Key Tables in Oracle Inventory
Here is a brief description of the key tables in Oracle Inventory.
Table | Description |
MTL_PARAMETERS | It maintains a set of default options like general ledger accounts; locator, lot, and serial controls, inter-organization options, costing method, etc. for each organization defined in Oracle Inventory. Each organization’s item master organization (MASTER_ORGANIZATION_ID) and costing organization (COST_ORGANIZATION_ID) are maintained here. |
MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_B | This is the definition table for items. This table holds the definitions for inventory items, engineering items, and purchasing items. The primary key for an item is the INVENTORY_ITEM_ID and ORGANIZATION_ID. Therefore, the same item can be defined in more than one organization. Items now support multilingual description. MLS is implemented with a pair of tables: MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_B and MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_TL. Translations table (MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_TL) holds item Description and Long Description in multiple languages. |
MTL_ITEM_STATUS | This is the definition table for material status codes. Status code is a required item attribute. It indicates the status of an item, i.e., Active, Pending, Obsolete. |
MTL_UNITS_OF_MEASURE_TL | This is the definition table for both the 25-character and the 3-character units of measure. The base_uom_flag indicates if the unit of measure is the primary unit of measure for the uom_class. Oracle Inventory uses this table to keep track of the units of measure used to transact an item. |
MTL_ITEM_LOCATIONS | This is the definition table for stock locators. The associated attributes describe which subinventory this locator belongs to, what the locator physical capacity is, etc. |
MTL_ITEM_CATEGORIES | This table stores inventory item assignments to categories within a category set. For each category assignment, this table stores the item, the category set, and the category. Items always may be assigned to multiple category sets. However, depending on the Multiple Assignments Allowed attribute value in a given category set definition, an item can be assigned to either many or only one category in that category set. |
MTL_CATEGORIES_B | This is the code combinations table for item categories. Items are grouped into categories within the context of a category set to provide flexible grouping schemes. Item categories now support multilingual category description. MLS is implemented with a pair of tables: MTL_CATEGORIES_B and MTL_CATEGORIES_TL. MTL_CATEGORIES_TL table holds translated Description for Categories. |
MTL_CATEGORY_SETS_B | It contains
the entity definition for category sets. A category set is a
categorization scheme for a group of items. Items may be assigned to
different categories in different category sets to represent the
different groupings of items used for different purposes. An item may be assigned to only one category within a category set, however. STRUCTURE_ID identifies the flexfield structure associated with the category set. Category Sets now support multilingual category set name and description. MLS is implemented with a pair of tables: MTL_CATEGORY_SETS_B and MTL_CATEGORY_SETS_TL. MTL_CATEGORY_SETS_TL table holds translated Name and Description for Category Sets. |
MTL_DEMAND | This table
stores demand and reservation information used in Available To Promise,
Planning and other Manufacturing functions. There are three major row
types stored in the table: Summary Demand rows, Open Demand Rows, and Reservation Rows. |
MTL_SECONDARY_INVENTORIES | This is the definition table for the subinventory. A subinventory is a section of inventory, i.e., raw material, finished goods, etc. Subinventories are assigned to items (in a many to one relationship), indicating a list of valid places where this item will physically exist in inventory. |
MTL_ONHAND_QUANTITIES | It stores quantity on hand information by control level and location. It is maintained as a stack of receipt records, which are consumed by issue transactions in FIFO order. The quantity on hand of an item at any particular control level and location can be found by summing TRANSACTION_QUANTITY for all records that match the criteria. |
MTL_TRANSACTION_TYPES | It contains seeded transaction types and the user defined ones. USER_DEFINED_FLAG will distinguish the two. The table also stores the TRANSACTION_ACTION_ID and TRANSACTION_SOURCE_TYPE_ID that is associated with each transaction type. |
MTL_MATERIAL_TRANSACTIONS | This table stores a record of every material transaction or cost update performed in Inventory. Records are inserted into this table either through the transaction processor or by the standard cost update program. The columns TRANSACTION_TYPE_ID, TRANSACTION_ACTION_ID, TRANSACTION_SOURCE_TYPE_ID, TRANSACTION_SOURCE_ID and TRANSACTION_SOURCE_NAME describe what the transaction is and against what entity it was performed. |
MTL_ITEM_ATTRIBUTES | This table stores information on item attributes. Each row in the table corresponds to an attribute. The table stores the attribute name, the corresponding user-friendly name seen by the users, and the kind of validation enforced on the attribute. |
MTL_ITEM_CATALOG_GROUPS_B | This is the code combinations table for item catalog groups. An item catalog group consists of items that can be described by the same set of descriptive elements or item properties. When an item is associated with an item catalog group, the item inherits the descriptive elements for that group which then behave like additional item attributes. |
MTL_ITEM_REVISIONS_B | It stores revision levels for an inventory item. When an item is defined a starting revision record is written out to this table, so every item will at least have one starting revision. |
MTL_ITEM_TEMPLATES_B | This is the definition table for item templates. It contains the user-defined name (TEMPLATE_NAME) and description (DESCRIPTION) ONLY for backward compatibility. You can use a template to set certain item attributes. |
MTL_DESCRIPTIVE_ELEMENTS | It stores the descriptive element definitions for an item catalog group. Descriptive elements are defining properties used to describe in the catalog group. |
MTL_DESCR_ELEMENT_VALUES | It stores the descriptive element values for a specific item. When an item is associated with a particular item catalog group, one row per descriptive element (for that catalog group) is inserted into this table. |
ORG_ACCT_PERIODS | It holds the open and closed financial periods for organizations. |
MTL_CUSTOMER_ITEMS | It stores customer item information for a specific customer. Each record can be defined at one of the following levels: Customer, Address Category, and Address. The customer item definition is organization independent. |
MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_INTERFACE | It temporarily stores the definitions for inventory items, engineering items and purchasing items before loading this information into Oracle Inventory. |
MTL_TRANSACTIONS_INTERFACE | It allows calling applications to post material transactions (movements, issues, receipts etc. to Oracle Inventory transaction module. |
MTL_ITEM_REVISIONS_INTERFACE | It temporarily stores revision levels for an inventory item before loading this information into Oracle Inventory. |
MTL_ITEM_CATEGORIES_INTERFACE | This table temporarily stores data about inventory item assignments to category sets and categories before loading this information into Oracle Inventory. |
MTL_DESC_ELEM_VAL_INTERFACE | This table temporarily stores descriptive element values for an item that is associated with an item catalog group before loading this information into Oracle Inventory. |
MTL_DEMAND_INTERFACE | It is the interface point between non-Inventory applications and the Inventory demand module. Records inserted into this table are processed by the Demand Manager concurrent program. |
MTL_INTERFACE_ERRORS | It stores errors that occur during the item interface process reporting where the errors occurred along with the error messages. |
Key Tables in Oracle Projects
Here is a brief description of the key tables in Oracle Projects.
Table | Description |
PA_PROJECTS_ALL | It stores the highest units of work defined in Oracle Projects. |
PA_PROJECT_ASSETS_ALL | It contains assets information defined for capital projects. |
PA_PROJECT_ASSIGNMENTS | It stores details of all Assignments for a project. |
PA_PROJECT_CLASSES | It contains the class codes of class categories that are used to classify projects. |
PA_PROJECT_ROLE_TYPES | Implementation-defined responsibilities or positions assigned to employees on projects are stored here. |
PA_PROJECT_STATUSES | It stores valid project status codes. |
PA_PROJECT_TYPES_ALL | It stores implementation-defined project classifications that supply default information and drive some project processing. |
PA_TASKS | It contains user-defined subdivisions of project work. |
PA_TASK_TYPES | It stores implementation-defined classifications of task. |
PA_TRANSACTION_INTERFACE_ALL | It is an interface table to import transactions from external sources into Oracle Projects. |
PA_TRANSACTION_SOURCES | It stores implementation-defined sources of imported transactions originating in an external system. |
PA_IMPLEMENTATIONS_ALL | It contains information about the configuration of an Oracle Projects installation. |
PA_ACTION_SETS | It stores action set templates as well as action sets belonging to an object, such as projects, requirements, etc. |
PA_ACTION_SET_LINES | It stores action set lines that belong to an action set or an action set template. |
PA_ACTION_SET_TYPES | It stores attributes of action set types. |
PA_AGREEMENTS_ALL | It has customer contracts that serve as the basis for work authorization. |
PA_AGREEMENT_TYPES | Implementation-defined classifications of customer agreements. |
PA_BILL_RATES_ALL | Information about bill rates and markups of standard bill rate schedules. |
PA_BUDGETS | It stores budgets information. |
PA_BUDGET_LINES | It stores detail lines of project and task budgets. |
PA_BUDGET_TYPES | It contains implementation-defined classifications of types of budgets used for different business purposes. |
PA_CLASS_CATEGORIES | It stores implementation-defined categories for classifying projects. |
PA_CLASS_CODES | It stores implementation-defined values within class categories that can be used to classify projects. |
PA_EVENTS | It stores entries assigned to tasks that generate revenue and/or billing but are not directly related to expenditure items. |
PA_EVENT_TYPES | It stores implementation-defined classifications of events. |
PA_EXPENDITURES_ALL | Groups of expenditure items incurred by employees or organizations for an expenditure period. |
PA_EXPENDITURE_CATEGORIES | Implementation-defined groupings of expenditure types by type of cost. |
PA_EXPENDITURE_ITEMS_ALL | It contains the smallest units of expenditure charged to projects and tasks. |
PA_EXPENDITURE_TYPES | Implementation-defined classifications of expenditures charged to projects and tasks. |
PA_PERIODS_ALL | Implementation-defined periods against which project performance is measured. |
PA_RBS_DENORM | This table stores normalized resource breakdown structure information. |
PA_RBS_ELEMENTS | This table stores the RBS element information and the parent-child relationship. |
PA_RESOURCES | It contains resources used in budgeting and project summary amounts. |
PA_ROLE_LISTS | It stores lists of roles defined with the system. |
PA_SCHEDULES | It displays the schedule details for requirements and assignments. It also displays calendar schedules. |
GL Tables
GL Tables
General Ledger tables can be grossly classified into following 5 categories. Here are few important tables in each category.Ledgers Tables:
GL_LEDGERS: Stores information about the ledgers defined in the Accounting Setup Manager and the ledger sets defined in the Ledger Set form. Each row includes the ledger or ledger set name, short name, description, ledger currency, calendar, period type, chart of accounts, and other information.GL_CODE_COMBINATIONS: Stores valid account combinations for each Accounting Flexfield structure within your Oracle General Ledger application.
Period Tables:
GL_PERIODS: Stores information about the accounting periods you define using the Accounting Calendar form.GL_PERIOD_SETS: Stores the calendars you define using the Accounting Calendar form.
GL_PERIOD_TYPES: Stores the period types you define using the Period Types form. Each row includes the period type name, the number of periods per fiscal year, and other information.
Journal Tables:
GL_JE_BATCHES: Stores journal entry batches. Each row includes the batch name, description, status, running total debits and credits, and other information.GL_JE_HEADERS: Stores journal entries. There is a one-to-many relationship between journal entry batches and journal entries. Each row in this table includes the associated batch ID, the journal entry name and description, and other information about the journal entry.
GL_JE_LINES: Stores the journal entry lines that you enter in the Enter Journals form. There is a one-to-many relationship between journal entries and journal entry lines. Each row in this table stores the associated journal entry header ID, the line number, the associated code combination ID, and the debits or credits associated with the journal line.
GL_JE_SOURCES: Stores journal entry source names and descriptions. Each journal entry in your Oracle General Ledger application is assigned a source name to indicate how it was created. This table corresponds to the Journal Sources form.
GL_JE_CATEGORIES: Stores journal entry categories. Each row includes the category name and description.
Conversion and consolidation tables:
GL_CONSOLIDATION: Stores information about your consolidation mappings. Each row includes a mapping’s ID, name, description, and other information. This table corresponds to the first window of the Consolidation Mappings form. You need one row for each consolidation mapping you define.GL_CONSOLIDATION_ACCOUNTS: Stores the account ranges that you enter when you consolidate balances using the Transfer Consolidation Data form. This table corresponds to the Account Ranges window of the Transfer Consolidation Data form.
GL_DAILY_RATES: Stores the daily conversion rates for foreign currency transactions. It replaces the GL_DAILY_CONVERSION_RATES table. It stores the rate to use when converting between two currencies for a given conversion date and conversion type.
GL_DAILY_BALANCES: Stores daily aggregate balances for detail and summary balance sheet accounts in sets of books with average balances enabled.
Budgeting tables:
GL_BUDGET_TYPES: Stores information about budget types. Oracle General Ledger supports only one budget type, ‘STANDARD’. Therefore, this table always contains only one row.GL_BUDGET_ASSIGNMENTS: Stores the accounts that are assigned to each budget organization. Each row includes the currency assigned to the account and the entry code for the account. The entry code is either ‘E’ for entered or ‘C’ for calculated. This table corresponds to the Account Assignments window of the Define Budget Organization form.
GL_BUDGET_INTERIM: It is used internally by Oracle General Ledger applications to post budget balances to the GL_BALANCES table. Rows are added to this table whenever you run the budget posting program. The budget posting program updates the appropriate budget balances in GL_BALANCES based on the rows in this table, and then deletes the rows in this table that it used.
Interface Tables:
GL_INTERFACE: It is used to import journal entry batches through Journal Import. You insert rows in this table and then use the Import Journals window to create journal batches.GL_INTERFACE_CONTROL: It is used to control Journal Import execution. Whenever you start Journal Import from the Import Journals form, a row is inserted into this table for each source and group id that you specified. When Journal Import completes, it deletes these rows from the table.
GL_BUDGET_INTERFACE: It is used to upload budget data into your Oracle General Ledger application from a spreadsheet program or other external source. Each row includes one fiscal year’s worth of budget amounts for an account.
Key FND Tables in Oracle Application
Key FND Tables in Oracle Application
Here there are few key FND tables that we use in our AOL queries.
FND_APPLICATION: Stores applications registered with Oracle Application Object Library.
FND_APPLICATION_TL:
Stores translated information about all the applications registered with Oracle Application Object Library.
FND_APP_SERVERS:
This table will track the servers used by the E-Business Suite system.
FND_ATTACHED_DOCUMENTS:
Stores information relating a document to an application entity.
FND_CONCURRENT_PROCESSES:
Stores information about concurrent managers.
FND_CONCURRENT_PROCESSORS:
Stores information about immediate (subroutine) concurrent program libraries.
FND_CONCURRENT_PROGRAMS:
Stores information about concurrent programs. Each row includes a name and description of the concurrent program.
FND_CONCURRENT_PROGRAMS_TL:
Stores translated information about concurrent programs in each of the installed languages.
FND_CONCURRENT_QUEUES:
Stores information about concurrent managers.
FND_CONCURRENT_QUEUE_SIZE:
Stores information about the number of requests a concurrent manager can process at once, according to its work shift.
FND_CONCURRENT_REQUESTS:
Stores information about individual concurrent requests.
FND_CONCURRENT_REQUEST_CLASS:
Stores information about concurrent request types.
FND_CONC_REQ_OUTPUTS:
This table stores output files created by Concurrent Request.
FND_CURRENCIES:
Stores information about currencies.
FND_DATABASES:
It tracks the databases employed by the eBusiness suite. This table stores information about the database that is not instance specific.
FND_DATABASE_INSTANCES:
Stores instance specific information. Every database has one or more instance.
FND_DESCRIPTIVE_FLEXS:
Stores setup information about descriptive flexfields.
FND_DESCRIPTIVE_FLEXS_TL:
Stores translated setup information about descriptive flexfields.
FND_DOCUMENTS:
Stores language-independent information about a document.
FND_EXECUTABLES:
Stores information about concurrent program executables.
FND_FLEX_VALUES:
Stores valid values for key and descriptive flexfield segments.
FND_FLEX_VALUE_SETS:
Stores information about the value sets used by both key and descriptive flexfields.
FND_LANGUAGES:
Stores information regarding languages and dialects.
FND_MENUS:
It lists the menus that appear in the Navigate Window, as determined by the System Administrator when defining responsibilities for function security.
FND_MENUS_TL:
Stores translated information about the menus in FND_MENUS.
FND_MENU_ENTRIES:
Stores information about individual entries in the menus in FND_MENUS.
FND_PROFILE_OPTIONS:
Stores information about user profile options.
FND_REQUEST_GROUPS:
Stores information about report security groups.
FND_REQUEST_SETS:
Stores information about report sets.
FND_RESPONSIBILITY:
Stores information about responsibilities. Each row includes the name and description of the responsibility, the application it belongs to, and values that identify the main menu, and the first form that it uses.
FND_RESPONSIBILITY_TL:
Stores translated information about responsibilities.
FND_RESP_FUNCTIONS:
Stores security exclusion rules for function security menus. Security exclusion rules are lists of functions and menus inaccessible to a particular responsibility.
FND_SECURITY_GROUPS:
Stores information about security groups used to partition data in a Service Bureau architecture.
FND_SEQUENCES:
Stores information about the registered sequences in your applications.
FND_TABLES:
Stores information about the registered tables in your applications.
FND_TERRITORIES:
Stores information for countries, alternatively known as territories.
FND_USER:
Stores information about application users.
FND_VIEWS:
Stores information about the registered views in your applications.
Few Important AP Tables
Few Important AP Tables
AP_SUPPLIERS:- This table replaces the old PO_VENDORS table.
- It stores information about your supplier level attributes.
- Each row includes the purchasing, receiving, invoice, tax, classification, and general information.
- Oracle Purchasing uses this information to determine active suppliers.
- The supplier name, legal identifiers of the supplier will be stored in TCA and a reference to the party created in TCA will be stored in AP_SUPPLIERS.PARTY_ID, to link the party record in TCA.
- This table replaces the old PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL table.
- It stores information about your supplier site level attributes.
- There is a row for unique combination of supplier address, operating unit and the business relationship that you have with the supplier.
- The supplier address information is not maintained in this table and is maintained in TCA. The reference to the internal identifier of address in TCA will be stored in AP_SUPPLIER_SITES_ALL.LOCATION_ID, to link the address record in TCA.
- Each row includes the supplier reference, purchasing, invoice, and general information.
- It contains records for invoices you enter.
- There is one row for each invoice you enter.
- An invoice can have one or more invoice distribution lines and can have one or more scheduled payments.
- It contains records for invoice lines entered manually, generated automatically or imported from the Open Interface.
- An invoice can have one or more invoice lines.
- An invoice line represents goods (direct or indirect materials), service(s), and/or associated tax/freight/miscellaneous charges invoiced from a supplier.
- An invoice line should contain all the attributes that are present on the physical or electronic invoice presented by the supplier.
- It holds the distribution information that is manually entered or system-generated.
- There is one row for each invoice distribution and a distribution must be associated with an invoice.
- An invoice can have multiple distributions.
- It contains records of invoice payments that you made to suppliers.
- There is one row for each payment you make for each invoice and there is one payment and one invoice for each payment in this table.
- Oracle Payables application updates this table when you confirm an automatic payment batch, enter a manual payment, or process a Quick payment.
- When you void a payment, your Oracle Payables inserts an additional payment line that is the negative of the original payment line.
- This table stores information about scheduled payment information on invoices.
- It stores the clearing/unclearing history for payments.
- It also stores the maturity history for future dated payments.
- The table contains a row for each future dated payment, once the future dated payment matures, i.e. becomes negotiable.
- Any time a payment is cleared or uncleared, a row is inserted into this table for the payment.
- It contains summary information about invoices you enter in batches if you enable the Batch Control Payables option.
- There is one row for each batch of invoices you enter.
- If you enable Batch Control, each invoice must correspond to a record in this table.
- Your Oracle Payables application uses this information to group together invoices that one person entered in a batch.
- It stores information about payments issued to suppliers or refunds received from suppliers.
- There is one row for each payment you issue to a supplier or refund received from a supplier.
- Oracle Payables application uses this information to record payments you make to suppliers or refunds you receive from suppliers.
- Oracle Payables application stores the supplier name and bank account name for auditing purposes, in case either one is changed after you create the payment. Oracle Payables application also stores address information for all payments.
- It contains information about holds that you or your Oracle Payables application place on an invoice.
- For non-matching holds, there is one row for each hold placed on an invoice. For matching holds, there is one row for each hold placed on an invoice-shipment match.
- An invoice may have one or more corresponding rows in this table.
- Your Oracle Payables application does not pay invoices that have one or more unreleased holds recorded in this table.
- It contains information about your bank accounts.
- There is one row for each bank account you define and each bank account must be affiliated with one bank branch.
- It stores information for the internal and external bank accounts you define in Oracle Payables and Oracle Receivables applications.
- It stores information about the corporate credit cards issued to your employees by your corporate credit card providers.
- It contains denormalized information about invoices and payments posted to the accrual set of books.
HZ tables in Oracle Receivables
HZ(TCA) tables in Oracle Receivables
This article describes few important HZ tables in AR and their relationships with each other.HZ_PARTIES:
The HZ_PARTIES table stores basic information about parties that can be shared with any relationship that the party might establish with another party. The primary key for this table is PARTY_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- PARTY_ID: Party identifier
- PARTY_NUMBER: Unique identification number for this party
- PARTY_NAME: Name of the party
- PARTY_TYPE: The party type can only be Person, Organization, Group or Relationship.
The HZ_PARTY_SITES table links a party (HZ_PARTIES) and a location (HZ_LOCATIONS) and stores location-specific party information. One party can optionally have one or more party sites. One location can optionally be used by one or more parties. The primary key for this table is PARTY_SITE_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- PARTY_SITE_ID: Party site identifier.
- PARTY_ID: Identifier for the party. Foreign key to the HZ_PARTIES table.
- LOCATION_ID: Identifier for the party site. Foreign key to the HZ_LOCATIONS table.
- PARTY_SITE_NUMBER: Party site number.
- PARTY_SITE_NAME: User-defined name for the site.
- ADDRESSEE: Addressee information.
The HZ_LOCATIONS table stores information about a delivery or postal address such as building number, street address, postal code, and directions to a location. This table provides physical location information about parties (organizations and people) and customer accounts. The primary key for this table is LOCATION_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- LOCATION_ID: Unique identifier for this location
- COUNTRY: Country code from the TERRITORY_CODE column in the FND_TERRITORY table
- ADDRESS1: First line for address
- ADDRESS2: Second line for address
- ADDRESS3: Third line for address
- ADDRESS4: Fourth line for address
- CITY: City
- POSTAL_CODE: Postal Code
- STATE: State
- ADDRESS_KEY: Derived key that facilitates fuzzy searches
The HZ_CUST_ACCOUNTS table stores information about customer accounts , or business relationships that the deploying company establishes with a party of type Organization or Person. This table focuses on business relationships and how transactions are conducted in the relationship. Since a party can have multiple customer accounts, this table might contain several records for a single party. For example, an individual person can establish a personal account, family account, and a professional account for a consulting practice. The primary key for this table is CUST_ACCOUNT_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- CUST_ACCOUNT_ID: Customer account identifier
- PARTY_ID: A foreign key to the HZ_PARTY table.
- ACCOUNT_NUMBER: Account Number
- CUSTOMER_TYPE: Receivables lookup code for the CUSTOMER_TYPE attribute. I for internal customers, R for revenue generating external customers.
- CUSTOMER_CLASS_CODE: Customer class identifier
The HZ_CUST_ACCT_SITES_ALL table stores all customer account sites across all operating units. Customer account sites are addresses, for customer accounts, where the deploying company does business with its customers. One customer account can have multiple customer account sites, and customer account sites for one customer account can belong to multiple operating units. The primary key for this table is CUST_ACCT_SITE_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- CUST_ACCT_SITE_ID: Customer site identifier
- CUST_ACCOUNT_ID: Identifier for a customer account. Foreign key to the HZ_CUST_ACCOUNTS table
- PARTY_SITE_ID: Identifier for a party site. Foreign key to the HZ_PARTY_SITES table
- BILL_TO_FLAG: Indicates if this is a Bill-To site.
- SHIP_TO_FLAG: Indicates if this is a Ship-To site.
- MARKET_FLAG: Indicates if this is a Marketing site.
The HZ_CUST_SITE_USES_ALL table stores business purposes assigned to customer account sites, for example Bill-To, Ship-To, and Statements. Each customer account site can have one or more purposes. This table is a child of the HZ_CUST_ACCT_SITES_ALL table, with the foreign
key CUST_ACCT_SITE_ID. The HZ_CUST_SITE_USES_ALL table also stores operating unit identifier, though the HZ_CUST_ACCT_SITES_ALL table itself stores the operating unit for customer account sites. The primary key for this table is SITE_USE_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- SITE_USE_ID: Site use identifier
- CUST_ACCT_SITE_ID: Identifier for the customer account site. Foreign key to the HZ_CUST_ACCT_SITES_ALL table
- SITE_USE_CODE: Business purpose assigned to customer site account, such as Bill-To, Market, and Statements.
- PRIMARY_FLAG: Indicates if this site is the primary site for this customer account. Y for the primary customer account site. N for other customer account sites.
The HZ_CUSTOMER_PROFILES table stores information about the credit characteristics of a single customer account or a customer account site or a party. A profile class defined in the
HZ_CUSTOMER_PROFILE_CLASSES table can be used to provide default values for the attributes in this table. The primary key for this table is CUST_ACCOUNT_PROFILE_ID.
Few Important Columns are
- CUST_ACCOUNT_PROFILE_ID: Unique identifier of this customer profile
- CUST_ACCOUNT_ID: Identifier for the Customer Account. Foreign key to the HZ_CUST_ACCOUNTS table.
- STATUS: Indicates whether the profile is active or inactive
The HZ_CUST_PROFILE_CLASSES table stores information about the credit characteristics that are common across a group of customer accounts. The characteristics specified in this table can be used as default characteristics for similar customer accounts. The primary key for this table is PROFILE_CLASS_ID.
HZ_PARTY_RELATIONSHIPS:
The HZ_PARTY_RELATIONSHIPS table stores information about relationships between parties.
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