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  1. Preface
  2. Web Services
  3. SOAP Web Services
  4. WSDL Data Object
  5. Schema Object
  6. How to Create a SOAP Web Service
  7. Operation Mappings
  8. Parsing Web Service SOAP Messages
  9. Generating Web Service SOAP Messages
  10. Web Service Consumer Transformation
  11. REST Web Services
  12. How to Create a REST Web Service
  13. REST Web Service Consumer Transformation
  14. REST Web Service Consumer Transformation Use Cases
  15. REST and SOAP Web Service Administration
  16. Datatype Compatibility

Web Services Guide

Web Services Guide

Rules and Guidelines to Map Ports to the Operation Fault

Rules and Guidelines to Map Ports to the Operation Fault

When you configure the Fault transformation, you map input ports to the operation fault hierarchy.
Consider the following rules and guidelines when you map input ports to the operation fault hierarchy:
  • You can map an input port to one node in the operation fault hierarchy. The input port and the node must have compatible datatypes.
  • You can map ports from one input group to nodes in the same hierarchy level in the operation fault.
  • You can map different ports from one input group to nodes in different hierarchy levels in the operation fault.
  • You must map input port data to the keys in the operation fault hierarchy. Any port that you map to a key must be a string, integer or bigint datatype. Map data to the keys in all levels in the operation fault above the hierarchy level that you are including in the SOAP message. Include the foreign keys for all levels above and including the level you are mapping.
  • You can map multiple input ports of different datatypes to a key. When you click the
    Location
    field for a key, you can reorder the input ports or remove one of the ports.

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