on 05-14-2007 5:31 AM
Hi ,
we're doing interfacing between Oracle DB and SAP. Our Scenario is as below
1. Everyday at 6 PM three should be triger which checks an entry in X table and if found then call the RFC,
2. Get the data from SAP via RFC and then insert or update the Y table
Is it require BPM???
Could any one pls let me know the steps t do it
Thanks in advance
Regards
Vijay
Hi,
Without BPM also you can implement this scenario.
for that you have to do the following configurations:
Sender : Jdbc Adapter
Receiver : RFC Adapter
thats it... If you have any further queries pls let me know!!!
Cheers.,
Xeon
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
Hi,
Sender JDBC adapter by standard is a polling basd adapter and so evey polling interval the sender JDBC adapter will poll to check for Records.
From SP 19, you have the Availabilty Times Planning that can allow you to schedule your adapters and so you can schedule the sender JDBC adapter and this will take look for the data at the corresponding time and if found the interface will be triggered.
Regards
Bhavesh
Hi,
For sender JDBC adapter , <a href="/people/yining.mao/blog/2006/09/13/tips-and-tutorial-for-sender-jdbc-adapter">Tips and Tutorial for Sender JDBC Adapter</a>
By default the Sender JDBC adapter is Asynchronous and so you might need to use a BPM if your RFC call is Synch Else you do not need a BPM.
Regards
Bhavesh
The normal procedure is to use a column in the database that indicated whether a record has been processed by SAP XI or not. From XI, you can read all records that have an initial value in this column, and update the column when a record is processed in XI.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
Yes. This design requires a BPM in design. You can avoid a BPM, if you are on SP19.
For design with BPM, refer the blog
/people/arpit.seth/blog/2005/06/27/rfc-scenario-using-bpm--starter-kit
This blog describes a File-RFC-File. Yours will be very similar except adpter type will be JDBC and some changes in Data type definition.
Regards,
Jai Shankar
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
User | Count |
---|---|
101 | |
13 | |
13 | |
11 | |
11 | |
7 | |
6 | |
5 | |
4 | |
4 |
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.