Table of Contents

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  1. Preface
  2. Welcome to Informatica Process Developer
  3. Using Guide Developer for the First Time
  4. Getting Started with Informatica Process Developer
  5. About Interfaces Service References and Local WSDL
  6. Planning Your BPEL Process
  7. Participants
  8. Implementing a BPMN Task or Event in BPEL
  9. Implementing a BPMN Gateway or Control Flow
  10. Using Variables
  11. Attachments
  12. Using Links
  13. Data Manipulation
  14. Compensation
  15. Correlation
  16. What is Correlation
  17. What is a Correlation Set
  18. Creating Message Properties and Property Aliases
  19. Adding a Correlation Set
  20. Deleting a Correlation Set
  21. Adding Correlations to an Activity
  22. Rules for Declaring and Using Correlation Sets
  23. Correlation Sets and Engine-Managed Correlation
  24. Event Handling
  25. Fault Handling
  26. Simulating and Debugging
  27. Deploying Your Processes
  28. BPEL Unit Testing
  29. Creating POJO and XQuery Custom Functions
  30. Custom Service Interactions
  31. Process Exception Management
  32. Creating Reports for Process Server and Central
  33. Business Event Processing
  34. Process Central Forms and Configuration
  35. Building a Process with a System Service
  36. Human Tasks
  37. BPEL Faults and Reports

Designer

Designer

Using Project References

Using Project References

As you create a project, you can keep common WSDL and schema files in another workspace project. Using this technique allows you to maintain and deploy commonly used WSDLs separately. It allows for the best reuse of common resources.
Many resources can be shared between multiple processes. The most efficient practice is to separate them out and place them in one or more resource-only projects. These can then be deployed independently as their own contributions. The process projects can declare dependencies on these resource projects, and are deployed after the resource-only projects they depend on.
You can define another project as a dependency for your current project using Project References.
  1. Before beginning a new BPEL process, create a new orchestration project to store common WSDL and schema.
  2. In the Project Explorer, right-mouse click on the project name of a project that will contain BPEL files, and select
    Properties
    .
  3. Select
    Project References
    .
  4. Select a project from the list that contains resources you want to reference. The example shows a project named "Common WSDLs":
  5. When you create a new participant, the WSDLs are available, and are displayed in a Project References folder. For details, see
    Using the Participants View
    .
See also
Deploying Project Dependencies and Viewing Excluded Dependencies
.

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