Oracle Pedigree and Serialization Manager Installation Guide Release 1.2 Part Number E36380-01 | Contents | Previous | Next |
This chapter covers the following topics:
Oracle Pedigree and Serialization Manager (OPSM) is an application that enables companies to manage serialization of products and share serialized product data across the supply chain. OPSM can integrate with your existing manufacturing, shipping, and receiving transactional systems, Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS), or it can operate as a standalone application. OPSM can support multiple transactional or EBS systems integrated to a single instance of OPSM. The multiple transactional or EBS systems may be multiple instances managed within your company or systems managed by your manufacturing and logistics partners.
For more information on OPSM, see the Oracle Pedigree and Serialization Manager Process Guide.
For more information on the integration between OPSM and EBS, see the Oracle Serialization and Tracking Integration Pack for Oracle Pedigree and Serialization Manager and Oracle E-Business Suite 3.1 - Implementation Guide.
This diagram illustrates a high-level overview of OPSM:
OPSM High-Level Overview
Download Oracle Pedigree and Serialization Manager (OPSM) through E-delivery. Oracle can also supply the product on DVD to accommodate specific customer requests.
The user interface is in American English. American English is supported.
This installation guide provides information required to install the OPSM application on Oracle supported platforms.
The information contained in this guide is subject to change as the product technology evolves and as hardware, operating systems, and third-party software are created and modified. This guide is intended for information technology personnel and privileged users responsible for installing and configuring OPSM.
These conventions are used throughout this guide:
The notation <Install_Dir> / is used to refer to the location on your system where the software is installed.
Forward slashes (/) are used to separate the directory levels in a path name. A forward slash will always appear after the end of a directory name.
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