Oracle Purchasing Basics
Oracle Purchasing Basics
Oracle Purchasing Basics
Oracle Purchasing allows requisitions, purchase orders, quotations, and receipts etc to be processed and integrated with modules such as General Ledger, Inventory, Order Management etc. The Oracle Purchasing design consists of various technical components like interfaces, workflows, profile options, tables etc which are summarized in this article.
Main Business Components in Oracle Purchasing are Employee/Buyers Vendor/Suppliers Requisitions Purchase Orders Receipts
Employees
You must to be setup as an employee in order to create a requisition or a PO. If Oracle HR is installed then you have to use the form defined in Oracle HRMS to define an employee. If Oracle HR is not installed then you can use a form under Setup->Personnel->Employees to setup employees. Main tables are HR_EMPLOYEES, PER_PEOPLE_F Important Note: The view HR_EMPLOYEES_CURRENT_V gives one record per active employee. PER_PEOPLE_F/PER_ALL_PEOPLE_F store multiple records per employee with specific start and end dates
Vendors
PO_VENDORS, PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL and PO_VENDOR_CONTACTS are the main tables for this entity. Vendors are global i.e. a vendor, once defined, can be used across operating units (OU). Vendor sites are OU specific. Most of the PO tables store the VENDOR_ID and VENDOR_SITE_ID columns. VENDOR_SITE_ID is unique (not unique within a VENDOR_ID) in 11i. It used to be unique for a vendor until 11.0.PO_VENDORS PO_VENDORS stores information about your suppliers. You need one row for each supplier you define. Each row includes the supplier name as well as purchasing, receiving, payment, accounting, tax, classification, and general information. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to determine active suppliers. VENDOR_ID is the unique systemgenerated receipt header number invisible to the user. SEGMENT1 is the systemgenerated or manually assigned number you use to identify the supplier in forms and reports. Oracle Purchasing generates SEGMENT1 using the PO_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER_CONTROL table if you choose to let Oracle Purchasing generate supplier numbers for you. This table is one of three tables that store supplier information. PO_VENDORS corresponds to the Suppliers window. PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL stores information about your supplier sites. You need a row for each supplier site you define. Each row includes the site address, supplier reference, purchasing, payment, bank, and general information. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to store supplier address information. This table is one of three tables that store supplier information. PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL corresponds to the Sites region of the Suppliers window.
PO_VENDOR_CONTACTS PO_VENDOR_CONTACTS stores information about contacts for a supplier site. You need one row for each supplier contact you define. Each row includes the contact name and site. This table is one of three tables that store supplier information. PO_VENDOR_CONTACTS corresponds to the Contacts region of the Supplier Sites window
Requisition
This entity is the starting point of data flow in the PO module. Requisitions can be created by various means Enter Reqs form, Requisition Interface tables or using Self Service Purchasing. All requisitions need to be approved before being considered for future processing. An unapproved requisition has a value of Incomplete for the column AUTHORIZATION_STATUS in the table PO_REQUISITION_HEADERS. After the requisition is completed it should be submitted for Approval. Approval is a separate piece of code that is reused in both Reqs as well as PO approval. It is a combination of Workflow, PL/SQL and Pro*C code. There are 3 main tables for Reqs:
PO_REQUISITION_HEADERS: PO_REQUISITION_HEADERS_ALL stores information about requisition headers. You need one row for each requisition header you create. Each row contains the requisition number, preparer, status, and description. REQUISITION_HEADER_ID is the unique systemgenerated requisition number. REQUISITION_HEADER_ID is invisible to the user. SEGMENT1 is the number you use to identify the requisition in forms and reports. Oracle Purchasing generates SEGMENT1 using the PO_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER_CONTROL table if you choose to let Oracle Purchasing generate requisition numbers for you. PO_REQUISITION_HEADERS_ALL corresponds to the Header region of the Requisitions window. SEGMENT1 provides unique values for each row in the table in addition to REQUISITION_HEADER_ID.
PO_REQUISITION_LINES: PO_REQUISITION_LINES stores information about requisition lines. You need one row for each requisition line you create. Each row contains the line number, item number, item category, item description, needby date, deliverto location, item quantities, units, prices, requestor, notes, and suggested supplier information for the requisition line. LINE_LOCATION_ID identifies the purchase order shipment line on which you placed the requisition. LINE_LOCATION_ID is null if you have not placed the requisition line on a purchase order. BLANKET_PO_HEADER_ID and BLANKET_PO_LINE_NUM store the suggested blanket purchase agreement or catalog quotation line information for the requisition line. PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID contains the REQUISITION_LINE_ID from the original requisition line if you exploded or multi-sourced this requisition line. This table corresponds to the Lines region of the Requisitions window. PO_REQ_DISTRIBUTIONS: PO_REQ_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL stores information about the accounting distributions associated with each requisition line. Each requisition line must have at least one accounting distribution. You need one row for each requisition distribution you create. Each row includes the Accounting Flexfield ID and requisition line quantity. PO_REQ_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL is one of three tables storing your requisition information. This table corresponds to the requisition Distributions window, accessible through the Requisitions window
Purchase Order
This is the pivotal entity of Oracle Purchasing. All other entities function for or because of this entity. There are four main tables for this entity: PO_HEADERS_ALL: There are six types of documents that use PO_HEADERS_ALL: RFQs Quotations Standard purchase orders Planned purchase orders Blanket purchase orders Contracts Each row contains buyer information, supplier information, brief notes, foreign currency information, terms and conditions information, and the status of the document. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to record information that is related to a complete document. PO_HEADER_ID is the unique systemgenerated primary key and is invisible to the user. SEGMENT1 is the systemassigned number you use to identify the document in forms and reports. Oracle Purchasing generates SEGMENT1 using the PO_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER_CONT_ALL table if you choose to let Oracle Purchasing generate document numbers for you. SEGMENT1 is not unique for the entire table. Different document types can share the same numbers. You can uniquely identify a row in PO_HEADERS_ALL using SEGMENT1 and TYPE_LOOKUP_CODE or using PO_HEADER_ID. If APPROVED_FLAG is Y, the purchase order is approved. If your document type is a blanket purchase order, contract purchase order, RFQ, or quotation, Oracle Purchasing uses START_DATE and END_DATE to store the valid date range for the document. Oracle Purchasing only uses BLANKET_TOTAL_AMOUNT for blanket PO_LINES_ALL: Is a detail of headers table. Each row includes the line number, the item number and category, unit, price, tax information, matching information, and quantity ordered for the line. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to record and update item and price information for purchase orders, quotations, and RFQs. PO_LINE_ID is the unique systemgenerated line number invisible to the user. LINE_NUM is the number of the line on the purchase order. Oracle Purchasing uses CONTRACT_NUM to reference a contract purchase order from a standard purchase order line. Oracle Purchasing uses ALLOW_PRICE_OVERRIDE_FLAG, COMMITTED_AMOUNT, QUANTITY_COMMITTED, MIN_RELEASE_AMOUNT only for blanket and planned purchase order lines. The QUANTITY field stores the total quantity of all purchase order shipment lines (found in PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL). PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL: Also known as Shipments is a detail of lines. PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL contains information about purchase order shipment schedules and blanket agreement price breaks. You need one row for each schedule or price break you attach to a document line. Each row includes the location, quantity, and dates for each shipment schedule. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to record delivery schedule information for purchase orders, and price break information for blanket purchase orders, quotations and RFQs. PO_RELEASE_ID applies only to blanket purchase order release shipments. PO_RELEASE_ID identifies the release on which you placed this shipment. SOURCE_SHIPMENT_ID applies only to planned purchase order release shipments. It identifies the planned purchase order shipment you chose to release from. PRICE_OVERRIDE always equals the purchase order line price for standard purchase order shipments. For blanket and planned purchase orders, PRICE_OVERRIDE depends on the values of the ALLOW_PRICE_OVERRIDE_FLAG and NOT_TO_EXCEED_PRICE in the corresponding row in PO_LINES_ALL: If ALLOW_PRICE_OVERRIDE_FLAG is N, then PRICE_OVERRIDE equals UNIT_PRICE in PO_LINES_ALL. If ALLOW_PRICE_OVERRIDE_FLAG is Y, then PRICE_OVERRIDE can take any value that is smaller than NOT_TO_EXCEED_PRICE in PO_LINES_ALL. The QUANTITY field corresponds to the total quantity ordered on all purchase order distribution lines (found in PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL).
PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL: PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL contains accounting distribution information for a purchase order shipment line. You need one row for each distribution line you attach to a purchase order shipment. Each row includes the destination type, requestor ID, quantity ordered and deliverto location for the distribution. Oracle Purchasing uses this information to record accounting and requisition information for purchase orders and releases. PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL is one of five tables storing purchase order and release information. Some columns in PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL contain information only if certain conditions exist:
If you autocreate this accounting distribution from a requisition, REQ_DISTRIBUTION_ID corresponds to the ID of the requisition distribution you copy on the purchase order. If you use a foreign currency on your purchase order, Oracle Purchasing stores currency conversion information in RATE and RATE_DATE. If you use encumbrance, GL_ENCUMBERED_DATE and GL_ENCUMBERED_PERIOD_NAME contain encumbrance information Oracle Purchasing uses to create journal entries in Oracle General Ledger. If you do not autocreate the purchase order from online requisitions, REQ_LINE_REFERENCE_NUM and REQ_HEADER_REFERENCE_NUM contain the requisition number and requisition line number of the corresponding paper requisition. These two columns are not foreign keys to another table. If the distribution corresponds to a blanket purchase order release, PO_RELEASE_ID identifies this release. If SOURCE_DISTRIBUTION_ID has a value, the distribution is part of a planned purchase order release. Reqs can be converted to Purchase Orders using either the Autocreate form or Create PO workflow. If certain conditions are satisfied then multiple req lines are converted to a single PO line or a single PO shipment.
Receipt
There are two receipt source types, Supplier (PO based) and Internal Order (Internal Requisitions and Inter-org transfers) that you need to use when receiving against different source document types. You use a receipt source type of Supplier when receiving items that you ordered from an external supplier using a purchase order. When you receive items that are part of an interorganization transfer, or when receiving items that you request from your inventory using an internal requisition, the receipt type would be Internal Order. The Internal Order receipt source type populates the ORGANIZATION_ID column. There are three main tables in receiving:
RCV_SHIPMENT_HEADERS RCV_SHIPMENT_HEADERS stores common information about the source of your receipts or expected receipts. You group your receipts by the source type and the source of the receipt. Oracle Purchasing does not allow you to group receipts from different sources under one receipt header. Oracle Purchasing creates a receipt header when you are entering your receipts or when you perform interorganization transfers using Oracle Inventory. When Oracle Inventory creates a receipt header for an intransit shipment, the receipt number is not populated until you receive the shipment. RCV_SHIPMENT_LINES RCV_SHIPMENT_LINES stores information about items that have been shipped and/or received from a specific receipt source. RCV_SHIPMENT_LINES also stores information about the default destination for intransit shipments. RCV_TRANSACTIONS RCV_TRANSACTIONS stores historical information about receiving transactions that you have performed. When you enter a receiving transaction and the receiving transaction processor processes your transaction, the transaction is recorded in this table. Once a row has been inserted into this table, it will never be updated. When you correct a transaction, the net transaction quantity is maintained in RCV_SUPPLY. The original transaction quantity does not get updated. You can only delete rows from this table using the Purge feature of Oracle Purchasing.
MAIN INTERFACES
You could import requisitions, Purchase Orders and Receipts using the open interfaces for the respective entities. The Manufacturing APIs and Open Interfaces manual is a comprehensive guide to these interfaces.
Requisitions Interface
See ReqImport process below.
MAJOR PROCESSES
A few important processes are described below. There are several other equally important processes in Oracle Purchasing. The users guide and Oracle Manufacturing APIs and Open Interfaces manual is a good source for information on them.
ReqImport
Overview This interface lets you integrate Oracle Purchasing quickly with new or existing applications such as material requirements planning, inventory management, and production control systems. Purchasing automatically validates your data and imports your requisitions. You can import requisitions as often as you want. Then, you can review these requisitions, approve or reserve funds for them if necessary, and place them on purchase orders or internal sales orders. Flow
You must write the program that inserts a single row into the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL and/or the PO_REQ_DIST_INTERFACE_ALL table for each requisition line that you want to import. Then you use the Submit Request window to launch the Requisition Import program for any set of rows. You identify the set of rows you want to import by setting the INTERFACE_SOURCE_CODE and BATCH_ID columns appropriately in the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL table. You then pass these values as parameters to the Requisition Import program. If you do not specify any values for these parameters, the program imports all therequisition lines in the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL table. You also specify the requisition grouping and numbering criteria as parameters to the Requisition Import program. Each run of the Requisition Import program picks up distribution information from either the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL or the PO_REQ_DIST_INTERFACE_ALL table. The PO_REQ_DIST_INTERFACE_ALL table was used in Release 11, for Self-Service Purchasing (known then as Web Requisitions). In Release 11i, you should use the PO_REQ_DIST_INTERFACE_ALL table to create multiple distributions only for requisitions created in non-Oracle systems that use multiple distributions. As long as the Multiple Distributions field in the Requisition Import program is No (or blank), Requisition Import looks for distribution information in the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL table. The Requisition Import program operates in three phases. In the first phase, the program validates your data and derives or defaults additional information. The program generates an error message for every validation that fails and creates a row in the PO_INTERFACE_ERRORS table with detailed information about each error. In the second phase, the program groups and numbers the validated requisition lines according to the following criteria. If you specify a value in the REQ_NUMBER_SEGMENT1 column of the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL table, all lines with the same value for this column are grouped together under a requisition header. If you provide a value in the GROUP_CODE column, all lines with the same value in this column are grouped together under a requisition header. If you do not provide values in either of these columns, the Requisition Import program uses the Group By parameter to group lines together. If you do not provide a value for this parameter, the program uses the default Group By that you set up to group requisition lines. You can group requisition lines in one of the following ways that the Requisition Import program supports by: BUYER CATEGORY LOCATION VENDOR ITEM ALL (all requisition lines grouped under one header) If you provide a value in the REQ_NUMBER_SEGMENT1 column of the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL table, this value becomes the requisition number. If not, the Requisition Import program uses either the Last Requisition Number parameter if specified or the next unique number stored in the PO_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER_CONTROL table, adds 1 to this number, and starts numbering requisitions. If any of the requisition numbers generated already exists, the program loops until it finds a unique number. For every line that is successfully imported, a default distribution is created with the account information that you specify. (You specify account information in any of the following columns in either the PO_REQUISITIONS_INTERFACE_ALL or the PO_REQ_DIST_INTERFACE_ALL table: CHARGE_ACCOUNT_ID, ACCRUAL_ACCOUNT_ID, VARIANCE_ACCOUNT_ID, BUDGET_ACCOUNT_ID, or any of the CHARGE_ACCOUNT_SEGMENT columns.) Requisition supply is also created for every approved requisition that is successfully imported. In the third phase, the program deletes all the successfully processed rows in the interface tables, and creates a report which lists the number of interface records that were successfully imported and the number that were not imported. This report can be viewed by choosing View Output for the Requisition Import concurrent Request ID in the Requests window. You can launch the Requisition Import Exceptions Report to view the rows that were not imported by the Requisition Import program along with the failure reason(s) for each row.
PO Approval Workflow
Overview Whenever you submit a purchase order or release for approval or take an action in the Notifications Summary window, Purchasing uses Oracle Workflow technology in the background to handle the approval process. Workflow uses the approval controls and hierarchies you define according to the setup steps in the section to route documents for approval. You can use the Workflow Builder interface to modify your approval process. The purchase order approval workflow consists of processes, which are viewable in the Workflow Builder as a diagram, some of whose objects and properties you can modify. Each workflow process, in turn, consists of individual function activities. The PO Approval workflow is initiated at the following points in Purchasing: When you choose Submit for Approval (and then choose OK) in the Approve Document window. See: Submitting a Document for Approval When you respond to a reminder in the Notifications Summary window reminding you to submit a document for approval that has not yet been submitted. Flow The purchase order approval process is associated with an item type called PO Approval. This item type identifies all purchase order and release approval workflow processes available. Refer to the Oracle Purchasing Users guide for a comprehensive explanation of the flow.
Immediate Online
RCV: Allow routing override Yes or No indicates whether the destination type assigned during requisition or purchase order entry can be overridden at receipt time. RCV: Debug Mode If set to Yes, and RCV: Processing Mode set to Immediate or Batch, debug messages will be printed to the concurrent log file. RCV: Default Include Closed PO Option If it is set to Yes, a search in the Enter Receipts window and the Receiving Transactions window automatically select the Include Closed POs checkbox. Your search results will then include closed orders. The Receiving Open Interface (including ASN) will allow a receipt against orders with the status of Closed for Receiving if this profile is set to Yes. Any setting other than Yes prevents receiving against orders using the Receiving Open Interface with the status of Closed for Receiving.
Basic Purchasing Setups The purchasing user must be set as a buyer in Oracle applications. Before setting the user as buyer he/she must be an employee in applications. Employee Setup Employee should be assigned the position and job. This is useful in PO approval workflow. The view used is per_people_v, per_people_address_v, per_people_assigment_v to store the employee information. Buyer Setup Once the user is set as buyer then he/she can create/approve/print the purchase orders. Whether the users can create/approve/print the purchase orders is decided by how the document types are setup. The table which stores the buyer is PO_AGENTS and the view used for the buyer name and other details is PO_AGENTS_V. The important columns PO_AGENTS_V Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Agent_id Unique agent id 2 Agent_name Agent Name 3 Location_id Unique location id 4 Location_code Location code 5 Start_date_active Start date active 6 End_date_active End date active Document Types Document types there are certain attributes needs to be set. They are explained below-: 1) Owner can approve: If we check this attribute then user can approve the documents he has created. This field is not updatable when the document type is RFQ or Requisition. 2) Approver can modify: If we check this attribute then approver the contents of the document. This is not applicable to RFQ and requisitions. 3) Can change forward to: This indicates test that the user can change the name of the approver in the approval window. 4) Can change forward from: This indicates that the user can change the name of the document creator. This is available only for document type requisition. 5) Can change approval hierarchy: Preparers and approvers can change the approval hierarchy in the approval document window. 6) Disable: Check it to disable the Document type. 7) Access Level: How the users can access the document type. a. Full: Full access to the user b. Modify: Can modify the document type c. View Only: Can only view the document type 8) Archive On: When the archival of document type will take place. a. On approval: On approval of the document b. On Printing: On printing of the document. 9) Approval workflow: Which workflow the purchasing will use to approve the document type in question. One can define a custom workflow and also mention the name of the workflow. 10) Default Hierarchy: What hierarchy the approval process will follow is to be mentioned here.
Table Used The table where the information is stored is PO_DOCUMENT_TYPES_V Supplier Setup The table where the information is stored is PO_VENDORS Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Vendor_id Unique vendor id 2 Vendor_name Vendor or supplier name 3 Segment1 Vendor Number 4 Start_date_active Start date active 5 End date active End date active Another important table associated with this screen is PO_VENDORS_SITES_ALL. This stores the important information of vendor sites. Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Vendor_site_id Unique vendor site Id 2 Vendor_id Unique vendor site id refers PO_VENDORS 3 Vendor_site_code Vendor site code Purchase Orders Creation Of Standard Purchase Orders Creation of purchase orders has three parts. First is the header information second is the line information and the third is the shipments and distributions information. This applies for the standard purchase order. Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Po_header_id Unique Po Header Id 2 Agent_id Agent id refers PO_AGENTS_V 3 Segment1 PO Number 4 Revision_num Revision Number for PO 5 Vendor_id Unique vendor id refers PO_VENDOR_ID 6 Vendor_site_id Unique vendor site id refers PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL 7 Vendor_contact_id Vendor contact id 8 Ship_to_location_id Where the material will be shipped by supplier 9 Bill_to_location_id Where the Bill/Invoice will be sent by the supplier 10 Currency_code Currency code 11 Authorization_status Authorization status for the PO Open/Closed/Approved/Incomplete 12 Type_look_up_code What is the type of PO Standard/Blanket/Planned 13 Org_id Operating Unit The second type of information stored is line level information. Its is stored in the table PO_LINES_ALL Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Po_line_id Line identification number
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Po_header_id Line_type_id Line_num Item_id Item_rev Item_description Quantity Unit_price List_price Org_id Promise_date Need_by_date
PO header id refers PO_HEADERS_ALL Line type_id such as Goods/Services/Expense etc Unique line num for each line item Item to purchased refers MTL_SYSTEMS_ITEMS Revision of the item refers MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS Description of item Quantity to be entered Price of one unit Unit price from price list Operating unit from where purchasing will take place Promise date by supplier Date by which the material is required
The third type of information is the shipment The information is stored in PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 LINE_LOCATION_ID Unique identifier LINE_LOCATION_ID 2 PO_HEADER_ID Refers PO_HEADERS_ALL 3 PO_LINE_ID Refers PO_LINE_ALL 4 QUANTITY Quantity to be shipped 5 SHIP_TO_LOCATION_ID Unique Identifier for the quantity to be shipped 6 SHIPMENT_TYPE Price break, Blanket ,Standard 7 ORG_ID Operating Unit The distribution information is stored in PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 Po_Distribution_Id Unique Distribution Id 2 Po_Header_Id PO Header Identification number referring PO_HEADERS_ALL 3 Po_Line_Id PO Line identification number referring PO_LINES_ALL 4 Line_Location_Id Refers PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL 5 Set_Of_Books_Id Set of Books 6 Code_Combination_Id GL Code combination id for charge account 7 Quantity_Ordered Quantity Ordered 8 Distribution_Num Unique distribution number 9 Destinition_Type_Code Destination type Code for e.g. Inventory 10 Destination_Organization_Id Destination organization id 11 Destination_Subinventory Destination Sub-inventory
Operating unit PO Release identification number if the PO type is blanket PO Thus to summarize the information for Standard, Planned is stored in the following tables. 1) PO_HEADERS_ALL 2) PO_LINES_ALL 3) PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL 4) PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL Creation of Blanket Purchase Order When the purchase order type information is of the type blanket then the header and line level information is stored in same table as that of standard PO. For a blanket one more transaction named a Release transaction is made. This release transaction then creates the shipment information and the distribution information. Therefore for a blanket transactions following tables are used. 1) PO_HEADERS_ALL 2) PO_LINES_ALL 3) PO_RELEASE_ALL 4) PO_LINE_LOCATIONS_ALL 5) PO_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL Thus a blanket PO is same as Standard PO with the help of extra transaction call Releases. The table for releases is PO_RELEASE_ALL Sr.no Column Name Comments 1 PO_RELEASE_ID PO Release identification Number 2 PO_HEADER_ID Refers PO_HEADERS_ALL 3 RELEASE_NUM Unique release num 4 AGENT_ID Buyer ID refers PO_AGENTS_V 5 RELEASE_DATE The date on which release is created 6 REVISION_NUM Revision number is generated when any changes are done to release information 7 APPROVED_FLAG Y if the release in question is approved 8 APPROVED_DATE Date on release is approved 9 PRINT_COUNT No of times the release is printed 10 PRINT_DATE Last printed date of the release 11 AUTHORIZATION_STATUS Different status of the releases such as Open/Closed/Approved/Incomplete 12 ORG_ID Operating unit Concept of Multi Organization in Purchasing In Oracle purchasing can be done across multiple organizations also called as operating units. So to accommodate this oracle has provided multi org views for the base tables of purchasing. For instance the table PO_HEADERS_ALL stores the header information of all the orgs. For using multi org view we need to set ORG_ID context variable using the AOL built in package. The syntax is given below. FND_CLIENT_INFO.SET_ORG_CONTEXT(<ORG_ID Value>) Once this is set then one can get rows in from all multi org views. Table below illustrates the base tables and there multi org views. Base Table Multi Org View
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Org_Id Po_Release_Id