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

Creating Data associations


Whether you have used the BPM Design Editor or Human Task editor to define the Human Task, you need to check the Data associations and make sure they are correct. The application knows what Data object types are in the Human Task and will list them for you in the center area, but you may need to specify exactly which Data objects should be mapped to each type as input and output.

Data associations are used to pass the information stored in Data objects in the following contexts:

  • To and from another process or service invoked from a BPMN process

  • In a Human Task service, to and from an Oracle Business Rule

  • To and from a script task

You are doing it here for a Human Task. You use Data associations to define the input and output from a flow object (like Human Task) to an external service or process.

Note

It is important to note that although the inputs and outputs are defined in the Data associations for a flow object, the defined values are passed to the implemented...