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Implementing Oracle Integration Cloud Service

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786460721
Length 506 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Robert van Molken Robert van Molken
Author Profile Icon Robert van Molken
Robert van Molken
Philip Wilkins Philip Wilkins
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Philip Wilkins
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing the Concepts and Terminology FREE CHAPTER 2. Integrating Our First Two Applications 3. Distribute Messages Using the Pub-Sub Model 4. Integrations between SaaS Applications 5. Going Social with Twitter and Google 6. Creating Complex Transformations 7. Routing and Filtering 8. Publish and Subscribe with External Applications 9. Managed File Transfer with Scheduling 10. Advanced Orchestration with Branching and Asynchronous Flows 11. Calling an On-Premises API 12. Are My Integrations Running Fine, and What If They Are Not? 13. Where Can I Go from Here?

Map message data

Now that we finished the initial integration between our two applications it is time to map the incoming SOAP request message to the REST outbound message. The same goes for mapping the REST response message to the SOAP outbound message.

Currently our integrations looks as follows:

Map message data

Mappings can be created or imported (from local disk) by clicking on the icon in the center of the integration. From top to bottom we will define the request, response, and fault mapping. First click on the request mapping and then on the plus sign, to create a new mapping. We are presented with a feature full mapping UI which has all capabilities that XSLT supports. In this chapter, we will not go into detail about all these capabilities, but we will touch base on them during later chapters.

The default view shows us the source message on the left and the target message on the right. The nodes to map depend on the selected adapters. Our target message doesn't have any leaf nodes, but we...

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