About Creating Hybrid Integrations

Many business use cases require integration between applications hosted on public cloud and resources residing in an on-premises network or private cloud. To facilitate such hybrid integrations, Oracle Integration provides the necessary infrastructure and architecture patterns.

For example, consider a business case where a quote or sales order configured through an Oracle Configure Price Quote (CPQ) application must be sent to an Oracle E-Business Suite application, hosted in an on-premises network, for creation and fulfillment of the sales order.

Capabilities of Hybrid Integrations

This type of hybrid integration enables you to have flows hosted on Oracle Integration that:

  • Access SOAP/REST endpoints exposed by applications such as Oracle E-Business Suite, Siebel, and JD Edwards, and any on-premises home grown SOAP/REST APIs

  • Access non-HTTP-based endpoints such as databases, JMS, AQ, local file systems, SAP, and others

Use Cases

These capabilities enable you to implement use cases such as the following:
  • Send requests from a cloud application (for example, send a create service order request from an Oracle Service Cloud application) to an on-premises E-Business Suite application

  • Synchronize bulk data extracts of a product from a product data hub in Oracle ERP Cloud with an on-premises Oracle database or an Oracle Database Cloud Service instance

  • Synchronize customers that are added/updated in an on-premises SAP application with SaaS applications such as Oracle CX Sales and B2B Service Adapter, Oracle CPQ, Oracle Service Cloud, and Salesforce.com

Use the Connectivity Agent in Hybrid Integrations

Oracle Integration provides a component called the connectivity agent to facilitate hybrid integrations. See About the Connectivity Agent.

Connection Patterns

For different connection patterns you can use to create hybrid integrations, see Connection Patterns for Hybrid Integrations.