Take advantage of this free, automated upgrade for Oracle Integration instances. After this upgrade, expect faster performance, greater reliability, and our
latest features.
Note
Upgrade scheduling is available to instance administrators only.
What is Oracle Integration Generation 2?
Oracle Integration Generation 2 is the next generation of our Oracle Integration platform. This upgrade delivers improved performance and reliability as well as
significant improvements in provisioning and other lifecycle management activities
by more deeply leveraging the power of Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure.
What is the upgrade
process and how will it impact my service?
This is a planned maintenance event and will include scheduled downtime
during the upgrade process. Your Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance will use the same URL and integration endpoints.
The upgrade process will take several hours, during which inflight
integration processing will be paused and user logins will be disabled. Upon
completion, your service will be fully restored using the same instance URL and
access credentials. Each Oracle Integration instance will be separately upgraded. You have the option of scheduling different
instances for different upgrade windows.
Two weeks after the upgrade of your first Oracle Integration instance, options to create new Oracle Integration (PSM) instances will no longer be available in your tenancy, as they're no longer
needed.
When will my instance
be upgraded?
Watch for a notification.
You'll receive an Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure notification and see a banner on your Oracle Integration Home page, telling you that your instance will be upgraded. The banner
includes two links: one to a Schedule Upgrade page
and another to the upgrade documentation.
Click the Review the details of your
upgrade link and follow the upgrade steps.
Three dates are listed in the upgrade window section. Note that
1 week before the first listed date and 2 weeks before the remaining upgrade
dates, the upgrade window selection becomes locked and you can
make NO further changes.
One day before the upgrade, you can NO LONGER perform
lifecycle operations on the Oracle Integration instance, such as scale up or down, and start or stop.
What happens during
the upgrade?
During the upgrade window, the Oracle Integration instance will be unavailable. All activity in the Oracle Integration instance, including design time and runtime, will be stopped. Users who attempt
to sign in will see a message that the instance is temporarily unavailable. All
metadata and in-flight instance data are moved to the new instance.
What happens to integration
instances in the old Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console?
Integration instances will still be visible in your old PSM Console from
which you upgraded for approximately two weeks. However, the instances will be
displayed as stopped, and cannot be restarted. You must perform all start and stop
actions on Oracle Integration Generation 2 integration instances in your new Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console.
Do I need to allowlist (formerly
known as whitelist) my IP addresses in Oracle Integration Generation 2?
What do I get with Oracle Integration Generation 2?
Make use of these Oracle Integration Generation 2 capabilities:
Native integration with the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console
Integration Insight in Oracle Integration for modeling and extracting meaningful business metrics
File Server, an embedded SFTP server within Oracle Integration
Support for Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure (OCI) Compartments, for organization and instance access control
Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Identity and Access Management (IAM)
Read/View only access to Oracle Integration instances
Support for tagging
Service instance Lifecycle Management (LCM) capabilities,
including Terraform, CLIs, APIs, and CI/CD
Integration with the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Monitoring service
Compartment quotas for better control over how resources are
consumed
Event automation based on Oracle Integration state changes using event types, rules, and actions
Ability to update Oracle Integration instances: Move between compartments, change edition and number of
message packs
What do I need to know about
lifecycle (LCM) APIs in Oracle Integration Generation 2?
Oracle Integration Generation 2 provides updated lifecycle (LCM) management APIs built for Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure for your use. See Oracle Integration API in the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure documentation (Oracle Integration CLI). For example, APIs
have changed for creating, deleting, and starting and stopping Integration
instances.
Tasks You MUST Do Before the
Upgrade ๐
Perform the following steps before the upgrade starts.
Ensure that you are subscribed to the same Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure region as the Oracle Integration instance you intend to upgrade.
If you received a notification email indicating that your Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure tenancy is not subscribed to all necessary regions, subscribe to all
regions by following these quick steps in Subscribe to Regions Before Upgrading.
If needed, select a different upgrade window. (Can only be done
before the upgrade window is locked.)
The Upgrade Window field shows the date
and time during which the instance is currently scheduled for upgrade. You
can select a different window, based on availability. Unless you make a
change, the current window displayed in your instance will be used for the
upgrade.
Specify the new OCID of the compartment to be used. (Can only be
done before the upgrade window is locked.)
By default, the cloud tenancy's root compartment is used for the
upgraded Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance and its OCID is listed in the
Compartment OCID field. However, we recommend
that you create a new compartment in the root compartment and enter its OCID
for the Oracle Integration instance in Gen 2. To create a new compartment in the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console, see Create an Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Compartment.
If needed, federate any secondary IDCS stripes with Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure.
For existing cloud accounts and new cloud accounts in regions that
have not yet been updated to use identity domains: if you created your Oracle Integration instance in an IDCS stripe other than the primary IDCS
stripe (also known as secondary IDCS stripe), you'll need to
federate the secondary IDCS stripe with Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure before the upgrade. Follow the steps in
Configure Multiple Identity Stripes for Oracle Integration Generation 2.
If needed, change the preselected upgrade date chosen for any
other instances. This has to be done before the window lock three weeks
before the upgrade date.
If your account includes multiple Oracle Integration
instances, note that each instance needs to be individually upgraded. This
means you can choose to first upgrade your development and test instances,
and later upgrade your production instances. However, if you leave the
default settings, the instances are upgraded in the default order as
specified on the Schedule Upgrade page. If you want
your non production instances to be upgraded before production, you MUST
go to the Oracle Integration Home page and change the upgrade
windows to reflect the upgrade order you want.
If needed, complete network rules configuration prior to your
planned upgrade.
If you are using an OCI service that supports network rules as a
target of an integration connection, such as object store or autonomous
database, and you have enabled the network rules, then you must add the OIC
Service VCN as part of the network rule. To get the OIC Service VCN OCID,
open a service request with Oracle Support. Once you have the OIC Service
VCN OCID, follow the rules for your target service, such as Configure Access Control
Lists When You Provision or Clone an Instance in Using Oracle Autonomous Database on Shared
Exadata Infrastructure.
If the OCI service you are accessing is in a different region
than your Oracle Integration instance, allowlist the egress IP address provided in the upgrade UI.
Tasks to Perform After the
Upgrade ๐
Complete these steps after the upgrade.
Access your Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance using your existing
credentials.
You will now find your Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance in the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console in the compartment you previously specified. (If you did
not provide a compartment ID, your new instance will be located at
the root compartment.)
Make sure to select the correct region.
Your old pre-Generation 2Oracle Integration instance is locked and cannot be restarted. Go to the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console instead.
Test your upgraded instance.
Once the upgrade is complete, perform regression testing. If you
find issues, open a service request. For example, verify that your instance
is running, endpoints are being reached, and so on.
Create Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure users and groups to enable Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console access.
Oracle Identity Cloud
Service identities are retained during upgrade, so you can continue using your
Oracle Identity Cloud
Service users and groups for accessing the Oracle Integration Console and running integrations. But you'll need to configure policies
in Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure, create Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure groups, and map Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure groups to Oracle Identity Cloud
Service groups.
Re-add any Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure instance tags previously added to your pre-Generation 2 instance to your
new Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance. This step is important if you use tagging to
manage your instances and perform Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure reporting.
Allowlist Your IP
Addresses ๐
After
you upgrade to Oracle Integration Generation 2, you may need to add your IP addresses to an allowlist (formerly a
whitelist).
The endpoint URLs and the Oracle Identity Cloud
Service application associated with your instance remain the same. You access the Oracle Integration Generation 2 instance in much the same way as the original instance.
However, the ingress and egress IP addresses are
different. So if you previously allowlisted (explicitly allowed
identified entities access) the IP addresses of your Oracle Integration instances, you must allowlist the new IP addresses for Oracle Integration Generation 2. Once the upgrade window becomes locked, Oracle provides the new IP
addresses to organizations that allowlist.
Note
Youโll need to allowlist IP addresses for Oracle Integration Generation 2 wherever you previously included IP addresses in the allowable
list. For example, youโll need to allowlist in these cases:
You use Connectivity Agent and have included Oracle Integration IP addresses in the allowable list.
You use applications such as Oracle E-Business Suite or
Siebel which have included Oracle Integration IP addresses in the allowable list when invoking Oracle Integration integration flows.
Youโre using Oracle Integration to invoke endpoints hosted on your on-premises/private cloud and have
included NAT Gateway IP addresses in the allowable list.
If you previously allowlisted IP addresses to enable Visual
Builder applications in an Oracle Integration instance to access external REST services, the outbound IP addresses
changed after the November 2020 Oracle Integration update. Note, the IP address for egress from Visual Builder will be
different from the egress IP of Oracle Integration. In addition, if you are using network rules to allow connection from
Visual Builder to OCI services, such as autonomous database, then you
must add the VB Service VCN as part of the network rule. If needed, open
a service request with Oracle Support to obtain new IP addresses or VCN
OCIDs.
Subscribe to Regions Before
Upgrading ๐
Oracle has begun upgrading Oracle Integration instances to Oracle IntegrationGeneration 2 instances. However, you may have received a notification email indicating
that your Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure tenancy is not subscribed to all the necessary
regions. Follow these steps to quickly subscribe to all
regions.
Subscribe to Regions Before Upgrade
Before upgrade, your Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure tenancy must be
subscribed to each region in which an Oracle Integration instance exists. For
example, if Ashburn is your home region, but you created an Oracle Integration
instance in the Phoenix region, the tenancy must be subscribed to the Phoenix
region.
In the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console, locate the region
for each of your Oracle Integration instances.
From the list of your instances, select each instance.
Click in the top right corner of the page.
Locate the region.
Repeat these steps for all other instances.
Subscribe to regions, as needed.
Open the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console, open the
Region menu, and click Manage
Regions. The list of regions available to your tenancy
is displayed. Your home region is labeled.
Locate the region you want to subscribe to and click
Subscribe. It may take several minutes to
activate your tenancy in the new region.
Repeat these steps to subscribe to all unsubscribed regions
of an Oracle Integration instance. You can manage infrastructure
regions. See Managing
Regions.
Note
If a message alerts you that you have exceeded the maximum number of
regions allowed for your tenancy, request a limit increase to your subscribed
region count from the Oracle Cloud
Infrastructure Console. See Request a subscribed region
limit increase.