Posts Tagged ‘SOA Suite10g’
Some tips & tricks on migrating SOA Suite 10g to 11g – Part 2
This blog contains some experiences taken from our migration from SOA Suite 10g to SOA Suite 11g. The previous one was about custom XSLT functions, sensors, composite instance tracking, and Domain Value Maps (DVM). This entry is about using Oracle Internet Directory (OID) 10g as identity provider for SOA Suite 11g.
Integrating OID 10g with SOA Suite 11g
Using OID 10g as identity- and access provider in SOA Suite 10g wasn’t entirely trivial. After applying the steps as documented in Oracle BPEL Process Manager Administrator’s Guide 10g you needed to perform some additional configuration steps that could be somewhat tricky at first. Jaap Poot has some great blogs on this.
Oracle Service Bus article on OTN
The Oracle Service Bus article Eric Elzinga and I wrote is published on Oracle Technology Network (OTN).
The article is aimed at developers and architects who are familiar with Oracle Enterprise Service Bus (OESB) and are (fairly) new to Oracle Service Bus (OSB). The tutorials in this article highlight differences between these two products. The tutorials are based on a workshop in the WAAI community; a collaboration of Dutch consultancies (Whitehorses, Approach, AMIS, and IT-Eye). The goal of the WAAI collaboration is to share, bundle, and expand knowledge on the recent Fusion Middleware 11g release.
Some tips and tricks on migrating SOA Suite 10g to 11g
Just a few things I noticed last week when migrating BPEL and ESB projects from SOA Suite 10g to SCA composites and components in SOA Suite 11g.
Custom adapter article on OTN
A while ago someone asked me if you could create your own adapter and use it from Oracle SOA Suite. More specifically if you could create an inbound e-mail adapter (not available out-of-the-box in SOA Suite) that polls for new mail messages and use it as activation agent for starting a BPEL process or ESB flow.
I knew this was possible -at least the possibility was documented- and searched for a how-to. I couldn’t find one explaining all steps involved. However, I did find lots of questions on the OTN forums asking how to achieve this. I thought it would be nice to write an article about it after I got it working. It’s published on OTN.
The article includes a step-by-step tutorial for building the adapter and plugging it into Oracle SOA Suite components such as BPEL PM and ESB. The article also briefly discusses adapter support, offerings, and convergence in future Oracle Fusion Middleware releases that incorporate former BEA products.
Drop me a line if you’re interested in an example for using a outbound adapter instead of an inbound one. I’ll see if I can add such an example in the future.
Deployment of BPEL processes to SOA Suite fails after upgrade to 10.1.3.4
If you apply patch 10.1.3.4 to Oracle SOA Suite and use OID as security provider then you might run into the following problem when deploying your BPEL processes from JDeveloper or custom Ant scripts:
A problem occured while connecting to server [host] using port [port]: java.security.AccessControlException: access denied (com.collaxa.security.DomainPermission [domain] read)
If this is the case then open Enterprise Manager and check that the deploy_service application (which is a child application of orabpel and new in SOA Suite 10.1.3.4) is configured to use OID as security provider instead of file-based JAZN. Restart SOA Suite and deployment should work.
The feared “demo-effect” – bluescreen just before our OOW session
Yesterday I arrived in San Francisco to attend and present on Oracle Open World 2008. After a really nice dinner with most of the ODTUG presenters, I quickly went to sleep. The day after -today as I’m writing this blog-, Lonneke and I were going to present the Oracle versus BEA shootout session in Moscone West. Exciting, moreover since the session was fully booked, with more than fifty people on the waiting list. So naturally we wanted to prepare, test, and fine-tune our demo’s this morning.
The day starts good. I had slept for more than 10 hours, my jetlag -that I really felt during the ODTUG dinner- was reduced to a minor disorientation. So far so good. I met with Lonneke to go over the demo’s. First thing that happens when I start my laptop is that I see the feared bluescreen of death telling me that a fatal core dump has occurred (sounds just like Star trek). Meanwhile the presentation was only a couple of hours away. Aarrrgghhh! To keep in Star trek terms, I only needed to realign the dilithium matrix to stabilize the warp field to fix this “coredump”. My laptop caught the demo-effect in its worst form: half our presentation is demo and my laptop is dead! That’s when my heart rate doubled and my blood pressure went to a new all-time high. Lonneke -normally making jokes to cheer you up when something goes wrong- kept quiet this time and looked at me alarmingly. Luckily, restarting computers when they’re broken or don’t do what you want can result in miracles: no bluescreen this time. Guess my computer had a jetlag too. After fixing our BEA demo’s and a quick rehearsal we left for Moscone. Luckily, the demo-virus stayed in the hotel and all demo’s worked perfectly during our presentation!
Later on this week we’ll post more on our Oracle Open World. We’ll also post the demo’s from our presentation later on.
Lonneke at OOW 2008.
Collect all the ribbons and become a fout-star general!
Blogs
- 26 Jul
- 10 Jun
- 02 Jun
- 26 Mar
- 25 Feb
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05 Nov
Some tips & tricks on migrating SOA Suite 10g to 11g – Part 2
- 04 Nov
- 02 Nov
- 25 Oct
- 20 Oct
- Best practices 2 - Web Services
- Fault handling in Oracle SOA Suite 11g - Part II
- Fault handling in Oracle SOA Suite 11g
- Migrating Web Services from JDeveloper 10g to 11g
- Migrating EJB 3 applications from OC4J to WebLogic
- Best practices for BPM, SOA and EDA
- Some tips & tricks on migrating SOA Suite 10g to 11g - Part 2
- Logging messages in Oracle SOA Suite 11g using OWSM



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