Oracle Workflow, a component of Oracle E-Business Suite, lets
you set up subscriptions to business events which can launch workflows or
enable messages to be propagated from one system to another when business
events occur.
The Oracle Workflow Business Event System is an application
service that leverages the Oracle Advanced Queuing (AQ) infrastructure to
communicate business events between systems.
Predefined events are provided with some Oracle E-Business Suite
products. For example, the “Create Person Event”
(oracle.apps.ar.hz.Person.create) is the name of a seeded business event in the
Receivables application. The event is triggered when a person party record is
created within the Trading Community Architecture (TCA).
Not all events are seeded. However, Oracle gives you the option
to create a custom event. An example would be an event that is triggered when
an invoice is matched to a purchase order.
In this article, I will show you how to create and use a custom
business event. I will go through the following steps:
1.
Create a custom business event
2.
Create a subscription to the event
3.
Raise the event from PL/SQL
4.
Consume the event in PL/SQL
Note: I tested these steps in Oracle EBS 12.1.2 and DB 11.2.0.1.
1.Create a custom business event called
xxu.oracle.apps.ap.inv.match: Login to Oracle Applications as SYSADMIN (or a
user with the Workflow admin role). Click on the Workflow Administrator Web
Applications responsibility. Click on Business Events. Click on Create Event. Supply
the event name, display name, owner name and tag.
2.Create a subscription to this event:
Supply the PL/SQL Rule Function. This is the function that will
be executed When the event is raised.
Here is the source code for the PL/SQL Rule Function xxu_bes.inv_po_matching.
For testing purposes I insert the event data into a temp table:
CREATE TABLE xx_temp (msg VARCHAR2 (4000));
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE xxu_bes
AS
FUNCTION inv_po_matching (
p_subscription_guid IN RAW,
p_event IN OUT
wf_event_t
)
RETURN VARCHAR2;
END
xxu_bes;
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE BODY xxu_bes
AS
FUNCTION inv_po_matching (
p_subscription_guid IN RAW,
p_event IN OUT wf_event_t
)
RETURN VARCHAR2
IS
l_plist wf_parameter_list_t :=
p_event.getparameterlist ();
BEGIN
IF p_event.geteventname () = 'xxu.oracle.apps.ap.inv.match'
THEN
INSERT INTO xx_temp (msg)
VALUES (
'Timestamp: '
||
fnd_date.date_to_canonical (SYSDATE)
|| ' | Event: '
|| p_event.geteventname
()
|| ' | Event Key: '
||
p_event.geteventkey ()
|| ' | SEND_DATE: '
||
wf_event.getvalueforparameter (
'SEND_DATE',
l_plist
)
|| ' | PO_NUMBER: '
||
wf_event.getvalueforparameter (
'PO_NUMBER',
l_plist
)
|| ' | event_data:
'
||
p_event.geteventdata ()
);
END IF;
RETURN 'SUCCESS';
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS
THEN
wf_core.context (
'xxu_bes',
'inv_po_matching',
p_event.geteventname (),
p_subscription_guid
);
wf_event.seterrorinfo (p_event, 'ERROR');
RETURN 'ERROR';
END inv_po_matching;
END
xxu_bes;
3.Feed sample data into the event and then raise it:
DECLARE
l_parameter_list
wf_parameter_list_t;
l_event_data CLOB;
BEGIN
l_parameter_list :=
wf_parameter_list_t (
wf_parameter_t ('SEND_DATE', fnd_date.date_to_canonical (SYSDATE)),
wf_parameter_t ('PO_NUMBER', '10100'),
);
l_event_data := '
<matched>
<send_date>2011/05/28 02:34:14</send_date>
<po_number>1234</po_number>
</matched>
';
wf_event.raise (
p_event_name =>
'xxu.oracle.apps.ap.inv.match',
p_event_key => SYS_GUID (),
p_event_data => l_event_data,
p_parameters =>
l_parameter_list
);
COMMIT;
END;
/
After the event is raised, query xx_temp. You will see the event
data in the table.