Monitoring Oracle Mediator Faults

Monitoring Oracle Mediator Service Components and Engines 15-13 Figure 15–4 Group Is Faulted Group Is Timed-out A group is in the timed-out state when processing of the group stops while waiting for an expected message, as shown in Figure 15–5 . The following information is displayed for a timed-out group: ■ The sequence ID of the last processed message ■ The sequence ID of the next message to be processed, along with its Oracle Mediator Instance ID Click Skip to unlock the group and start processing the next available instances in the group. Figure 15–5 Group Is Timed-out Group Is Faulted Due to a System Error A group can be in a faulted state when processing of the group is suspended due to a system error, as shown in Figure 15–6 . This state is termed as a special case of a Faulted Group. This group is not timed out and there is no faulted message for the group. The groups in this state can be described as Errored Groups. The following information is displayed for an Errored Group: ■ The sequence ID of the last processed message ■ The sequence ID of the next message to be processed, along with its Oracle Mediator Instance ID Click Retry to unlock the group and start processing the next instances in the group. 15-14 Oracle Fusion Middleware Administrators Guide for Oracle SOA Suite and Oracle BPM Suite Figure 15–6 Group Is Faulted Due to a System Error

15.3.2 Monitoring Resequenced Messages from the Mediator Instance Dialog

The Faults page of the Mediator Instance Details dialog provides the following resequencer-specific information: ■ Group ID of the resequenced message ■ Operation performed on the resequenced message Figure 15–7 Figure 15–7 Monitoring Resequenced Messages If you click a fault message, the fault message appears with details about the fault. If you click Retry, then the Oracle Mediator service engine again tries to process the message. If you click Abort, then it terminates the faulted message, then unlocks the group, and resumes processing from the next message in the sequence. Figure 15–8 provides details.