Book Image

Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook

By : Pete Wang
Book Image

Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook

By: Pete Wang

Overview of this book

An integral component of Oracle SOA and BPM Suite, Oracle BAM (Business Activity Monitoring) ultimately empowers business executives to react quickly to changing business situations. BAM enables business service and process monitoring through real-time data streaming and operational reports, and this book helps you to take advantage of this vital tool with best practice guidance for building a BAM project."Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook" is an essential companion for advancing your BAM knowledge, with troubleshooting and performance tuning tips to guide you in building BAM applications. The book uses step-by-step instructions alongside a real world demo project to steer you through the pitfalls of report and application development. Packed with best practices, you'll learn about BAM migration, HA configuration and much more."Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook" comprises a myriad of best practices for building real-time operational dashboards, reports and alerts. The book dives straight into the architecture of Oracle BAM 11g, before moving swiftly onto concepts like managing BAM server securities, populating Data Objects and performing load testing. Later on you'll also learn about BAM migration and building an ADF-based report, plus much more that you won't want to miss. For focusing in on best practices for this integral tool within Oracle SOA and BPM Suite, "Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook" is the perfect guide for the job.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Oracle BAM 11gR1 Handbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Using ICommand to import Data Objects


ICommand is a command-line utility that can be used to manage BAM artifacts (for example, folders, reports, Data Objects, alerts, and so on), by interacting with BAM Active Data Cache. In this section, you will learn how to use ICommand to import Data Objects.

Configuring ICommand

When BAM ICommand gets executed, it looks for BAM server configuration details in BAMICommandConfig.xml, which is located in the SOA_HOME/bam/config directory. In this URL, SOA_HOME is the home directory for SOA, which is specified during product installation.

To configure ICommand, you need to modify the following two properties in BAMICommandConfig.xml:

  • ADCServerName: This is the BAM server hostname. You can use localhost as the server name, if ICommand gets executed in the same host as the BAM server.

  • ADCServerPort: This is the BAM server listening port. By default, it is 9001. If you have changed the listening port at BAM server side, then this property needs to be...