Book Image

Apache OfBiz Cookbook

Book Image

Apache OfBiz Cookbook

Overview of this book

Apache Open For Business (OFBiz) is an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system that provides a common data model and an extensive set of business processes. But without proper guidance on developing performance-critical applications, it is easy to make the wrong design and technology decisions. The power and promise of Apache OFBiz is comprehensively revealed in a collection of self-contained, quick, practical recipes in this Cookbook. This book covers a range of topics from initial system setup to web application and HTML page creation, Java development, and data maintenance tasks. Focusing on a series of the most commonly performed OFBiz tasks, it provides clear, cogent, and easy-to-follow instructions designed to make the most of your OFBiz experience. Let this book be your guide to enhancing your OFBiz productivity by saving you valuable time. Written specifically to give clear and straightforward answers to the most commonly asked OFBiz questions, this compendium of OFBiz recipes will show you everything you need to know to get things done in OFBiz. Whether you are new to OFBiz or an old pro, you are sure to find many useful hints and handy tips here. Topics range from getting started to configuration and system setup, security and database management through the final stages of developing and testing new OFBiz applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Apache OFBiz Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface

Service Event Condition Actions


Service Event Condition Actions (SECAs) are a powerful tool used to build complex business processing solutions out of one or more OFBiz Service(s). With SECAs, you may associate one or more Services together to form a chain of processing logic based on defined triggering events and conditions.

There are no limits on the number of SECAs supported by OFBiz, or in the number of Services that may participate within a single SECA.

Getting ready

Writing SECAs is simple. To write a SECA, you will need one or more Services to participate as either the action Service and/or the target Service. Once you have your Services defined:

  1. 1. Find or create a new SECA definition XML document. The SECA definition document must have the following XML line at the top of the file:

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
    
  2. 2. Followed by the SECA XML schema declaration:

    <service-eca xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation=
    "http:/...