BPM Suite 12c Specialist certifications available free online training and free certification!

 

clip_image002Free online training including free online certification for BPM Suite 12c is now available.

· Business Process Management Suite 12c Sales Specialist guided learning path is intended for sales representatives at partner organizations who specialize in selling and positioning Oracle BPM Suite 12c to their own customer base. The recommended online training sessions provide sales training solutions that equip the sales teams with high-level of product knowledge, market knowledge and selling strategies to help them achieve own revenue targets.

· Oracle Business Process Management Suite 12c Presales Specialist guided learning path is intended for sales engineers and presales consultants at partner organizations who specialize in selling and positioning Oracle BPM Suite 12c. The recommended online training sessions provide more in-depth information to help consultants as they support the sales process through demonstrations and prototypes.

SOA & BPM Partner Community

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Business Rules in Oracle Process Cloud Service by Herman Brunnekreef

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In this post I will show an overview of Business Rules in the Process Cloud Service.

First let’s create a new application on the start window of the Process Composer
After the creation of the application you see the Application Home. At the left side you see the following options.
Let’s select Business Types to create Business Objects

Read the complete article here.

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My private corner–Bill Gates book recommendation

 

clip_image002Every year Bill Gates recommends interesting books to read during the summer break. Thoughtful list of interesting content, make sure you grape one or more books! Here is his original tweet” Every summer I try to do a little extra reading. Here are a few books you might enjoy: b-gat.es/1S7Txy1 amp.twimg.com/v/e910bd12-b09…

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Process Cloud Composer Tour by Gregory Hughlett

 

clip_image002There are many good reasons for business to look very seriously at the Oracle Process Cloud Service as a way to provision a fully managed BPM environment that lets the business focus on process improvement.  Previous releases of Oracle BPM admitedly have focused on the technologist and not the business user.  However, the evolution to the Process Cloud has been underway since 11g via the Process Composer tool.  Process Cloud now makes it available to everyone.

For the business, there are many reasons to move to the Oracle Process Cloud: 

  • It wlll lower start-up and upfront costs for both IT infrastructure and software licenses. 
  • Cloud implementations reduce risks associated with large capital investment with smoother predictable operational expenditures. Large one-time software upgrade costs are also eliminated.
  • Cloud customers benefit from using the latest product version and can rapidly leverage new feature capabilities. 
  • Requires the business to pay only for what they need, rather than over or under engineering an on premise business application.  "Elastic scalability’ ensures the business only pays for the capacity that is needed when it is needed.
  • Provides high performance and continuous availability: automatic load balancing and failover provide continuous availability.

The first release of the Oracle Process Cloud provides a full lifecycle, soup to nuts process management tool.  The Process Cloud user interface is fast, modern, and designed for the business. It isn’t designed for the IT types (although us IT types will enjoy using them too.)  This topic is a tour through many of the Process Cloud screens at a high level so you can get a feel for how complete it is.  Many of the features you’ll see here can also be found in the on-premise Process Composer tool, a web-based tool, also oriented to business users.      

Process Composer Home

Depending on your role in the Process Cloud environment, you will have different options available on the Process Composer main page. Read the complete article here.

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A quick look at Process Cloud Service by Laurens van der Starre

 

clip_image002Oracle Process Cloud Service is Oracle’s rapid process automation in the Cloud. It is more or less BPM in the cloud. This service allows you to quickly and easily create business processes like you are used to with Oracle BPM, only now in the cloud. In this post I’ll give a quick tour of this service.

So let’s start with the Process Cloud Service. The landing page already gives you loads of features.

The landing page of the Process Cloud

Here you have your spaces in which your processes will be saved, and where you start building new applications. So let’s create a new one. Read the complete article here.

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Process Cloud – first impressions by Luc Gorissen

 

clip_image002As of this week, Oracle has released the Oracle Process Cloud Service (PCS): https://cloud.oracle.com/process. This PaaS cloud service offers a development platform for implementing business processes. Underpinning technology for this cloud service is the Oracle Fusion Middleware BPM stack. As a result, using the Process Cloud Service should be easy for people that are already familiar with Oracle Fusion Middleware BPM. For example, familiar platform components like BPM Composer and BPM WorkSpace are also present in PCS. With that in mind, we decided to give it a go!

This article outlines the steps for implementing a simple process in the Oracle Process Cloud Service. We were inspired during a discussion with a customer on SOA Governance, more specifically: how to handle/grant access to specific services. The customer mentioned that ‘he had people were complaining that it was unpredictable how long it took before access to a specific service in a specific environment was granted’. These types of processes can be handled very well within the Oracle Process Cloud. So, the ‘ServiceAccessApproval’ process will be shown in this example.

Sample process ServiceAccessApproval

The process ServiceAccessApproval in short consists of the following steps: Read the complete article here.

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IoT Cloud Service – Driving value in the connected world–Webcast Wednesday, November 18th

imageWednesday, November 18th @ 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM PT

Speakers:

Harish Gaur, Senior Director Product Management for Internet of Things Product Group

Simon Nicholson, Senior Director, Product Management for the Internet of Things Product Group

IoT presents a huge opportunity to transform and differentiate your business—whether you are in manufacturing, logistics, infrastructure, or other verticals. Companies are looking to deliver business benefits from the Internet of Things (IoT) around reduced operational costs and enhanced customer experience, and by improving products. If this is done right, returns can be significant and rapid. By leveraging large volumes of sensor data, analyzing this data, and connecting this data with back-end applications, customers and partners are realizing the full potential of IoT for digital transformation.

Join this session to understand Oracle IoT Strategy and a phased approach to ROI with the Oracle Internet of Things Cloud Service, making IoT implementation straightforward, simple and effective. In this session, you will learn how the feature set will help you to quickly build IoT applications, connect and manage devices, configure and monitor security policies, manage and analyze massive amounts of data and integrate with your business processes and applications. You will also see examples of out-of-the-box integration with other Oracle Cloud services and applications, showing the unique value through end-to-end integration that Oracle provides.

This is the link to the registration page that displays all webcast details!

SOA & BPM Partner Community

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Fusion Middleware 12c – Selective tracing by Michel Schildmeijer

 

clip_image002For doing a good diagnosis in case of a problem in your Oracle Fusion Middleware Product, the platform offers you many methods and techniques to do your investigation. The disadvantage from some of these methods is that they have some impact on your system, such as if you would raise the log or debuglevel or use diagnostic snapshots.

Selective Tracing is a facility available through Enterprise Manager to limit the scope of trace logging.This allows for debugging of a production system without overloading the system with logging activity. To use Selective Tracing, perform the following method:

1. On the left expand ‘WebLogic Domain’
2. Open Enterprise Manager: http://<your host>:7001/em

3. Right click your domain name -> Logs -> Selective Tracing. This will bring you to the following screen where you can configure your Selective Tracing session. Click on add fields and select as below: Read the complete article here.

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OSB – Comparing Transformation Performance by Over de Auteur

 

clip_image001Introduction

In this post, I am looking into the relative performance of the transformation technologies in Service Bus 12c. Having searched the internet, I could not find a lot of specific information regarding the performance in Oracle Service Bus, but only qualitative opinions like “XSLT performs better for large documents”, or “Service Bus is optimized for XQuery”, without any supporting data [ORAFORUM].

Background

In an attempt to offload some of the production load from the SOA clusters, a migration project has been initiated to migrate services implemented in SOA Suite 11g (as BPEL processes) to the Oracle Service Bus cluster.

Although these services are not directly exposed to consumers, the intention is to reuse – without modification- as much artefacts as possible, including WSDL, JCA adapter definitons and the transformation logic – currently implemented in XSLT. Fortunately, the XSLT is version 1.0 since our Service Bus 11.1.1.6 does not yet support version 2.0.

Environment Setup

Although the environment where the question originates currently runs SOA/OSB 11g, migration to 12c is being planned. Liking life on the bleeding edge of technology, I decided to setup a test for 12c.

To quickly create a (reproducible) SOA 12c installation, I have used the scripts [BIEMOND] provided by Edwin Biemond to leverage Vagrant for the creation of two virtual machines (one for the DB and one for the middleware) (). Since my laptop has enough memory available, I have assigned 8 GB to the middleware virtual machine. Furthermore, the memory settings for the OSB-server have been increased to 1536 MB (initial = maximum memory).

On my laptop, I have also installed SoapUI [SOAPUI] (for functional testing – verifying that the testcase using different technologies yields the same result) and Apache Jmeter 2.13[JMeter] (for the actual performance testing).

Scenario Setup

For the time being I want to primarily focus on the relative performance of XQuery when compared to XSLT, over multiple transformations with varying payloads. So, the only metric I am interested in is the response time of the service, assuming that -with all other things being equal- equal actions will add equal overhead: the total response time of the service will be taken as the main indicator.

To support different transformations for testing, there should both be XQuery and XSLT versions of the transformation. Ideally, we should have different proxies per scenario and transformation technology, but actually I am too lazy to set up this scenario. Initially, I was thinking about setting up different testcases in the same proxy and switching between these testcases based on a value in the payload or operation, this has the suspicion that it works like a case statement (or nested if-then-else): evaluating the conditions for the fourth case might take more time than for the first case.

Fortunately, Service Bus also supports “Dynamic Transformations”[OSBDYNTRANS] for both XQuery and XSLT: this lets you dynamically assign the name of a transformation resource to apply, and also dynamically assign the payload to this transformation (see the Dynamic XQuery example below):

OSB Dynamic Assign Operation

The project I have come up with consists of a single proxy exposing a single operation and five pipelines: Read the whole article here.

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SOA 12c–Creating ESS Job metadata by Siva

 

clip_image002In this post, We will use the EM Console to create ESS Job metadata  to call the Service Bus proxy services however the steps remain same for calling BPEL service too.

Configuration

During domain creation, we should select the following options to create ESS Managed Server and EM Plugin for ESS. EM Plugin for ESS enable us to monitor and manage submitted ESS jobs.

You should see the EM Console as shown below on successful domain creation and starting the Admin and ESS servers. Observe that Scheduling Services is shown having ESSAPP. Read the complete article here.

SOA & BPM Partner Community

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