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Oracle® Warehouse Builder Installation and Administration Guide
11g Release 2 (11.2) for Windows and Linux

Part Number E10579-01
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7 Installing Optional Components

This section discusses how to install optional components of Oracle Warehouse Builder.

This section includes the following topics:

Modifying the OC4J Startup Script

OWB has several OC4J startup scripts for its components. Some are for starting OC4J for OWB Browser, and others are for starting OC4J for Control Center Agent.

To modify the OC4J startup script:

  1. Ensure that you are in the application server configuration directory, AS_HOME/opmn/config. AS_HOME stands for the root home directory of the application server.

  2. Open the file opmn.xml in a text editor.

  3. Alter the contents of the file as demonstrated in the following example, where bold font indicates the edits you must make.

    Note that:

    • Setting MaxPermSize parameter at 128M allocates enough PermGen space to OC4J to run the Control Center Agent.

    • The Python.path sets the path for the Python library files used by the Control Center Agent: jython_lib.zip and jython_owblib.jar. These two files are in the OWB_HOME/owb/lib/int directory.

    • The km_security_needed property determines if restrictions are applied to the types of operating system commands allowed by the OWB Code Template script that runs in the Control Center Agent. Setting it to true enforces restrictions.

      To review the list of commands allowed by this security mechanism, check the file AS_HOME/j2ee/home/config/ct_permissions.properties (it can be specified in the jrt.xml configuration file), which is available after Control Center Agent successfully installs in the OC4J in Application Server.

    <ias-component id="default_group">
      <process-type id="home" module-id="OC4J" status="enabled">
      <module-data>
      <category id="start-parameters">
      <data id="java-options" value="-server
        -XX:MaxPermSize=128M
        -ms512M -mx1024M
        -XX:AppendRatio=3 
        -Dpython.path=/home/lib/jython_lib.zip:/home/lib/jython_owblib.jar 
        -Dkm_security_needed=true 
    ...
     </ias-component>
    

Configuring Control Center Agent Server-side Logging

To set up the Control Center Agent server-side logging:

  1. Ensure that you are in the OC4J server configuration directory, OC4J_HOME/j2ee/home/config/. OC4J_HOME stands for the root home directory of the OC4J.

  2. Open the file j2ee-logging.xml in a text editor.

  3. Alter the contents of the file as demonstrated in the following example, where bold font indicates the edits you must make.

    Note that:

    • In the log handler section, the jrt-internal-log-handler is the handler used by Control Center Agent run-time logger to create log files.

    • In the logger section, you are creating the logger for Control Center Agent run-time auditing.

    <!-- The log handler used by JRT run-time logger -->
    <log_handler name="jrt-internal-log-handler"   class="oracle.core.ojdl.logging.ODLHandlerFactory">
        <property name="path" value="../log"/>
        <property name="maxFileSize" value="10485760"/>
        <property name="maxLogSize" value="104857600"/>
        <property name="encoding" value="UTF-8"/>
    </log_handler>
    ...
    <!-- The JRT run-time logger for run-time auditing -->
    <logger name="oracle.wh.jrt.server.audit" level="ALL" 
       useParentHandlers="false">
        <handler name="jrt-internal-log-handler"/>
    </logger>
    

Configuring the Audit Data Source

To configure the audit data source:

  1. Ensure that you are in the OC4J server configuration directory, OC4J_HOME/j2ee/home/config/. OC4J_HOME stands for the root home directory of the OC4J.

  2. Open the file data-sources.xml in a text editor.

  3. Define the audit data source as demonstrated in the following example, where bold font indicates the edits you must make.

    <managed-data-source name="AuditDS" connection-pool-name="OWBSYS Audit
      Connection Pool" jndi-name="jdbc/AuditDS"/> 
    <connection-pool name="Oracle Audit Connection Pool"> 
      <connection-factory factory-class="oracle.jdbc.pool.OracleDataSource"
        user="username" password="password"
        url="jdbc:oracle:thin:@//localhost:1521/ORCL"/> 
    </connection-pool>
    

Configuring Control Center Agent Security Roles

To configure Control Center Agent security roles:

  1. In a web browser, navigate to the Enterprise Manager home page.

  2. Log in using the oc4jadmin credentials.

  3. On the Cluster Topology page, locate the link to the OC4J instance installed under the Application Server.

    Description of jrt_security_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_01.gif

  4. Click home (the OC4J instance).

    This takes you to the home page of the OC4J instance.

  5. On the OC4J home screen, click the Administration tab.

    Description of jrt_security_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_02.gif

  6. On the Administration Tasks screen, expand Security.

  7. Click the task icon next to Security Providers.

    Description of jrt_security_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_03.gif

  8. On Security Providers screen, click Instance Level Security.

    Description of jrt_security_04.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_04.gif

  9. On Instance Level Security screen, click the Realms tab.

    Description of jrt_security_05.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_05.gif

  10. Under the Realms tab, in the default realm jazn.com, click the number in Roles column.

    Description of jrt_security_06.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_06.gif

  11. On the Roles screen, click Create.

    Description of jrt_security_07.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_07.gif

  12. On the Add Role screen, enter Name OWB_J2EE_EXECUTOR.

    Click OK.

    Description of jrt_security_08.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_08.gif

  13. On the Add Role screen, enter Name OWB_J2EE_OPERATOR.

    Click OK.

    Description of jrt_security_08.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_08.gif

  14. On the Add Role screen, enter Name OWB_J2EE_OPERATOR.

    Under Assign Roles, in the list of Available Roles, select OWB_J2EE_EXECUTOR and oc4j-administrators, and move to the list of Selected Roles.

    Click OK.

    Description of jrt_security_09.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_09.gif

  15. On the Add Role screen, enter Name OWB_J2EE_ADMINISTRATOR.

    Under Assign Roles, in the list of Available Roles, select OWB_J2EE_OPERATOR and OWB_J2EE_EXECUTOR, and move to the list of Selected Roles.

    Click OK.

    Description of jrt_security_10.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_10.gif

  16. On the bread crumb, click Instance Level Security.

  17. Under the Realms tab, in the default realm jazn.com, click the number in Users column.

  18. On the Users screen, click user oc4jadmin.

    Description of jrt_security_11.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_security_11.gif

  19. Under Assign Roles, in the list of Available Roles, select OWB_J2EE_ADMINISTRATOR and oc4j_app_administrators, and move to the list of Selected Roles.

    Click Apply.

  20. On the breadcrumb, click Instance Level Security.

  21. Under the Realms tab, in the default realm jazn.com, click the number in Roles column.

  22. Click Create.

  23. On the Add Role screen, enter Name OWB_INTERNAL_USERS.

    Click OK.

Creating JMS Queues

You must create two JMS queues, for JRT:owbQueue, and for JRT:owb_abortQueue.

To create JMS Queues:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Administration tab.

  3. Expand Services, and then expand Enterprise Messaging Service.

    Description of jms_queues_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jms_queues_01.gif

  4. Click the task icon next to JMS Destinations.

  5. On JMS Destinations screen, click Create New.

    Description of jms_queues_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jms_queues_02.gif

  6. On Add Destination screen, choose Destination Type Queue, enter Destination Name owbQueue, select Persistence In Memory Persistence Only, and enter JNDI Location jms/owbQueue.

    Click OK.

    Description of jms_queues_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jms_queues_03.gif

  7. On Add Destination screen, choose Destination Type Queue, enter Destination Name owb_abortQueue, select Persistence In Memory Persistence Only, and enter JNDI Location jms/owb_abortQueue.

    Click OK.

Setting the PATH Environment Variable

To ensure that system commands such as linux ls, sh, and so on, can run normally in scripts within the Control Center Agent, the environment variable PATH must be hold the directory that contains the system commands.

To set the PATH environment variable:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Administration tab.

  3. Expand Administration Tasks, then expand Properties.

    Description of jrt_path_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_path_01.gif

  4. Click the task icon next to Server Properties.

  5. On the Server Properties screen, scroll downwards to Environment Variables section.

  6. Under Environment Variables, click Add Another Row.

  7. Enter PATH in Name, and fill Value with directories that contain the system commands.

    Click Apply.

    Description of jrt_path_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_path_02.gif

Deploying the Control Center Agent to OC4J

To deploy the Control Center Agent to OC4J:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Applications tab.

  3. Click Deploy to begin deploying Control Center Agent.

    Description of deploy_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_01.gif

  4. On the Deploy: Select Archive screen, under Archive, select Archive is present on local host. Upload the archive to the server where Application Server Control is running.

    Click Browse and locate the jrt.ear file in the OWB_HOME/owb/jrt/applications directory.

    Description of deploy_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_02.gif

  5. Under Deployment Plan, select Automatically create a new deployment plan.

    Click Next.

    While the upload is in progress, you see the Deploy: Uploading screen.

    Description of deploy_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_03.gif

  6. On the Deploy: Application Attributes screen, enter Application Name jrt, and Context Root jrt. Leave the other attributes at their default values.

    Click Next.

    Description of deploy_04.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_04.gif

  7. On Deploy: Deployment Settings screen, leave all attributes at their default values, and click Deploy.

    Description of deploy_05.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_05.gif

  8. Once the application is successfully deployed, a confirmation message displays.

    Description of deploy_06.gif follows
    Description of the illustration deploy_06.gif

  9. On the Confirmation screen, click Return.

    Under the Applications tab, expand All Applications, then expand default.

    Note that the new application CCA is up.

Configuring the Control Center Agent Web Service (jrt-web.war)

The Control Center Agent Web Service is deployed automatically with Control Center Agent. No additional setup is required.

To check that the Web Service is running:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Web Services tab.

    Note that JRTWebService is listed.

    Description of jrt_web_services_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_web_services_01.gif

To test the Web Service:

  1. Under the Web Services tab, select JRTWebService and click Test Service.

  2. On the Test Web Service: HttpSoap11 screen, under Discovered Websites, select the http site and click Test Web Service.

    Description of jrt_web_services_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_web_services_02.gif

  3. The JRTWebService endpoint screen displays that the Web Service is running.

    You can access the operations available from the Operation drop down box, fill in the required parameters, and then click Invoke to execute the operation.

    Description of jrt_web_services_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration jrt_web_services_03.gif

  4. [Optional] Alternatively, go to http://AS_hostname/jrt/webservice.

To use the Web Service with a secure website (available only to admin users):

  1. Create or modify the secure-web-site.xml file in the config directory.

  2. A sample secure-web-site.xml file is listed below.

    Note that the relevant code is in bold typeface.

    Particularly, ensure that protocol is set to https, secure is set to true, and a secure http port is identified. Additionally, you must create a keystore file and add the ssl-config entry (you must use an absolute path for the key store file).

    <?xml version="1.0" standalone="yes"?>
    
    <web-site
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation=
        "http://xmlns.oracle.com/oracleas/schema/web-site-10_0.xsd"
      display-name="OC4J 10g (10.1.3) Secure Web Service"
      schema-major-version="10"
      schema-minor-version="0"
      protocol="https"
      port="4443"
      secure="true"
    >
      <ssl-config keystore="directory_path/owb/jrtrun/config/serverkeystore.jks"
        keystore-password="password"/>
    
      <default_web_app application="default" name="defaultWebApp" />
      <web-app application="system" name="dms0" root="/dmsoc4j" access-log="false"
        load-on-startup="true" />
      <web-app application="system" name="dms0" root="/dms0" access-log="false"
        load-on-startup="true" />
      <web-app application="system" name="JMXSoapAdapter-web"     root="/JMXSoapAdapter" />
      <web-app application="default" name="jmsrouter_web" root="/jmsrouter"
        load-on-startup="true" />
      <web-app application="javasso" name="javasso-web" root="/jsso"
        load-on-startup="false" />
      <web-app application="ascontrol" name="ascontrol" root="/em"
        load-on-startup="true" ohs-routing="false"/>
      <web-app application="jrt" name="jrtws" load-on-startup="true" root="/jrt" />
    
      <!-- Access Log, where requests are logged to -->
      <access-log path="../log/secure-web-access.log"
                 split="day" />
    
      <!- Uncomment this if you want to use ODL logging capabilities
      <odl-access-log path="../log/secure-web-access" max-file-size="1000"  
      max-directory-size="10000" />
      -->
    
    </web-site>
    
  3. After you create the secure-web-site.xml file, deploy it to jrtws.war, you may access the JRTWebService securely through https://hostname:4443/jrt/webservice.

Enabling Control Center Agent Audit Table Logging

To enable Audit Table logging, you must set up a connection pool, and then a managed data source prior to Control Center Agent deployment.

Configuring OWBSYS Audit Connection Pool

To configure the OWBSYS Audit Connection Pool:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Administration tab.

  3. Expand Services.

    Description of audit_conn_pool_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_conn_pool_01.gif

  4. Click the task icon next to JDBC Resources.

  5. On the JDBC Resources screen, under Connection Pools, click Create.

    Description of audit_table_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_table_02.gif

  6. On the Create Connection Pool - Application screen, under Application, select default.

    Under Connection Pool Type, select New Connection Pool.

    Click Continue.

    Description of audit_conn_pool_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_conn_pool_02.gif

  7. On the Create Connection Pool screen, enter the Name OWBSYS Audit Connection Pool. Under URL, select JDBC URL, and enter the URL (in this example, jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:ora111 is used for a local installation).

    Under the Credential section, enter the User Name (in this example, owbsys_audit), and enter the Use Cleartext Password.

    Description of audit_conn_pool_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_conn_pool_03.gif

  8. [Optional] On the Confirmation screen, test the availability of the connection. Click Test Connection.

    Description of audit_conn_pool_04.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_conn_pool_04.gif

  9. On the Test Connection: "OWBSYS Audit Connection Pool" screen, click Test.

    Description of audit_conn_pool_05.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_conn_pool_05.gif

    A confirmation screen appears.

Note:

Application Server 10g is not case-sensitive when verifying Oracle Database credentials; it converts all letters to lower case before attempting to connect to the database. Because Oracle Database Release 11g R1 and subsequent releases are case sensitive, create user credentials in lowercase when using for Audit Table logging to prevent the Invalid username/password error message.

Configuring an Audit Table Data Source

To deploy Control Center Agent to OC4J, you must also configure the data source for the audit table. This data source is required by Control Center Agent; if not configured, the Control Center Agent deployment fails.

To configure the audit table data source:

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Administration tab.

  3. Expand Services.

    Description of audit_table_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_table_01.gif

  4. Click the task icon next to JDBC Resources.

  5. On the JDBC Resources screen, under Data Sources, click Create.

    Description of audit_table_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_table_02.gif

  6. On the Create Data Source - Application & Type screen:

    • Under Application, select Application default.

    • Under Data Source Type, select Managed Data Source.

    • Click Continue.

    Description of audit_table_03.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_table_03.gif

  7. On the Create Data Source - Managed Data Source screen,

    • Enter Name AuditDS.

    • Enter JNDI Location jdbc/AuditDS.

    • Click Finish.

    If you do not require audit table logging, leave other parameters at their default values.

    Description of audit_table_04.gif follows
    Description of the illustration audit_table_04.gif

Installing JDBC Drivers for OC4J

The following instructions demonstrate how to install JDBC drivers for OC4J.

To install the JDBC drivers for OC4J:

  1. Obtain the *.jar file that contains the JDBC driver for your desired platform.

  2. Stop the OC4J service.

  3. Copy the JDBC driver file into the AS_HOME/j2ee/home/applib directory, where AS_HOME is the Application Server home.

  4. Restart the OC4J service.

Overview of Control Center Agent Files

This section describes the files generated at run time. Note that if you application name is other than jrt, it appears in these directory paths as app_name.

The Control Center Agent files include:

ODL Job Log Files

By default, ODL Job log files are located in the AS_HOME/j2ee/home/log/app_name directory.

Each job log resides in its own directory. For example, log file for job 10 is in AS_HOME/j2ee/home/log/app_name/job10/log.xml, and the metadata file for job 10 in AS_HOME/j2ee/home/log/app_name/job10/meta_data.txt.

You may choose to configure Control Center Agent to store the log files in other directories; ensure that Control Center Agent can access these log directories.

Control Center Agent Run-Time Log File

The Control Center Agent run-time log file app_name.log employs the ODL log file rotation mechanism. The current run-time log is always app_name.log, while older log files are app_name.log.N, where N is the round of log rotation). By default, this file is:

AS_HOME/j2ee/home/log/app_name.log

JobID File

Control Center Agent uses a file to keep track of the current job ID in the system; be careful not to remove this file. This file can be in one of two possible locations:

  • When the Control Center Agent is installed as part of the larger OWB installation, the file is at:

    OWB_HOME/owb/jrt/application-deployments/jrt/counter/counter.info 
    
  • When the Control Center Agent is installed on the Application Server, the file is at:

    AS_HOME/j2ee/home/applications/application_name/counter/counter.info
    

Control Center Agent Settings

Control Center Agent settings are persisted in the file jrt.xml. You may modify the settings in this file directly, and then restart Control Center Agent. Alternatively, you can modify these settings by changing the attributes of the JRTAdministratorMBean in Enterprise Manager. This file is:

AS_HOME/j2ee/home/applications/app_name/config/jrt.xml

JRTAdministratorMBean

The JRTAdministratorMBean enables you to dynamically change Control Center Agent settings without restarting the Control Center Agent.

To change Control Center Agent settings with the JRTAdministratorMBean

  1. On the breadcrumb, click OC4J:home.

  2. On the OC4J:home screen, click the Applications tab.

  3. Expand All Applications, then expand default.

  4. In the jrt row, click the task icon in column Application Defined MBeans.

    Description of admin_bean_01.gif follows
    Description of the illustration admin_bean_01.gif

  5. On the Application MBeans screen, in the left-hand side navigation menu, select JRTAdministrator.

    The right-hand side shows all the Attributes and Operations of JRTAdministrator MBean, under the corresponding tabs.

    Description of admin_bean_02.gif follows
    Description of the illustration admin_bean_02.gif

  6. Change the attributes to desired values, then click Apply.

Installing Code Templates

If you want to use a Code Template, you must install any additional JDBC driver files that it requires to access heterogeneous systems on all the client computers and on the computer that hosts the Control Center Agent.

To install a Code Template:

  1. Load the required JDBC drivers to the OWB_HOME/owb/lib/ext directory.

  2. Import the CTs into any projects that uses them, in the design client.

    You only import the code template once for the project. After it is imported, all users working on the project can use the code template.

Configuring the Repository Browser Environment

The Repository Browser connects to Warehouse Builder repositories and enables you to view metadata, run Web reports, perform lineage and impact analysis on your metadata, and audit run-time executions.

When you install Warehouse Builder from Oracle Universal Installer, the Repository Browser is also installed and runs in all the languages that you selected during installation.

To verify the installation, start the Repository Browser listener and then the Repository Browser. For information on how to use the Repository Browser, refer to Oracle Warehouse Builder Data Modeling, ETL, and Data Quality Guide.

Changing the Session Timeout

By default, Repository Browser sessions time out after one hour of inactivity. To change this, edit the web.xml file located at OWB_HOME\owb\j2ee\applications\owbb\WEB-INF by updating the session-config tag.

By default, the tag displays as follows:

<session-config>
<session-timeout>60</session-timeout>
</session-config>

Integrating with E-Business Suite

When integrating with Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS), you must first import its metadata, and then design mappings for moving and transforming data. Specifically:

Because direct access to the APPS production schema may be limited and restricted, you may define a user on the EBS database for Oracle Warehouse Builder users to access only the relevant metadata and data.

To enable access to EBS data and metadata:

  1. Create a user on the database that hosts the EBS. This user needs, at minimum, CONNECT and RESOURCE privileges.

  2. Grant access to the relevant metadata by running the OWB_ORACLE_HOME\owb\cmi\ebs\owbebs.sql script.

    This script grants access to the following tables in the APPS schema, which contain metadata for EBS tables, views, sequences, and keys:

    • FND_APPLICATION

    • FND_APPLICATION_VL

    • FND_TABLES

    • FND_VIEWS

    • FND_SEQUENCES

    • FND_COLUMNS

    • FND_PRIMARY_KEYS

    • FND_FOREIGN_KEYS

    • FND_PRIMARY_KEY_COLUMNS

    • FND_FOREIGN_KEY_COLUMNS

    The script also creates a synonym in the user schema for each of the preceding objects.

  3. Enable a user to extract data from the EBS database.

    You can create a new user, or grant the appropriate privileges to the same user you created earlier. For each object from which you want to enable data extraction, grant this user at least SELECT access.

Warehouse Builder users can now import the E-Business Suite metadata as described in the importing section of Oracle Warehouse Builder Data Modeling, ETL, and Data Quality Guide.

Installing Third-Party Name and Address Data

Warehouse Builder gives you the option to perform name and address cleansing on your data with the Name and Address operator. The Name and Address operator identifies and corrects errors and inconsistencies in name and address source data. The operator identifies inconsistencies by comparing input data to data libraries supplied by the third-party name and address cleansing software vendors. Purchase the data libraries directly from these vendors.

To install data libraries, refer to the installation instructions of the name and address cleansing software vendor of your choice. For the list of certified name and address cleansing software providers, refer to Oracle Technology Network at http://otn.oracle.com/products/warehouse/htdocs/OTN_Partners.html.

To integrate with third-party name and address data libraries:

  1. Install Warehouse Builder as instructed in this guide.

  2. Purchase data libraries from one of the certified vendors listed on My Oracle Support at http://metalink.oracle.com.

  3. Install and access the certified vendor's data libraries and Name and Address adapter following the vendor's instructions.

    If you are installing in a Real Application Cluster environment, then you may be able to install the name and address adapter on many nodes to benefit from the parallelism and failover enabled by the RAC architecture. Check with your vendor to see if your purchase license allows a multiple-node installation.

    You do not need to install the data libraries on multiple nodes. However, if you install all data libraries on one node, then performance may suffer due to file access time latency. Follow the recommendations of your name and address cleansing software vendor.

  4. Design a mapping using the Name and Address operator to cleanse name or address data. Refer to Oracle Warehouse Builder Data Modeling, ETL, and Data Quality Guide for information on designing mappings using the Name and Address operator.

Integrating with Oracle Workflow

If you plan to use Warehouse Builder process flows, then use Oracle Workflow to enable deployment. For more information, read about schedules in Oracle Warehouse Builder Data Modeling, ETL, and Data Quality Guide.

To enable integration with Oracle Workflow:

  1. Stop all running OC4J instances.

  2. Locate Oracle Workflow installation program, at OWB_HOME\owb\wf\install\wfinstall.*.

    If you installed Oracle Warehouse Builder 11g on Oracle Database 10g Release 2, separately download the software for Oracle Workflow 2.6.4.

  3. Start Oracle Workflow installation program.

    For Windows, enter the following at the command prompt:

    C:\>  cd OWB112\owb\wf\install
    C:\OWB112\owb\wf\install> wfinstall.bat
    

    For Linux, enter the following in the shell:

    % cd OWB112/owb/wf/install
    % wfinstall.csh
    

    Note that if you use multiple Oracle databases, you must unset the environment variables related to Oracle, such as ORACLE_HOME, ORACLE_SID, ORACLE_PORT, and LD_LIBRARY_PATH.

  4. Complete the Workflow Configuration Assistant using following values:

    • Install Option: Server Only

    • Workflow Account: owf_mgr

    • Workflow Password: wf_password

    • SYS Password: sys_password; use the SYS password for the database where installing Oracle Workflow.

    • TNS Connect Descriptor: hostname:port:service_name, where the values correspond to your database.

      Because the assistant does not reference the tnsnames.ora file, do not use a net service name.

    • LDAP Parameters: this is optional; see Oracle Workflow documentation for details.

    • Mailer Parameters: this is optional; see Oracle Workflow documentation for details.

    • Tablespace: this is optional; you may change the tablespace.

  5. Click Submit to start the Workflow configuration process.

    The configuration process can take several minutes. Check OWB112/owb/wf/install/wf.log for messages to follow the progress of the configuration process.

    When the process is complete, the Workflow Configuration Assistant displays a message of completion.

  6. Install the Workflow Client [Optional]

    The installation of Oracle Workflow client is optional because the Process Flow Editor in Warehouse Builder replaces its functionality. You may want to install Oracle Workflow client if you want to view the deployed Warehouse Builder processes in Oracle Workflow.

    On the computer that hosts the Warehouse Builder client, install Oracle Workflow client from Oracle Workflow client CD.

  7. Create a Workflow Proxy User.

    When the Workflow instance is not on the same computer that hosts the Warehouse Builder repository, you need to create a proxy user.

    Within the database hosting the repository, use SQL Plus to create a user and grant it the OWB_USER role as a default. This enables the remote Oracle Workflow instance to connect to the services provided by the Control Center.