I am sharing my experience of migrating from OBI to Incorta.
Process
Start with Incorta EBS Blueprint
Configure and customize for the deploying company
Optionally, Demo the Fusion Connector
Preview and demo to business users using their own data
Provide the existing OBI dashboard usage analysis – Help prioritize the replacement project
Provide the lineage and SQLs from OBI. Get the access to nqquery log and SDE logic to the development team
Analyze the SQL and OBI report one by one against the blueprint business schemas
Interactive processes about enhancing Incorta physical schema and creating dashboards in Incorta
Create materialized View when necessary
Demo and get feedback from business users during the development
Leverage the existing OBI team in verifying and comparison, help the team gain knowledge about Incorta for future support
Prepare the pilot and overlap period before shutting down OBI. Define the Exit criteria
Prepare the training to the future analyzers/superuser, who can create and manage their own contents. This may be necessary as a recursive event for several months. Providing an office hour will be helpful.
Provide a demo to Excel Add-in if necessary
Provide the SQL interface if necessary. Control the usage by understanding their usage. This may be helpful for Tableau users, but need to be careful as it impacts the system resource usage
Schedule the dashboard delivery and the download. Configure the integration with network drive storage. FTP, dropbox, OneDrive, GDrive, etc.
Along with the development of the new content, start discussion about job schedule options. For example, dependencies from Incorta to source app batch process. Also, understand the source data update pattern and frequency. For example, when the Transfer to GL was executed, when the depreciation process is executed. How frequent these processes are run. For example, any difference in period closing weeks?
Very few resistance from existing OBI developers since most of them see this as an opportunity.
Learning new skills such as using Spark SQL and PySpark in creating materialized views. Explore ML library in Incorta.
Their Data Model knowledge is typically the asset to the new platform.
Several people are curious about what are OTBI and OBIA, and what are the differences between OTBI and OBIA. I will discuss these in this article.
OTBI stands for Oracle Transactional Buisness Intelligence.
OBIA stands for Oracle Business Intelligence Applications.
Let’s start with OBIA. OBIA is the pre-packaged BI Apps that Oracle has provided for several years. It is the data warehouse based solution. It is based on the universal data warehouse design with different prebuilt adapters that can connect to various source application to bring the data into the data warehouse. It allows you to conslidate the data from various sources and bring them together. It provides a library of metrics that help you measure your business. It also provides a set of predefined reports and dashboards. OBIA works for multiple sources, including E-Business Suite, PeopleSoft, JDE, SAP, and Fusion Applications.
OTBI is different. First of all, it is a real time BI. There is no data warehouse or ETL process for OTBI. Second, it is for Fusion Apps only. OTBI is leveraging the advanced technologies from both BI platform and ADF to enable the online BI queries agains the Fusion Applications database directly. In addition, in some area, such as Financial, you can also connect to the Essbase cubes. Unlike OBIA, OTBI does not have a lot of prebuilt dashboards and reports. The reason is that for some advanced analysis, the data need to be prepared. You cannot get eveything you can get from the OBIA data warehouse in OTBI.
Both OTBI and OBIA are available from the same metadata repository. Some of the repository objects are shared between OTBI and OBIA. It was designed to allow you have the following configurations:
OTBI Only
OBIA only
OTBI and OBIA coexist
If you implement Fusion Apps, you can enable OTBI. You can use the BI EE Answer to access the prebuild metadata and metrics those are built against the Fusion Apps. You may not get the full powerful prebuild dashboard and repost and prebuilt navigation workflow. However, you can start experiencing what the BI EE based reports look like. You can start bring the data out from your OLTP system. You can provide training to the users to get familar with the subject areas, some of which are shared with OBIA.
If you enjoy OTBI and want to further get OBIA with a data warehouse based solution. You can implement OBIA later. Some of the OTBI reports maybe switched to run against OBIA. Some of OTBI reports can continue connecting to Fusion Apps directly. They can coexist in a single BI server and a single BI answer client.
Both OTBI and OBIA are accessing Fusion Apps via the ADF. This is a more advanced topic.
This is my first post about dimension hierarchy support in a data warehouse.
I will first starting with the requirement assumptions in this post and later posts will talk about the implementations.
Dimension is mainly about “View By”, “Group by”, and “Filter By”. You say that you want to view your last year sales by regions. Last year is a filter and “By region” is the “view by” or “group by”, so there are two dimensions involved here: the Calendar dimension and the Region dimension.
Each year, such as year 2010, is a dimension member in the Calendar dimension. Each region, such as the East Region, is a dimension member.
Sometime there are hierarchical relationship among the dimension members. for example, year 2010 is a dimension member, and the month “January 2010” is also a member and we know that the member year 2010 can be related to another 12 dimension members. the data for the dimension member year 2010 can actually further break down by those twelves members. we call this relationship between the member year 2010 and the member month January 2010 is a hierarchical relationship. The year 2010 is a parent member and the month “January 2010” is a child member.
The relationship is useful in BI since you can see where the data come from. Basically if you know that the year 2010 is consistent of 12 child members, January 2010, February 2010, …, to December 2010, it would be great if BI allows you to drill from the group by view with the year 2010 to the view by the child members of year 2010.
If there is hierarchical relationships among regions, it would be great that when you view any region in your report, you can further see what are the other regions that the region is consist of and see the details, especially see how the figure is made from.
For example, if you see the sales for 2010 for the East region is 21M and the east region is consist of three child regions, region A, region B, and region C. You may want to see how this 21M come from. Whether the figure is 7M for each region, or the figure is actually unbalanced among regions may mean different for you and different action plan may come up.
The requirement assumptions are
Dimension Hierarchy is for supporting drill down reporting. You should be able to drill into a dimension member and see the further details about the member.
Dimension hierarchy let you see the break down. Browsing the dimension members is not the main purpose. The purpose of having the dimension support in BI is for viewing the metrics along with the dimension.
The number that is associated with the parent dimension members would typically be a number that can be added up from the child members.
Next post, I will talk about BI tool implementation.
Last week I talked about EDW as a data model offering. I also mentioned that it is possible to use the enterprise data warehouse as the source for BI Apps, but it requires a lot of manual work. The topic discussed is about evaluating if you need to have the EDW data model or BI Apps, or both.
There is another commonly seen scenario that you may already have an existing enterprise data warehouse. If you already have an enterprise data warehouse and already have the integration from various in-house systems, what do you do?
First of all, I think that it is not wrong to co-exist. You have existing investments in your EDW and you should consider keeping it for the value it already provides. However, considering the benefits and the cost and time saving you may get from the prepackaged BI apps, you may still want to deploy a prepackaged BI Apps. There is really no conflict.
The other questions come from those people who think of one plus one should not be two, but more. I think that it is possible to integrate the EDW and prepackaged BI apps in several ways to gain the additional values:
1. Dashboard and report level integration
BI tool, such as Oracle BI EE, allows you to have multiple data sources for your BI. You can put the reports or regions from different data warehouses into the same end user business flow. You can even put them into the same page if it makes sense.
If you include a cross reference table or cross reference from at least one side, you can actually drill into from one to the other.
The integration between the two will be similar from the integration between the BI apps and an OLTP system, such as E-Business Suite. For example, you can navigate to a EBS page as long as the page is callable. You can use URL rewrite to pass the context. The URL can encrypt the identifier so the data can still be secured. You can the URL as an presentation layer attribute that can be a derived attribute that include the object instance ID from the record.
You can also define the page navigation from one BI page to the other.
I will call this loosely-decoupled approach.
2. Logical Layer Integration via Data Federation
We can also use the data federation feature from a BI tool such as Oracle BI EE. The concept of the data federation is very simple. Basically, as an end user of BI, you should not need to know where your data is physically located. Your BI design architect can tell the BI system as part of the metedata repository about where the data is physically located and what the semantic layer of the data mode should be and how the data are related. During run time, the BI tool can get the data from the various physical database systems or even the text files and spreadsheet data. It will merge the results and show the data to the users.
3. Data Warehouse and Database level integration
The data federation is done via the BI tool. There is mot much impact to the ETL process as long as we can identify the share nature key.
The Data warehouse level integration means that you can not only make the BI Apps co-exist with your enterprise data warehouse, you may actually build some integration via the ETL process.
For example, you do not really need duplicate the Date dimension. The Calendar Date is an important dimension in the data warehouse. However, the definition of the Gregorian calendar is defined outside your organizations. Most of data warehouses have the similar design on the Date dimension. If the various facts can get the agreement on how to derive the Date dimension foreign key, you do not really need to have two Date dimension tables.
You need to be careful for going into this approach though. The benefit of using a prepackaged BI apps is not just cut your initial cost, but also reduce your lifetime maintenance. When you upgrade your OLTP apps, or when you want to implement additional modules, it may be the time for you to upgrade your BI Apps. The prepackaged BI Apps can provide the upgraded adapters to the latest version of the OLTP. If you change the out of the box date dimension from the BI Apps, you make need to find a strategy to keep the change isolated from the upgrade to make the change be easily redone or be protected from the upgrade.
Oracle BI Applications 7.9.5 is released early this month. Here is a quick summary of the features introduced in this release and where you can get more information about it.
This is my 4th post about the embedded BI. The key is that a OBIEE and OBIA warehouse based solution is embeddable to the OLTP system as long as the OLTP system can provide the basic support.
In this article, I will discuss one of the key enabling technology – integrated authentication.
Some people left me messages in my MeeboMe. If you have questions about Oracle BI Suite Enterprise Edition and Oracle BI Applictions. Here are the links to the public discussion forums:
Oracle database allows you secure the access to the table rows using the virtual private database feature. It is one of the enabler for the EBS organization based security.
Oracle BI EE also provide the data security in the BI server based on repository setup. However, can we also use the database feature together with our BI deployment?
I recently learned a way to retrieve and manipulate the Oracle BI repository file without using the Admin Tool. Although they are not officially documented and supported, they are extensively used by many savvy users. You can see the following screen shot to get the idea on how to retrieve the repository definition in a text format.
Oracle BI Server shipped the Oracle Merant ODBC Driver from DataDirect technology. The ODBC driver files are stored under X:\OracleBI\DAC\oraclemerantodbc
It does a license check so you may receive a warning when you connect to a non-Siebel database. I received a message when I tried to recalculate the row count in the Oracle BI Server Administration Tool for connecting to a non-Siebel database..
I just installed the Oracle ODBC Instant Client to solve this problem. It does not require Oracle Home and the installation is very simple. It took less then 10 minutes for downloading and installing the files.
I do not have a ORACLE_HOME in my machine since I am using the Oracle XE. The only problem I have found for using XE is that BIEE and XE are running different OC4J servers so I have multiple web server instances on my machines. Fortunately Oracle Express takes the port 8080 as the default and the OC4J for analytics is running under the port 9704, so they are not conflicting with each other.
To run the Oracle BI Application, you don’t need to install a separate application server. The OC4J server is packaged with the Oracle BI Enterprise Edition platform and you can put your web page files under X:\OracleBI\oc4j_bi\j2ee\home\default-web-app.
If you are using Oracle BI EE/Apps, you have a chance to provide your feedback to Oracle about the upgrade to the next release. You can fill the form – BI EE Upgrade survey available in OracleBI Blog.
Oracle BI Applications is build on top of the platform from the Oracle BI Enterprise Edition. The dashboard and report components can be seamlessly embedded into Oracle Applications, like how it is integrated with Siebel application. However, it is also a very typical data warehouse architecture. Read the rest of this entry »
This is the link to public available Business Intelligence Suite Enterprise Edition Version 10.1.3.2 Documentation Library. Read the rest of this entry »
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