Table of Contents
- Title and Copyright Information
- Preface
- What's New in This Guide
-
Part I Introduction to Oracle B2B
-
1
Introduction to Oracle B2B
- 1.1 Oracle B2B and Business-to-Business E-Commerce
- 1.2 Protocols Supported in Oracle B2B
- 1.3 Oracle B2B Metadata
- 1.4 Security Features of Oracle B2B
- 1.5 How Oracle B2B Fits into a SOA Implementation
- 1.6 Sending a Purchase Order: An Example of a SOA Implementation
- 1.7 Administering Oracle B2B in the Oracle Fusion Middleware Environment
- 1.8 Accessibility Options
- 2 Getting Started with Oracle B2B
-
1
Introduction to Oracle B2B
-
Part II Oracle B2B Process Flow
- 3 Creating Guideline Files
- 4 Creating Document Definitions
-
5
Configuring Trading Partners
- 5.1 Introduction to Trading Partners
- 5.2 Creating Trading Partner Profiles
- 5.3 Adding Trading Partner Users
- 5.4 Adding Document Definitions
-
5.5
Configuring Channels
- 5.5.1 Add a Channel
- 5.5.2 Provide Transport Protocol Parameters
- 5.5.3 Provide Channel Attributes
- 5.5.4 Provide Exchange Protocol Parameters
- 5.5.5 Configure Security
- 5.5.6 Binary Transfer
- 5.5.7 About MLLP
- 5.5.8 Multiple Channel Support for ebMS
- 5.5.9 Message Sequencing
- 5.5.10 Using Transport Sync Callback
- 5.5.11 Correlating Messages Using JMS Queues
- 5.5.12 Configuring Delivery Retry Options
- 5.6 Using the Auto Create Agreement Feature
- 5.7 Using Identifiers for Trading Partner Lookup
- 5.8 Scheduling Trading Partner Downtime
- 5.9 Broadcasting Messages to Multiple Trading Partners
- 5.10 Validating Certificate in Inbound Message Processing
- 6 Creating and Deploying Trading Partner Agreements
-
Part III Oracle B2B Administration
- 7 Importing and Exporting Data
-
8
Using Document Protocols
- 8.1 Using the Custom Document Protocol
- 8.2 Using the EDI EDIFACT Document Protocol
- 8.3 Using the EDI X12 Document Protocol
- 8.4 Using the HL7 Document Protocol
- 8.5 Using the OAG Document Protocol
- 8.6 Using the Positional Flat File Document Protocol
- 8.7 Using the RosettaNet Document Protocol
- 8.8 Using the UCCNet Document Protocol
- 8.9 Changing Document Details
- 8.10 Using Document Routing IDs
- 9 Managing Deployments
- 10 Creating Types
- 11 Batching EDI Messages
- 12 Scheduling Trading Partner Downtime
- 13 Managing Callouts
- 14 Using Maps
- 15 Purging Data
- 16 Configuring Listening Channels
- 17 Configuring B2B System Parameters
-
Part IV Reports and Metrics
- 18 Securing Oracle B2B
- 19 Creating Reports
- 20 Using B2B Metrics
-
Part V Scripts and Utilities
-
21
B2B Command-Line Tools
- 21.1 Prerequisites for Running the Command-line Tools
- 21.2 Archiving Data
- 21.3 Purging Data
- 21.4 Importing Data
- 21.5 Exporting Data
- 21.6 Batching Operations
- 21.7 Resetting Channel Passwords
- 21.8 Activating or Deactivating Listening Channels
- 21.9 Deploying Agreements
- 21.10 Validating B2B Metadata
- 21.11 Using the ebXML CPP/CPA Utilities
- 21.12 Verifying Agreement Availability
- 21.13 Creating Oracle B2B Metadata Based on selfservice.xsd
- 21.14 Resubmitting a Message
- 21.15 Scheduling Trading Partner Downtime
- 21.16 Managing the Keystore
- 21.17 Updating the Keystore
- 21.18 Errors During Import
- 21.19 Moving B2B Agreement from a Test to a Production Environment
- 22 Using the Oracle B2B Web Services
-
23
Enabling Web-Service-Based Message Exchange
- 23.1 Introduction to Web-Service-Based Message Exchange
- 23.2 Exchanging SOAP-Based Service Messages with Custom WSDL File
- 23.3 Configuring wsa.action
- 23.4 Sending Custom SOAP Headers
- 23.5 Attaching Policies to Web Services Using Enterprise Management
- 23.6 Identifying the Trading Partner at Runtime
- 23.7 Sample Request-Reply Scenarios
- 24 Enabling AS4-Based Message Exchange
- 25 Using Scripts for Archiving and Restoring Data
- 26 Utilities for Enqueuing and Dequeuing
-
27
Monitoring Instance Message Data With Oracle BAM
- 27.1 Introduction to Monitoring Oracle B2B with Oracle BAM
- 27.2 Creating a Data Source in Oracle WebLogic Server
- 27.3 Creating a Foreign JMS Server
- 27.4 Create a B2B Data Object using Oracle BAM Composer
- 27.5 Define a JMS Message Source Using an Oracle BAM Enterprise Message Source
- 27.6 Mapping Oracle B2B Instance Messages to Oracle BAM Data Objects
- 27.7 Creating a Dashboard to Monitor Oracle B2B
- 27.8 Enabling the Oracle BAM Integration in Oracle B2B
- 28 Programmatically Accessing Instance Message Data
-
21
B2B Command-Line Tools
-
Appendices
- A Handling Large Payloads
- B Handling E-Mail Attachments
- C High Availability Architecture and Failover Considerations
-
D
Diagnosing Generic Issues
- D.1 Generic Diagnostics
- D.2 Troubleshooting Message Delivery Failure - A Case Study
- E Synchronous Request/Reply Support
- F Setting B2B Configuration Properties in Fusion Middleware Control
- G Back-End Applications Interface
- H Sequence Message Management
-
I
Tracking Business Message Flow
- I.1 Introduction to Business Flow Events
- I.2 Tracking Oracle B2B Message Events
- I.3 Tracing Flow By Using Oracle B2B Console
- I.4 Instance Tracking and Error Hospital Integration
- J Setting Up B2B Communication By Using Remote JNDI Queue
- K Exception Handling
- L Database Partitioning
- M Self Service Utility Protocols, Identifications, Security Specifications, and Parameters
- N TA1 Acknowledgment
- O Exchanging Messages By Using IBM Websphere MQ
- P Running Oracle B2B as a Hub
- Q Overriding Non-Traditional Characters