Cloud. The connection is then used to create
an integration, which calls Oracle WMS Cloud web services, as well as exposes web services
that Oracle WMS Cloud can call to push out data. The sample flow uses the Oracle ERP Cloud
Adapter to connect to ERP Cloud instances (Fusion/Cloud Inventory).
Related Documentation
• Oracle Warehouse Management Cloud Integrating with Integration Cloud Services
• Using the Oracle ERP Cloud Adapter with Oracle Integration 3
A-4
Appendix A
Other Recipes
Other Recipes
Oracle is continually expanding its portfolio of recipes. In addition to the recipe documents
listed here, you can find documentation for the latest recipes on the Recipes and Accelerators
page in the Oracle Help Center.
A-5