Skip to main content
Multi Org Access Control (MOAC) in Oracle Purchasing

From Release 12 the Multi-Org Access Control feature, will enable users to access data in one or more Operating Units from a single responsibility. This feature allows users in a shared services environment to access/transact data within several operating units from a single responsibility at the same time restricting access to other users through a security policy. This allows flexibility and convenience for shared service users. At same time you can prevent access to data from users who are not authorized to access this information.


For Further Information:-
View Multi Org Access Control (MOAC) in Oracle Purchasing [ID 397362.1]

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Oracle R12 Inventory Configuration: Key points to Avoid Mistakes

Most Oracle ERP R12 inventory problems are not system failures they are process and configuration failures. The same categories of mistakes surface repeatedly across implementations: Focusing on master data control, disciplined transactions, proper OU setup, and strong internal controls prevents operational and financial discrepancies.   This article walks through the four most critical areas where Oracle R12 inventory implementations go wrong, explains why each mistake is costly, and provides recommendations to prevent them. Each section includes the relevant navigation path and configuration screenshots for hands-on reference   1.       Improper Item Master Configuration in Oracle R12   Oracle E‑Business Suite R12 , the Item Master Configuration serves as the foundation of the Inventory module. Two critical components under this configuration umbrella are: Define Master Item Setup Define Item Status Both setups control how items ...

Monitoring and Troubleshooting Oracle APEX Performance with Real-World SQL Queries

    Introduction Oracle Application Express (APEX) is one of the most widely adopted low-code development platforms in the Oracle ecosystem. As organizations scale their APEX deployments, the need for robust monitoring and troubleshooting capabilities becomes critical. This article provides SQL queries that DBAs and developers can use to monitor, diagnose, and optimize their APEX environments.   What makes monitoring APEX unique is the three-tier architecture it operates on: the Oracle Database at the data layer, APEX at the application layer, and Oracle REST Data Services (ORDS) as the middleware. Understanding how sessions flow through these three layers is the key to effective monitoring.     Architecture Overview   Layer Component Version Role Database Oracle DB 19.28 Stores data, executes SQL, manages sessions Application Oracle AP...
SQL Query Performance Tuning: A Practical Approach for Oracle DBAs Inefficient queries in Oracle Database can significantly impact system performance, resulting in higher response times and decreased user productivity. By closely monitoring memory usage and CPU consumption, database administrators can identify performance bottlenecks and determine the root causes of inefficient query execution. Oracle Query Performance Tuning Checklist 1.          Monitor Memory Usage:                Purpose: Ensure optimal memory allocation to prevent excessive disk I/O and performance degradation.             Actions: * Track memory consumption using Oracle Enterprise Manager *Automatic Workload Repository (AWR) reports to review SGA and PGA utilization, and identify abnormal memory usage patterns. Analyze AWR reports for: a.   ...