Book Image

Oracle BPM Suite 11g Developer's cookbook

By : Vivek Acharya
Book Image

Oracle BPM Suite 11g Developer's cookbook

By: Vivek Acharya

Overview of this book

Oracle Business Process Management Suite is a complete set of tools for creating, executing, and optimizing business processes.Oracle BPM Suite 11g offers the flexibility that business demands, hand-in-hand with the power IT requires. The result is an agile platform that brings together your existing applications, enabling you to react quickly to new business requirements.With this cookbook we will develop rich, interactive business processes using the Oracle Business Process Management suite.With Oracle BPM Suite 11g Developer's Cookbook, a common process model based on BPMN is presented to the specific role assigned to readers in each chapter. Explore Oracle BPM 11g with Modelling, Implementation, Simulation, Deployment, Exception Management, BPM and SOA in Concert, Advanced Rules and Human tasks, End User Interaction and Run-time.Oracle BPM Suite 11g Developer's Cookbook will help readers learn BPM 11g through a Real World Sample Process.This book is divided into four sections: the first section, Modeling, lays the foundation and demonstrates how to implement the Modeling of Business processes for a Use Case of a Fictitious Organization which needs BPM to be implemented at their site (with data objects and information handling). In the second section, Implementation, we learn about Process Implementation, Human Interaction, Business Rules, and much more. In the third section, Measuring, we learn about Post Process Development, Performance Analysis and Simulation Models. In the last section, Deployment, Migration and Run-Time, we learn deployment and migration, and Post Deployment Run-Time.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Oracle BPM Suite 11g Developer's Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Oracle BPM—Application Development Lifecycle

BPM Admin—Using flex fields/mapped attributes


A user can have many tasks assigned. Let's say he wants to prioritize tasks and work on those tasks which he wants to access at that instant. You can create a custom column in the task list and the user can see these custom column values in the task list after logging into the Process workspace; they can then decide which task to access.

How will these column values be populated? These column values will be populated from the task payload itself. Say you have a businessanalyst user. You will create a custom attribute in a task list which displays Account name from the quote payload. Account name has values such as FusionNX, APJSales, USASales, and so on, and businessanalyst has priorities for the day and he/she just wants to work on account name FusionNX for the day.

You can achieve this by using flex fields. Human Workflow flex fields store and query use case specific custom attributes. These custom attributes typically come from the task payload...