You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
There's an HTTP receive port named DeliveryX. Sometimes messages that arrive on this receive port are
suspended. What should you do to write the contents of the messages to a file directory for examination?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
In order to send loan requests to a business partner for processing, you create an orchestration. What
should you do to identify whether transmission of the loan requests fails or succeeds?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2 to develop a solution.
The manager of your company wants that EDI documents be sent to a business partner. The BizTalk
artifacts that represent the business partner have to be created and configured. So what should you do?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2 developer.
You create an orchestration. The orchestration validates documents and aggregates them into a single
message by using pipeline processing. The message will be relayed to a Web service. An error occurs
when messages enter the pipeline and the orchestration is activated. So what should you do to catch the
error when it happens in the pipeline processing?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
You develop an orchestration. The orchestration use direct binding to drop a message on the MessageBox
database. The message is based on a schema named Request.xsd. You have to create a send port and an
orchestration. When Request message arrives on the MessageBox database, the send port and an
orchestration will subscribe to them. So what actions should you perform?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
You import a binding file. The configuration information for a SQL receive port is contained in this file. The
SQL adapter fails to connect to the database because of an incorrect password after the import. The SQL
adapter can successfully connect after the password to the correct value in the SQL port is changed by
hand. You must make sure that the password will be set automatically to the correct value on future imports
of the binding file. So what should you do?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
You business partner send messages to you and each of them has their own custom message format to
use. In order to use a standard message format to process all messages, an XML schema is created for
each custom message format. The schema displays the standard message format. So what's your next
action?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
You run the BizTalk Web Services Publishing Wizard. An orchestration is published as a Web service by
you. And you are able to reference the Web service proxy in code. From a custom Microsoft .NET
Framework application, you call the Web service proxy. No error is returned. But the orchestration behind
the Web service does not instantiate. What should you do to make sure that when you call the Web
service, the orchestration instantiates?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
A 250-MB message is sent to your File receive location by one of your trading partner. The message
cannot be published to the MessageBox database, but you must rout it to an internal legacy application.
The BizTalk receive host uses up available memory when the message arrives. So what should you do to
make sure that the message can be successfully received, stored, and sent to the internal legacy
application when the message arrives?
You work in an international company which is named TXTWIN. And you're in charge of the company
network and use Microsoft BizTalk Server 2006 R2.
You develop two orchestrations. The first one has multiple orchestration parameters but has no configured
ports. Now you've been assigned a task that you must configure the second orchestration, making it pass
parameters to the orchestration and receive a response back. So what should you do to achieve this?