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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?

Getting ready


Before we start building the services, let's take a look at the WSDLs for the inbound and outbound calls for our first inbound and outbound definitions. Let's start with the inbound or source definition, as shown in the following illustration:

The service payload is defined by a schema within the file and is structured as follows:

The inbound WSDL is available in the downloads as ICSBook-Ch3-FlightProgress-Source.WSDL.

As you can see, the idea of the message is to describe the status of a flight, including its destination and where it is. The first thing of note is that ICS has to offer the implementation URL of the service to be called, so the SOAP:Address location attribute is missing.

However, if you look at the destination WSDL, it has to contain the concrete target address (shown as http://XXXX.mockable.io/FlightServices) so that ICS knows where to call out to. When we set up Mockable, we will need to change this address to our unique account identified mock of the target...

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