Item | Description |
For some Applications and Operations, for example, for the CloudStreams Connector for Salesforce(R) Bulk v2 Data Loader Application and Create Job and Upload Job Data Operation, Integration Cloud supports multipart request body. | |
User Interface changes due to performance enhancements | The following user interface changes are made to enhance the performance and reduce the wait time for user actions: ![]() ![]() |
Mapping enhancement | While doing pipeline mapping, you can now view only the mapped fields by selecting the Show Only Mapped Fields check box. |
The new Capabilities page allows you to view the status of some of the system capabilities, based on your license offering. To access this page, from the Integration Cloud navigation bar, click ![]() | |
Integration Cloud Integrations can now invoke Cloud Deployment webMethods Integration Server Flow and Java services for the same tenant. A new pre-defined Application, Cloud Deployment, is added in Integration Cloud. Using this Application, you can select the solution webMethods Integration Server services that you want to call from Integration Cloud. | |
The following OAuth 2.0 enhancements have been implemented in this release: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Item | Description |
Support for usage based license monitoring of CPU and Memory capacity | You can now view the cumulative usage of CPU and Memory for all the active solutions in all the stages from the Usage page. To access this page, from the Cloud Deployment navigation bar, click ![]() Further, on the Cloud Deployment landing page, you can see the current usage (CPU and Memory) for the tenant. |
Continuous Integration/Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) | You can now build user-created assets and configurations using webMethods Asset Build Environment (ABE), retrieve those assets and configurations from a VCS by using ABE or an automated tool like Jenkins, and then deploy those assets and configurations to the Integration Cloud Development Stage using ABE. Note: For information on CI/CD and how to promote assets across stages, see the Deploying to webMethods Integration Cloud document. |
Landscape component status | You can now see the status of a solution landscape component whether it is Ready or Not Ready on the landscape page. |
Support for stateless cluster of webMethods Integration Servers | In addition to supporting stateful webMethods Integration Server clusters, you can now define that a cluster is stateless from the Landscape page for a solution. The deployment of a solution will therefore not need a Terracotta Server Array. |
Support for viewing more assets | You can now view more on-premises assets for Cloud Deployment. |
You can now type a message to describe the rollback. The rollback message appears on the History page. The History page shows the Trace ID, that is, the tracking ID, which is automatically generated on every successful or unsuccessful promotion or rollback, or deletion, the Deployment, Rollback, or Deletion Action, Date when the asset was promoted, rolled back, or deleted, the User who promoted, rolled back, or deleted the asset, and the commit Message for the selected instance. You can click on a Trace ID to see the Track History for the specific action. | |
You can now delete assets from all stages from the Deploy page for a solution. | |
The new Capabilities page allows you to view the status of some of the Cloud Deployment capabilities, based on your license offering. To access this page, from the Cloud Deployment navigation bar, click ![]() | |
Support for webMethods Adapter KPI monitoring | You can now monitor the following details of all the installed Adapters: ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Duplicate low severity alerts | In earlier releases, along with critical alerts, redundant alerts of lower severity like warning and info alerts were also displayed. From this release, if there are critical alerts, lower severity alerts will not be displayed. |