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Oracle Workflow Developer's Guide
Release 2.6.3.5

Part Number B12161-02
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Events

A business event is an occurrence in an internet or intranet application or program that might be significant to other objects in a system or to external agents. For instance, the creation of a purchase order is an example of a business event in a purchasing application. You can define your significant events in the Event Manager.

Oracle Workflow provides several predefined events for significant occurrences within the Business Event System. See: Predefined Workflow Events

When you define an event in the Event Manager, you must assign it a unique internal name, which is case-sensitive. The suggested format for these internal names is a compound structure of identifiers separated by periods (.) as follows:

<company>.<family>.<product>.<component>.<object>.<event>

This format allows you to organize the events you define into a classification hierarchy.

Any detail information needed to describe what occurred in an event, in addition to the event name and event key, is called the event data. For example, the event data for a purchase order event includes the item numbers, descriptions, and cost. The event data can be structured as an XML document.

The application where the event occurs can include the event data when raising the event to the Event Manager. If the application will not provide the event data, you should specify a generate function for the event that can produce the complete event data from the event name, event key, and an optional parameter list. The generate function must follow a standard PL/SQL or Java API. See: Raise, Oracle Workflow API Reference and Standard API for an Event Data Generate Function.

Define only one generate function for an event, either PL/SQL or Java. Define the generate function independently of any subscriptions to the event.

Note: When raising an event from Java, you can also set a serializable object as a payload for the event. The payload is available to all Java subscriptions to the event.

The Event Manager checks each subscription before executing it to determine whether the subscription requires the event data. If the event data is required but is not already provided, the Event Manager calls the generate function for the event to produce the event data. If the event data is required but no generate function is defined for the event, Oracle Workflow creates a default set of event data using the event name and event key.

Note: If the generate function is costly, and you want to return control to the calling application more quickly after raising the event, you can defer all the subscriptions that require the complete event data. Then the Event Manager will not run the generate function until those subscriptions are executed at a later time. See: Deferred Subscription Processing.

You can run a diagnostic test through Oracle Diagnostics to verify that the generate functions that are defined for events exist in the database and are valid. See: Oracle Workflow Diagnostic Tests, Oracle Workflow Administrator's Guide.

You can associate an event with the program or application to which it belongs by setting the program name and brief identifier as the owner name and owner tag for the event. For instance, in the example of the purchase order event, the owner would be the purchasing application. The program can then use this identifying information to locate the events that it owns.

Each event is assigned a customization level that determines whether you can update the event definition. Oracle Workflow uses the customization level to protect Oracle Applications seed data and to preserve your customizations in an upgrade. An event can have one of the following customization levels:

See: Access Protection for Business Event System Data, Oracle Workflow Administrator's Guide.

Some Oracle Applications products provide seeded events and subscriptions. In these cases, Oracle Workflow executes subscriptions only if the triggering event and the subscription are both owned by products that you have licensed with a status of Installed or Shared.

Your Oracle Applications installation may include seeded events owned by Oracle Applications products that you have not licensed. For such events, the Update Event page displays a notice that the event is not licensed. Oracle Workflow will not execute any subscriptions to these events. Additionally, Oracle Workflow will not execute any subscriptions owned by products that you have not licensed, even if the triggering events for those subscriptions are licensed.

You can use the License Manager AD utility to review which products you currently have licensed. To ensure that the license status of the seeded events and subscriptions in the Business Event System is updated according to the status of the products you currently have licensed, you can run the Synchronize Product License and Workflow BES License concurrent program. See: License Manager, Oracle Applications AD Utilies Reference Guide and Synchronizing License Statuses, Oracle Workflow Administrator's Guide.

Note: Any events that you define with a customization level of User are always treated as being licensed.

Event Groups

You can also define event groups that let you associate any events you want with each other and reference them as a group in event subscriptions. An event group is a type of event composed of a set of individual member events. The internal names of event groups should follow the same format as the names of individual events. Once you have defined an event group, you can register a subscription to the group rather than having to create separate subscriptions for each individual event within it. The subscription will be executed whenever any one of the group's member events occurs.

Note: Event groups cannot be used to raise events. You must raise each event individually.

See Also

To View and Maintain Events

To Create or Update an Event

To Create or Update an Event Group

To Raise a Test Event


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