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  1. Preface
  2. Part 1: Introduction to SAP Connector
  3. Part 2: SAP Connector administration
  4. Part 3: Connections
  5. Part 4: Data integration using BAPI/RFC functions
  6. Part 5: Data integration using IDocs
  7. Part 6: SAP BW data extraction
  8. Part 7: Data integration for SAP ADSO
  9. Appendix A: SAP data type reference

SAP Connector

SAP Connector

Introduction to SAP Connector

Introduction to SAP Connector

You can use SAP Connector to integrate with SAP systems in batch, asynchronous, or synchronous modes based on your requirements.
SAP integrates multiple business applications and solutions, such as Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Advanced Planner and Optimizer (APO), and Bank Analyzer. Developers can add business logic within SAP using Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) or Advanced Business Application Programming-Fourth Generation (ABAP/4 or ABAP), a language proprietary to SAP.
Data Integration
supports ABAP
, IDoc read, IDoc write, BAPI/RFC, ADSO write,
and ODP read functions to integrate with SAP systems. You can choose an SAP connection type to connect to SAP systems based on the interface requirements.
You can use the SAP connection in
synchronization
tasks,
mappings,
mapping
tasks, and
data transfer
tasks.
You can switch mappings to advanced mode to include transformations and functions that enable advanced functionality.
Create a
synchronization
task to synchronize data between a source and target.
Create a
mapping
task to process data based on the data flow logic defined in a mapping or integration template.
For more information about configuring assets and transformations, see
Mappings
,
Transformations
, and
Tasks
in the Data Integration documentation.

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