If you want your process to have a single start event, then you must right-click the start event and select Change Trigger Type and then Timer. To design a process to start based on a time condition: You can design your process to start when a specific date arrives or to periodically start after a certain elapsed time. The flow a non-interrupting event defines cannot resume the main process flow.ġ7.3.1 How to Design a Process to Start Based on a Time Condition When an non-interrupting event fires, the BPMN Service Engine creates a copy of the token that is running the main process flow and routes that copy through the flow the timer event defines. The flow an interrupting event defines, can resume the main process flow When an interrupting timer event fires, the token leaves the main process flow to follow the flow the timer defines. When you define a timer event as a boundary event you can choose to configure it as interrupting or non-interrupting. If the timer event is a start event or a non-interrupting boundary event, then it fires multiple times. You can specify the elapsed time or use a function to calculate it. You can configure a timer event to fire after an elapsed time. You can specify a specific date or use a function to calculate the it. ![]() ![]() You can configure a timer event to fire on a certain date. Oracle BPM enables you to configure timers using: ![]() Timer events are not based on the business calendar definitions. Triggering additional activities after an elapsed time Timer events enable you to control the flow of your process using a time condition.Ĭreating a delay before running an activity
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |