FNDLOAD is a concurrent program that can move Oracle Applications data between database and text file. FNDLOAD can download data from an application entity into an editable text file, which can be uploaded to another database. Conversion between database format and text file format is specified by a configuration file. But i could not find anything regarding upload/download of an Oracle Alert. So, my conclusion was that i must be possible to use FNDLOAD to transfer Alerts, but that there is no configuration file provided by Oracle. I had to create a configuration file myself.

We use ldt loader data files for loading.
Oracle currently supports the migration of the following types of data using FNDLOAD
Printers / Print queues / Executables Printers / Print queues / Executables. Roles / Responsibilities / Forms Roles / Responsibilities / Forms. Menus / Users / Request Sets Menus / Users / Request Sets. Request Groups / Request Queues Request Groups / Request Queues. Work shifts / Programs / Libraries Work shifts / Programs / Libraries. Attachments / Help Files Attachments / Help Files. Mime Types Mime Types. Security Information.

What is 0 & Y in FNDCPASS, FNDLOAD or WFLOAD?


0 & Y are flags for FND Executable like FNDCPASS & FNDLOAD where
   0 is request id (request ID 0 is assigned to request ID’s which are not submitted via Submit Concurrent Request Form.
   ‘Y’ indicates the method of invocation. i.e. it is directly invoked from the command-line not from the Submit Request Form.
Create Temporary Table in Oracle

To create a table named test with column col1 type varchar2 length 10, col2 type number. col3 type clob we can use CREATE TABLE statement as,
CREATE TABLE TEST(col1 VARCHAR2(10), col2 NUMBER, col3 CLOB);
Now if I insert data into the table the data is visible and accessible to all users. In many cases it is needed the data inside a table will be reside temporarily. In that case we can use temporary tables. Temporary tables are useful in applications where a result set is to be buffered. To create temporary table we have to issue CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY clause.
Temporary table can be of two types based on ON COMMIT clause settings.
1)ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS specifies temporary table would be transaction specific. Data persist within table up to transaction ending time. If you end the transaction the database truncates the table (delete all rows). Suppose if you issue commit or run ddl then data inside the temporary table will be lost. It is by default option.
Example:
(i)This statement creates a temporary table that is transaction specific:
CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE test_temp(col1 number, col2 number) ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS;
Table created.
(ii)Insert row in to the temporary table.
insert into test_temp values(3,7);
1 row created.
(iii)Look at the data in the table.
select * from test_temp;
COL1 COL2
———- ———-
3 7
(iv)Issue Commit.
commit;
Commit complete.
(v)Now look at the data in the temporary table. As I created transaction specific temporary table(on commit delete rows) so data is lost after commit.
SQL> select * from test_temp;
no rows selected
2)ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS specifies temporary table would be session specific. Data persist within table up to session ending time. If you end the session the database truncates the table (delete all rows). Suppose you type exit in SQL*Plus then data inside the temporary table will be lost.
Example of Session Specific Temporary Tables:
1)Create Session Specific Temporary Table test_temp2.
CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE test_temp2 (col1 number, col2 number)
ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS;
(ii)Insert data into it and look at data both before commit and after commit.
insert into test_temp2 values(3,7);
1 row created.
SQL>select * from test_temp2;
COL1 COL2
———- ———-
3 7
(iii) commit;
Commit Complete
(iv)select * from test_temp2;
COL1 COL2
———- ———-
3 7

(iv)End the Session.
exit;


Disconnected from Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.3.0 – Production
With the Partitioning, OLAP and Data Mining options
(v)Connect in a new session and look at data again.
$ sqlplus apps/[email protected]
Connected to:
Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.3.0 – Production
With the Partitioning, OLAP and Data Mining options

SQL> select * from test_temp2;
no rows selected

This is how Global Temporary Tables are used.
Feature of Temporary Table
1.Indexes can be created on temporary tables. They are also temporary and the data in the index has the same session or transaction scope as the data in the underlying table.
2.Unlike permanent tables, temporary tables and their indexes do not automatically allocate a segment when they are created. Instead, segments are allocated when the first INSERT (or CREATE TABLE AS SELECT) is performed. This means that if a SELECT, UPDATE, or DELETE is performed before the first INSERT, the table appears to be empty.
3.DDL operations (except TRUNCATE) are allowed on an existing temporary table only if no session is currently bound to that temporary table.
4.If you rollback a transaction, the data you entered is lost, although the table definition persists.
5.A transaction-specific temporary table allows only one transaction at a time. If there are several autonomous transactions in a single transaction scope, each autonomous transaction can use the table only as soon as the previous one commits.
6.Because the data in a temporary table is, by definition, temporary, backup and recovery of temporary table data is not available in the event of a system failure.
7.It is good to know about that temporary table itself is not temporary, the data within it is temporary.
Restriction of Temporary Table
1.Temporary tables cannot be partitioned, clustered, or index organized.
2.You cannot specify any foreign key constraints on temporary tables.
3.Temporary tables cannot contain columns of nested table.
4.You cannot specify the following clauses of the LOB_storage_clause: TABLESPACE, storage_clause, or logging_clause.
5.Parallel DML and parallel queries are not supported for temporary tables. Parallel hints are ignored. Specification of the parallel_clause returns an error.
6.You cannot specify the segment_attributes_clause, nested_table_col_properties, or parallel_clause.
7.Distributed transactions are not supported for temporary tables.

This is our requirement.

SCHEMA NAME : XXCUST
TOP NAME : XXCUST_TOP
Application : XXCUST Custom Application
Data Group : Standard
Request Group : XXCUST Request Group
Menu : XXCUST_CUSTOM_MENU
Responsibility : XXCUST Custom

Assumptions:
APPL_TOP: /d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl
Instance Name: VIS
Server OS: linux

There are 14 simple steps to achieve this.
1) Make the directory structure for your custom application files.
cd $APPL_TOP
mkdir XXCUST
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/admin
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/admin/sql
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/admin/odf
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/sql
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/bin
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/reports
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/reports/US
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/forms
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/forms/US
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/lib
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/out
mkdir XXCUST/12.0.0/log

2) Add the custom module into the environment
cd $APPL_TOP
echo “XXCUST_TOP=/d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl/XXCUST/12.0.0” >customVIS_linux.env
echo “export XXCUST_TOP ” >> customVIS_linux.env
Source the environment file (/d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl/APPSVIS_linux.env )
Make entry to the application context file
vi $INST_TOP/appl/admin/VIS_linux.xml
/d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl/XXCUST/12.0.0
cd $INST_TOP/admin/install
sh adgentopfile.sh

3) create tablespace XXCUST datafile ‘/d01/oracle/VIS/db/apps_st/data/XXCUST01.dbf’
size 500M

4) create user XXCUST identified by XXCUST
default tablespace XXCUST
temporary tablespace temp
quota unlimited on XXCUST;
grant connect, resource to XXCUST;

5) Register your Oracle Schema.
Login to Applications with System Administrator responsibility
Navigate to Application–>Register
Application = XXCUST Custom Application
Short Name = XXCUST
Basepath = XXCUST_TOP
Description = XXCUST Custom Application

6) Register Oracle User
Naviate to Security–>Oracle–>Register
Database User Name = XXCUST
Password = XXCUST
Privilege = Enabled
Install Group = 0
Description = XXCUST Custom Application User

7) Add Application to a Data Group
Navigate to Security–>Oracle–>DataGroup

8) Create custom request group
This will act as a placeholder for any custom reports we wish to make available for the Custom Responsibility (which is defined at a later stage)
Navigate to Security–>responsibility–>Request
Group = XXCUST Request Group
Application = XXCUST Custom
Code = XXCUST
Description = XXCUST Custom Requests
At this statge, We are not going to define any requests, but you can add request in the later point of time if its required.

9) Create custom menu
This will act as a placeholder for any menu items we wish to make available for the Custom Responsibility (which is defined at a later stage).
Navigate to Application–>Menu
Menu = XXCUST_CUSTOM_MENU
User Menu Name = XXCUST Custom Application Menu
Menu Type =
Description = XXCUST Custom Application Menu
Seq = 100
Prompt = View Requests
Submenu =
Function = View All Concurrent Requests
Description = View Requests
Seq = 110
Prompt = Run Requests
Submenu =
Function = Requests: Submit
Description = Submit Requests
10) Create new responsibility. Navigate to Security–>Responsibility–>Define

Responsibility Name = XXCUST Custom
Application = XXCUST Custom
Responsibility Key = XXCUSTRESP
Description = XXCUST Custom Responsibility
Available From = Oracle Applications
Data Group Name = Standard
Data Group Application = XXCUST Custom Application
Menu = XXCUST Custom Application Menu
Request Group Name = XXCUST Request Group
11) Add responsibility to user
Navigate to Security–>User–>Define
Add XXCUST Custom responsibility to users as required.

12) Other considerations
You are now ready to create your database Objects, custom Reports, Forms, Packages, etc
Create the source code files in the XXCUST_TOP directory appropriate for the type of object. For example forms would be located in $XXCUST_TOP/forms/US or
package source code in $XXCUST_TOP/admin/sql for example.
Database Objects, such as tables, indexes and sequences should be created in the XXCUST schema, and then you need to
   a) Grant all privilege from each custom data object to the APPS schema.
      For example : logged in as XXCUST user
      grant all privileges on XX_TABLE to apps;
   b) Create a synonym in APPS for each custom data object
      For example : logged in as APPS user
      create synonym XX_TABLE for XXCUST.XX_TABLE;

13) Login to sysadmin, Application Developer Responsibility
In the backend compile your form
su – applmgr
cd $AU_TOP/forms/US
cp TEMPLATE.fmb XXSAMPLE.fmb
frmcmp_batch Userid=apps/apps module=XXSAMPLE.fmb output_file=/d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl/XXCUST/12.0.0/forms/US/XXSAMPLE.fmx compile_all=special  batch=yes
Application > Form (Register the form)
Application > Menu (Attach the function to a menu)
Open new session, source environment file, and stop middle tier services, run autoconfig
Open new session, source environment file, check for custom top in topfile.txt in $APPL_TOP/admin, start the middle tier services.
   cd $ADMIN_SCRIPTS_HOME
   sh adstpall.sh apps/apps
   sh adautocfg.sh
   sh adstrtal.sh apps/apps
   cat $APPL_TOP/admin/topfile.txt
   You can find the entry as lke this, XXCUST /d01/oracle/VIS/apps/apps_st/appl
14) Menu that is added to a particular responsibility is given to specific user
Security > User >
Attach our custom responsibility to the user.
Common Errors and Solution:
1. Function not available to this responsibility. Change responsibility or contact your system administrator.
Solution
Restart the forms server
cd $ADMIN_SCRIPTS_HOME
sh adstpall.sh apps/apps
sh adstrtal.sh apps/apps