1.

Why ‘process Control’ Is Used? What Are Its Features?

Answer»

‘Process Control’ is used to manipulate another work item of the workflow during runtime.

‘Process Control’ is usually used to model the workflow when deadlines are reached. SAP offers 4 standard BEHAVIORS as part of process control.

Cancel Work item: Target WI is LOGICALLY deleted. Subsequent tasks are not executed. Precondition is that Process control and the target WI have to be in different branches of the same fork.

Set Work item to OBSOLETE: The target WI is set to COMPLETE, and processing continues in the branch processing obsolete.

Cancel Workflow: Current workflow is set to ‘Complete’. If this is the sub workflow, then the control goes to super-ordinate workflow.

Complete (terminate) Workflow: Same as above, but the branch of super-ordinate workflow which contains the current sub-workflow will not be continued.

Cancel Workflow including all callers: Same as above, but all callers also will be ‘COMPLETE’d.

‘Process Control’ is used to manipulate another work item of the workflow during runtime.

‘Process Control’ is usually used to model the workflow when deadlines are reached. SAP offers 4 standard behaviors as part of process control.

Cancel Work item: Target WI is logically deleted. Subsequent tasks are not executed. Precondition is that Process control and the target WI have to be in different branches of the same fork.

Set Work item to obsolete: The target WI is set to complete, and processing continues in the branch processing obsolete.

Cancel Workflow: Current workflow is set to ‘Complete’. If this is the sub workflow, then the control goes to super-ordinate workflow.

Complete (terminate) Workflow: Same as above, but the branch of super-ordinate workflow which contains the current sub-workflow will not be continued.

Cancel Workflow including all callers: Same as above, but all callers also will be ‘COMPLETE’d.



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