Table of Contents

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  1. Preface
  2. Understanding the Repository
  3. Using the Repository Manager
  4. Folders
  5. Managing Object Permissions
  6. Local and Global Shortcuts
  7. Team-Based Development with Versioned Objects
  8. Labels
  9. Object Queries
  10. Team-Based Development with Deployment Groups
  11. Copying Folders and Deployment Groups
  12. Exporting and Importing Objects
  13. Exchanging Metadata
  14. Copying Objects
  15. Metadata Extensions
  16. Appendix A: MX Views Reference

Repository Guide

Repository Guide

Using Queries in Dynamic Deployment Groups

Using Queries in Dynamic Deployment Groups

When you associate an object query with a deployment group, the Repository Service runs the query at the time of deployment. You can associate an object query with a deployment group when you edit or create a deployment group.
To deploy composite objects using a dynamic deployment group, you must deploy all components of the composite object the first time you deploy the deployment group to another repository. For example, if you deploy a mapping, you must also deploy the reusable and non-reusable child objects associated with the mapping. To do this, you must create a query that returns parent objects and their dependent child objects. A common way to group versioned objects for deployment is to use labels to identify the objects you want to deploy.
To find the latest versions of objects in a dynamic deployment group, you must create all mappings in the group with labels. If the dynamic deployment group contains a non-reusable object in an unlabeled mapping, the group will not deploy.
When you use labels to identify versioned objects for a dynamic deployment group, the labels for parent and dependent child objects can become out of sync. When this occurs, queries may return part of a composite object, and the dynamic deployment fails. This can occur in the following cases:
  • You apply a label to a parent object, but do not label the dependent child objects
    . When you apply a label to a parent object, the label does not apply to child objects. For example, you apply label 1 to mapping 1 without labeling the dependent child objects. Later, you run a dynamic deployment group using a query that searches for objects in a specified folder that use label 1. The query returns the parent object but not the child objects. The deployment fails because you attempted to deploy only the parent for a composite object. To ensure that dynamic deployment queries return these child objects, manually apply the label to dependent objects each time you apply a label or move a label to a different version of the parent object.
  • You do not apply a specified label to the same version of the parent and child object
    . By default, object queries return the latest versions of objects. For example, you apply label 1 to version 1 of a child object and apply label 1 to version 2 of the parent object. In the query, you search for objects that use label 1 and reusable and non-reusable objects. The query returns the parent object but not the child objects because the most recent versions of the child objects do not have the label applied. To ensure that dynamic deployment queries return both parent and child objects when you apply a specified label to different versions of parent and child objects, include a Latest Status parameter in the query and specify the latest checked-in and older values.
  • The dynamic deployment query does not return non-reusable child objects with parent objects.
    To ensure that the dynamic query returns reusable and non-reusable child objects, include the Reusable Status parameter in the query and specify reusable and non-reusable values. In addition, include a Latest Status parameter in the query and specify the latest checked-in and older values.

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