Limiting the no of change pointers

Hi,
I have to send around 2 lac change pointers by using the program ZRBDMIDOC (replica of the program RBDMIDOC)
from R/3 to SRM client.
Is there any way to limit the change pointers, such that I can move them in slots, say, some 100 change pointers per single run of the program.
Please reply.
Regards,
Binay.

Hi Binay,
1) Reduce the amount of CP while writing them. Customizing (transaction BD52) and filtering (BADI BDCP_BEFORE_WRITE - use it at least to delete duplicates of the same object) may need adjustments.
2) Look at function group BD01. Function module CHANGE_POINTERS_READ_MODE_SET has sufficient documentation.
have fun!
Holger

Similar Messages

  • Change pointers to trigger the IDOC

    HI
    I am having a selection screen with fields to create a custom info record (transaction VD51/ VD52 )
    Customer
    material
    salesorganisation
    distribution channel
    division
    if we can use change pointers to determine when procedure is triggered.
    Please provide the steps for that (including change document)or we need to check the CDHDR table using the following fields.
    Plz suggest

    Change pointers is the one of the IDOC processing method in ALE.
    In this once we make the config to any of messages type , if any changes are made in sending system then IDOC will be posted directly to destination with user interation.
    Changes pointers are configured using BD50,BD51,BD53,BD61.
    Change pointers are stored in tables BDCP and BDCPS (or BDCP2 in case of high-performance setting) - like CDHDR and CDPOS for change documents (but this is not a controlling table!).
    1. Do you really need change pointers?
    You need change pointers to distribute changes with the ALE SMD tool. If you do not use this tool, you do not need to write change pointers.
    You can deactivate change pointers and activate them again with the transaction BD61.
    2. Do you really need to activate change pointers for this messages type?
    If some messages types are no longer to be distributed by change pointers, you can
    deactivate change pointers for this message type.
    You can deactivate change pointers for the message type
    and reactivate them again in transaction BD50.
    For reduced message types, deactivate the change pointer with the
    Reduction tool (transaction BD53).
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the
    tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an
    application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification
    took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is
    triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with
    SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to
    choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else
    than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are
    meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a
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    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for
    every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE
    when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically
    written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC
    which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can
    be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily
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    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
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    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or
    selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to
    turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function
    module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the
    matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction
    updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.
    Reward if useful

  • Change Pointers - adding a new field to existing Change Document

    Hi,
    We have a requirement to capture the changes made to the Material object through the transaction C223. The changes to field MKAL-PRFG_F have to be captured.
    There is an exisitng Change Document Object - MATERIAL. This is included in Message Type MATMAS. These are the steps we have done:
    1. In SCDO - added the Z structure to the Change Document Object - Material. [Z structure contains the field MKAL-PRFG_F. Change pointer option is checked for this Data element.
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    3. In BD52 - we have listed the fields for the new Z Message Type created.
    4. The Change Pointers - reactivated after the steps are done.
    The changes to the field MKAL-PRFG_F through C223 Tcode are not recorded in BDCPV table.
    Have we missed any steps here?
    Thanks,
    Pallavi

    HI,
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    Please see if the change is reflected or not....
    ELSE.
    may be you need to create a new entry in SCDO and do all the ALE configurations for change pointers.
    Please find the link for change pointers and also you can get lot of information on change pointers in SCN.
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/EN/12/83e03c19758e71e10000000a114084/content.htm
    Regards,
    Nagaraj

  • Generate Change Pointers in non Original System

    I have developped in the inbound badis a trigger to generate the change pointers in a non-original system.
    Do you know if there is a standard way to generate change pointers in a non-original system?
    Landscape is as follow:
    Original System => Intermediate System => Final System
    I would like to generate change pointers in the Intermediate System to transfer master data into the Final System...

    Hi,
      Thanks for your reply.
      the configuration for change pointers is already done, the problem is that if changes are send from the original system, it doesn't generate a change pointer in the intermediate system.
      In the end, the intermediate system doesn't send the information to the final system as there are no change pointers generated by the changes received from the original system.
      What I'm doing at the moment is to generate those change pointers in the inbound badi in the intermadiate system, I'm wondering if there is not a standard solution for this kind of implementation.
    Cheers,
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  • Change pointers problem

    I have created message type ZMATMAS  and I  want to see an entry in BDCP2 (Change pointers table)
    when ever any material is created or changed
    I did following steps until now.
      1. Created ZMATMAS
      2. Activated change pointers - BD61
      3. Activated change pointers for message type - BD50
    What else I've to do?
    Thanks in advance..

    Hi,
      Visit this link for more details on Change pointer.
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw04/helpdata/en/12/83e03c19758e71e10000000a114084/content.htm
    also i will tell you in short about what next to be done...
    To be able to activate the writing of change pointers via the SMD tool for your master data object, you must carry out these steps:
    ·        Activate change pointers for each message type
    ·        Maintain change-relevant fields for message type
    ·        Activating change pointers generally
    You also have to:
    ·        Implement function module for evaluating change pointers
    ·        Defining the ALE object type MSGFN as a filter object type
    NoteIf you distribute master data using a asynchronous BAPI, all the settings below apply to the generated message type of the BAPI-ALE interface.
    Thanks and Regards
    Anup

  • What is the use of change pointer technique in IDOC

    hi
    could anybody suggest me
    what is the use of change pointer technique and how to use it
    thank you
    kalyan.

    Change pointers are used for changes to the master data objects are flagged for distribution by SMD Tool.i.e.shared Master Data.
    You need change pointers to distribute changes with the ALE SMD tool. If you do not use this tool, you do not need to write change pointers.
    You can deactivate change pointers and activate them again with the transaction BD61
    The SMD tool is connected to the change document interface. If the master data changes are to be distributed, the application writes a change document. The contents of this are passed to the SMD tool. The tool writes change pointers, reads the application data and creates the master IDoc.
    The master IDoc is then passed to the ALE layer, which sends it to all interested systems.
    The change pointer tables (BDCP und BDCPS) should be as small as possible. Use as few change pointers as possible and delete change pointers which you no longer need.
    You can increase the rate of processing by using the Analyze Change Pointer and Reorganize Change Pointer functions.

  • ALE Change Pointers in source system not active

    Hi All,
    I am trying to load 0COSTELMNT using deltas. The initial load is OK and then i use a delta and it fails and i get the error:
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    I have carried out the following steps in an attempt to resolve the problem - but it didnt. Anyone have any advice??
    (1) Checked BD61 – to confirm whether the change pointers are active
    (2) Checked BDCP to confirm the number range is maintained
    (3) Checked SALE (Activate change pointers for message types)  to confirm whether the change pointer has been activated for the type we need:
    COCOKA     Control segment CO object/cost element
    COELEM     Cost element master data
    (4) In transaction snum, Selected number ranges and confirmed the intervals are setup
    No. 01
    FROM: 0000000001
    TO: 0000009999
    (5) Activate transfer structure
    (6) Replicate Datasources
    Thanks,

    If you are transferring master data from source system, the BD61 setting on the source system should be checked.
    Why it has been unchecked - not sure (likely someone did it by mistake).
    It shouldn't have any effect on txnl delta. What will be effected though is that you will have lost delta of the ALE based data sources for the period this setting was unchecked.

  • Change Pointers in CIF

    Hi
    I can create IModels for initial transfer to APO. But i am clueless to incorporate the delta changes in master data through these IModels with the help of change pointers. How can i enable them ? so far i have been doing just delete and creating the models in batch jobs. but i know with change pointers, we can carry the delta changes or new data.
    can anyone please give me the detailed steps ?
    thanks
    narendra

    Naren,
    There is only one configuration step which helps in doing this.
    The integration models you can run them every night without deleting the old one as the new IM which has run will only be the active one and the previous run will be deactivated automatically
    Use CFM1 and CFM3 to do the above
    Configuring Change Transfer before changing Master Data (R/3)
    Set how changes to master data that we make in SAP R/3 are transferred to SAP APO. If we do not make a setting here, master data changes are not transferred to SAP APO.
    SAP documentation recommends that this be done if an active integration model exists and before changes to the master data take place.
    SAP recommends that Master Data changes be done periodically and not immediately since this can easily lead to inconsistencies between the two systems.
    Menu SAP Customizing Implementation Guide ® Integration with other mySAP.com Components ® Advanced Planning and Optimization ® Basic Settings for the Data Transfer ® Change Transfer ® Change Transfer for Master Data à Configure Change Transfer for Master Data
    Tcode CFC9
    Change Transfer of Master Data is done periodically and not immediately (same as recommended by SAP).
    SAP responded to the created OSS message by suggesting that we set the ‘Re-read stock‘ indicator in this transaction. This is required since we are using Late Locking logic in R/3 and not Exclusive locks (R/3 customizing à Materials Management à General Settings à Set Material Blocks for Goods Movement.
    Customizing for Material BlocK:
    Material Block: 2 Late Lock
    Waiting time: 10 Seconds
    Change Transafer for Master Data:
    Material Master Change transfer: 1
    Change TRansfer for customer: 1
    Change transfer for vendor: 1
    Hope this helps
    Regards
    Kumar

  • Change pointers in ale

    hi experts,
      what is use of change pointers in ale?please give me help about change pointers?

    hi,
    If you want to distribute master data changes with the SMD tool (Shared Master Data), changes to the master data objects are flagged for distribution by change pointers (Master Data Distribution).
    The SMD tool is connected to the change document interface. If the master data changes are to be distributed, the application writes a change document. The contents of this are passed to the SMD tool. The tool writes change pointers, reads the application data and creates the master IDoc.
    The master IDoc is then passed to the ALE layer, which sends it to all interested systems.
    Regards,
    Pankaj Singh

  • Change pointers in ALE/IDOCs

    Hi guys,
                Can any let me know step by procedure to implenent change pointers using IDocs including ALE settings as i am new to this concept.
            Any step by step example will be helpful. useful answers will be rewarded.
    Thanks in advance.
    Regards,
    vinay

    Change pointers is the one of the IDOC processing method in ALE.
    In this once we make the config to any of messages type , if any changes are made in sending system then IDOC will be posted directly to destination with user interation.
    Changes pointers are configured using BD50,BD51,BD53,BD61.
    Change pointers are stored in tables BDCP and BDCPS (or BDCP2 in case of high-performance setting) - like CDHDR and CDPOS for change documents (but this is not a controlling table!).
    1. Do you really need change pointers?
    You need change pointers to distribute changes with the ALE SMD tool. If you do not use this tool, you do not need to write change pointers.
    You can deactivate change pointers and activate them again with the transaction BD61.
    2. Do you really need to activate change pointers for this messages type?
    If some messages types are no longer to be distributed by change pointers, you can
    deactivate change pointers for this message type.
    You can deactivate change pointers for the message type
    and reactivate them again in transaction BD50.
    For reduced message types, deactivate the change pointer with the
    Reduction tool (transaction BD53).
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the
    tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an
    application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification
    took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is
    triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with
    SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to
    choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else
    than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are
    meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a
    relevant field has changed.
    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for
    every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE
    when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically
    written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC
    which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can
    be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily
    the same that cause change pointers to be written.
    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
    This check does nothing else than to check, if this table has an entry or not. If there is an entry in TBDA1, the ALE change pointers are generally active. If this table is empty, change pointers are turned off for everybody and everything, regardless of the other settings.
    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or
    selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to
    turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function
    module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the
    matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction
    updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.
    To generate the IDOCS in case of change pointers we need to use the standard report
    RBDMIDOC
    we need execute the follwing t.code
    BD61:to activate the change pointers globally
    BD50,BD52: to activate message types ,and to enable the fileds for change pointers
    Hope this link will help you regarding Change Pointer...
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_erp2005vp/helpdata/en/ba/c9c1c31253ed4596e3bbb74922cd4a/frameset.htm
    Change Pointer Configuration and extraction in HRPay.
    Infotypes to be logged are in:
    V_T585A,
    V_T585B,
    & V_T585C
    Please view the table contents to understand the structure of these tables and how they are linked. These help you identify the cluster tables which store the data.
    Payroll Cluster Table – PCL4 contains the cluster table reference. (Please refer to the table structure below:
    Payroll Custer Tables
    http://www.planetsap.com/HR_ABAP_payroll.htm
    Cluster tables combine the data from several tables with identical (or almost identical) keys into one physical record on the database.
    Data is written to a database in compressed form.
    Retrieval of data is very fast if the primary key is known.
    Cluster tables are defined in the data dictionary as transparent tables.
    External programs can NOT interpret the data in a cluster table.
    Special language elements EXPORT TO DATABASE, IMPORT TO DATABASE and DELETE FROM DATABASE are used to process data in the cluster tables.
    PCL1 - Database for HR work area; (long text, etc)
    PCL2 - Accounting Results (time, travel expense and payroll); (payroll results)
    PCL3 - Applicant tracking data;
    PCL4 - Documents, Payroll year-end Tax data (change logs, etc)
    Database Table PCL4
    The database table PCL4 contains the following data areas:
    LA change logs (long term documents)
    SA Short-Term Documents for HR Master Data
    SB Short-Term Documents for Applicant Master
    SRTFD (PC400) = trans class always A for master data (1) pernr (8) info type (4) modified date (8) modified time (8) seqnr (4)
    Please note that for the extraction of data, you have to use the date portion of the ‘SRTFD’ and not the field value AEDTM(since it is not primary key).
    Naming convention for INCLUDES when defining clusters. These INCLUDES will define the work area key above and the cluster data that is returned from an IMPORT:
    RPCnxxy0
    n = 1, 2, 3 or 4 (for PCL1, PCL2, PCL3, PCL4)
    xx = cluster ID
    y = country grouping (0 for international otherwise country indicator T500L)
    Description of Cluster Data using Cluster RX as an Example
    The data description is stored in the include RPC2RX00 in accordance with the above naming conventions.
    RPC1TX00 - Long text cluster ID in table PCL1
    RPC2RUU0 - Payroll results for the US cluster ID in table PCL2
    RPC4LA00 - Change log cluster ID in table PCL4
    Importing Data (I)
    The IMPORT command causes data objects with the specified key values to be read from PCLn.
    If the import is successful, SY-SUBRC is 0; if not, it is 4.
    REPORT ZRPIMPORT.
    TABLES: PCLn.
    INCLUDE RPCnxxy0. "Cluster definition
    Fill cluster Key
    Import record
    IMPORT TABLE1 FROM DATABASE PCLn(xx) ID xx-KEY.
    IF SY-SUBRC EQ 0.
    Display data object
    ENDIF.
    See sample program for long text.
    Importing data (II)
    Import data using macro RP-IMP-Cn-xy.
    Check return code SY-SUBRC. If 0, it is successful. If 4, error.
    Need include buffer management routines RPPPXM00
    REPORT ZRPIMPORT.
    *Buffer definition
    INCLUDE RPPPXD00.
    DATA: BEGIN OF COMMON PART 'BUFFER'.
    INCLUDE RPPPXD10.
    DATA: END OF COMMON PART 'BUFFER'.
    *import data to buffer
    RP-IMP-Cn-xy.
    *Buffer management routines
    INCLUDE RPPPXM00.
    Cluster Authorization
    Simple EXPORT/IMPORT statement does not check for cluster authorization.
    Use EXPORT/IMPORT via buffer, the buffer management routines check for cluster authorization.
    rpcbdt00 - include needed for importing from database PCL4(la) (Change log cluster ID)
    Please note that data for change pointers is stored at two levels: 1) Header – which has the key info and 2) BELEGE – which has the changed info – ie. Old value and new value.
    Check standard program RPUAUD00
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a relevant field has changed.
    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily the same that cause change pointers to be written.
    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
    This check does nothing else than to check, if this table has an entry or not. If there is an entry in TBDA1, the ALE change pointers are generally active. If this table is empty, change pointers are turned off for everybody and everything, regardless of the other settings.
    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.
    Arunsri
    Posts: 307
    Registered: 12/3/07
    Forum Points: 246
    Re: change pointers method
    Posted: Feb 27, 2008 11:08 AM in response to: satish abap E-mail this message Reply
    hi,,
    Activating Change Pointers
    Use
    You can activate change pointers in the HR system to avoid distributing the entire structure when you make changes to the HR-ORG model, and distribute instead only the changes that you have made.
    Procedure
    1. In the Implementation Guide (IMG, transaction SALE), choose Modeling and Implementing ® Master Data Distribution ®Replication of Modified Data ® Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally.
    2. Set the activation status Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally, and save your entry.
    3. Choose the activity Activate Change Pointers for Message Types.
    4. Set the active indicator for the message type HRMD_ABA.
    5. Save your entries.
    also see this link,
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_47x200/helpdata/en/ba/c9c1c31253ed4596e3bbb74922cd4a/frameset.htm
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_47x200/helpdata/en/ba/c9c1c31253ed4596e3bbb74922cd4a/frameset.htm
    Check the links below;
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/f1/035c8cae3d11d3b540006094192fe3/frameset.htm
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/12/83e03c19758e71e10000000a114084/frameset.htm
    Reward if useful

  • Change Pointers Issue

    Hi
    Pls any body can give me step by step settings to save the changes to the DB tables(Change Log)
    I am trying to read change pointers for a 1) FAGL_011PC  table.But when ever i change the data using T Code FSE2 the data is saving in this table but the changes are not getting saved in CDHDR/CDPOS.
    Chagne Log Check Box in tech Settings I Activated.
    What shouls i Do ?
    Thanks in Advance
    PREETI Raj

    Hi,
    Change pointers is the one of the IDOC processing method in ALE.
    In this once we make the config to any of messages type , if any changes are made in sending system then IDOC will be posted directly to destination with user interation.
    Changes pointers are configured using BD50,BD51,BD53,BD61.
    Change pointers are stored in tables BDCP and BDCPS (or BDCP2 in case of high-performance setting) - like CDHDR and CDPOS for change documents (but this is not a controlling table!).
    1. Do you really need change pointers?
    You need change pointers to distribute changes with the ALE SMD tool. If you do not use this tool, you do not need to write change pointers.
    You can deactivate change pointers and activate them again with the transaction BD61.
    2. Do you really need to activate change pointers for this messages type?
    If some messages types are no longer to be distributed by change pointers, you can
    deactivate change pointers for this message type.
    You can deactivate change pointers for the message type
    and reactivate them again in transaction BD50.
    For reduced message types, deactivate the change pointer with the
    Reduction tool (transaction BD53).
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the
    tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an
    application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification
    took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is
    triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with
    SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to
    choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else
    than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are
    meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a
    relevant field has changed.
    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for
    every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE
    when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically
    written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC
    which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can
    be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily
    the same that cause change pointers to be written.
    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
    This check does nothing else than to check, if this table has an entry or not. If there is an entry in TBDA1, the ALE change pointers are generally active. If this table is empty, change pointers are turned off for everybody and everything, regardless of the other settings.
    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or
    selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to
    turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function
    module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the
    matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction
    updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.
    Regards,
    Shiva Kumar

  • Change pointers in CRM for Product Data Extraction using MDM_CLNT_EXTR

    Hi All,
    We want to extract Product data in Delta mode using MDM_CLNT_EXTR.
    I think change pointers are activated in CRM system in a different way. Please let me know steps to activate change pointers in CRM system for Product Data.
    Thanks in advance for your help.
    Regards,
    Shiv

    Hi,
       Please follow the below steps fro change pointers.
    1.      In the Implementation Guide (IMG, transaction SALE), choose Modeling and Implementing ® Master Data Distribution ®Replication of Modified Data ® Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally.
    2.      Set the activation status Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally, and save your entry (i.e BD61 Activate Change Pointers ).
    3.      Choose the activity Activate Change Pointers for Message Types like ORDERS.
    4.      Set the active indicator for the message type .
    5.      Save your entries.
    warm regards
    Mahesh.

  • Change Pointers Needed

    Hi All,
    Please give me a scenario to expalin about change pointers.
    Regards,
    Srik

    Change Pointer Configuration and extraction in HRPay.
    Infotypes to be logged are in:
    V_T585A,
    V_T585B,
    & V_T585C
    Please view the table contents to understand the structure of these tables and how they are linked. These help you identify the cluster tables which store the data.
    Payroll Cluster Table – PCL4 contains the cluster table reference. (Please refer to the table structure below:
    Payroll Custer Tables
    http://www.planetsap.com/HR_ABAP_payroll.htm
    Cluster tables combine the data from several tables with identical (or almost identical) keys into one physical record on the database.
    Data is written to a database in compressed form.
    Retrieval of data is very fast if the primary key is known.
    Cluster tables are defined in the data dictionary as transparent tables.
    External programs can NOT interpret the data in a cluster table.
    Special language elements EXPORT TO DATABASE, IMPORT TO DATABASE and DELETE FROM DATABASE are used to process data in the cluster tables.
    PCL1 - Database for HR work area; (long text, etc)
    PCL2 - Accounting Results (time, travel expense and payroll); (payroll results)
    PCL3 - Applicant tracking data;
    PCL4 - Documents, Payroll year-end Tax data (change logs, etc)
    Database Table PCL4
    The database table PCL4 contains the following data areas:
    LA change logs (long term documents)
    SA Short-Term Documents for HR Master Data
    SB Short-Term Documents for Applicant Master
    SRTFD (PC400) = trans class always A for master data (1) pernr (8) info type (4) modified date (8) modified time (8) seqnr (4)
    Please note that for the extraction of data, you have to use the date portion of the ‘SRTFD’ and not the field value AEDTM(since it is not primary key).
    Naming convention for INCLUDES when defining clusters. These INCLUDES will define the work area key above and the cluster data that is returned from an IMPORT:
    RPCnxxy0
    n = 1, 2, 3 or 4 (for PCL1, PCL2, PCL3, PCL4)
    xx = cluster ID
    y = country grouping (0 for international otherwise country indicator T500L)
    Description of Cluster Data using Cluster RX as an Example
    The data description is stored in the include RPC2RX00 in accordance with the above naming conventions.
    RPC1TX00 - Long text cluster ID in table PCL1
    RPC2RUU0 - Payroll results for the US cluster ID in table PCL2
    RPC4LA00 - Change log cluster ID in table PCL4
    Importing Data (I)
    The IMPORT command causes data objects with the specified key values to be read from PCLn.
    If the import is successful, SY-SUBRC is 0; if not, it is 4.
    REPORT ZRPIMPORT.
    TABLES: PCLn.
    INCLUDE RPCnxxy0. "Cluster definition
    Fill cluster Key
    Import record
    IMPORT TABLE1 FROM DATABASE PCLn(xx) ID xx-KEY.
    IF SY-SUBRC EQ 0.
    Display data object
    ENDIF.
    See sample program for long text.
    Importing data (II)
    Import data using macro RP-IMP-Cn-xy.
    Check return code SY-SUBRC. If 0, it is successful. If 4, error.
    Need include buffer management routines RPPPXM00
    REPORT ZRPIMPORT.
    *Buffer definition
    INCLUDE RPPPXD00.
    DATA: BEGIN OF COMMON PART 'BUFFER'.
    INCLUDE RPPPXD10.
    DATA: END OF COMMON PART 'BUFFER'.
    *import data to buffer
    RP-IMP-Cn-xy.
    *Buffer management routines
    INCLUDE RPPPXM00.
    Cluster Authorization
    Simple EXPORT/IMPORT statement does not check for cluster authorization.
    Use EXPORT/IMPORT via buffer, the buffer management routines check for cluster authorization.
    rpcbdt00 - include needed for importing from database PCL4(la) (Change log cluster ID)
    Please note that data for change pointers is stored at two levels: 1) Header – which has the key info and 2) BELEGE – which has the changed info – ie. Old value and new value.
    Check standard program RPUAUD00
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a relevant field has changed.
    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily the same that cause change pointers to be written.
    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
    This check does nothing else than to check, if this table has an entry or not. If there is an entry in TBDA1, the ALE change pointers are generally active. If this table is empty, change pointers are turned off for everybody and everything, regardless of the other settings.
    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.
    Arunsri  
    Posts: 307
    Registered: 12/3/07
    Forum Points: 246 
       Re: change pointers method  
    Posted: Feb 27, 2008 11:08 AM    in response to: satish abap       E-mail this message      Reply 
    hi,,
    Activating Change Pointers
    Use
    You can activate change pointers in the HR system to avoid distributing the entire structure when you make changes to the HR-ORG model, and distribute instead only the changes that you have made.
    Procedure
    1. In the Implementation Guide (IMG, transaction SALE), choose Modeling and Implementing ® Master Data Distribution ®Replication of Modified Data ® Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally.
    2. Set the activation status Activate Change Pointers ‑ Generally, and save your entry.
    3. Choose the activity Activate Change Pointers for Message Types.
    4. Set the active indicator for the message type HRMD_ABA.
    5. Save your entries.
    also see this link,
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_47x200/helpdata/en/ba/c9c1c31253ed4596e3bbb74922cd4a/frameset.htm
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_47x200/helpdata/en/ba/c9c1c31253ed4596e3bbb74922cd4a/frameset.htm
    Check the links below;
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/f1/035c8cae3d11d3b540006094192fe3/frameset.htm
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/12/83e03c19758e71e10000000a114084/frameset.htm
    Reward points hope this helps u,

  • What are change pointers

    What are change pointers?
    where do we process them,
    where do we configure them
    and what is its fuinctionality
    please advice
    Edited by: kittu reddy on Feb 11, 2008 5:02 AM
    Edited by: kittu reddy on Feb 11, 2008 5:03 AM

    hi,
    Applications which write change documents will also try to write change pointers for ALE operations. These are log entries to remember all modified data records relevant for ALE.
    Most applications write change documents. These are primarily log entries in the
    tables CDHDR and CDPOS.
    Change documents remember the modified fields made to the database by an
    application. They also remember the user name and the time when the modification
    took place.
    The decision whether a field modification is relevant for a change document is
    triggered by a flag of the modified field’s data element. You can set the flag with
    SE11 by modifying the data element.
    For the purpose of distributing data via ALE to other systems, you may want to
    choose other fields, which shall be regarded relevant for triggering a distribution.
    Therefore R/3 introduced the concept of change pointers, which are nothing else
    than a second log file specially designed for writing the change pointers which are
    meant to trigger IDoc distribution via ALE.
    So the change pointers will remember the key of the document every time when a
    relevant field has changed.
    Change pointers are then evaluated by an ABAP which calls the IDoc creation, for
    every modified document found in the change pointers.
    The Change pointers are written from the routine CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE
    when saving the generated change document. So change pointers are automatically
    written when a relevant document changes.
    The following function is called from within CHANGEDOCUMENT_CLOSE in order to write the change pointers.
    CALL FUNCTION 'CHANGE_POINTERS_CREATE'
    EXPORTING
    change_document_header = cdhdr
    TABLES
    change_document_position = ins_cdpos.
    Activation of change pointer update :
    Change pointers are log entries to table BDCP which are written every time a transaction modifies certain fields. The change pointers are designed for ALE distribution and written by the function CHANGE_DOCUMENT_CLOSE.
    Change pointers are written for use with ALE. There are ABAPs like RBDMIDOC
    which can read the change pointers and trigger an IDoc for ALE distribution.
    The change pointers are mainly the same as change documents. They however can
    be set up differently, so fields which trigger change documents are not necessarily
    the same that cause change pointers to be written.
    In order to work with change pointers there are two steps to be performed
    1) Turn on change pointer update generally
    2) Decide which message types shall be included for change pointer update
    R3 allows to activate or deactivate the change pointer update. For this purpose it
    maintains a table TBDA1. The decision whether the change pointer update is active
    is done with a Function Ale_Component_Check
    This check does nothing else than to check, if this table has an entry or not. If there is an entry in TBDA1, the ALE change pointers are generally active. If this table is empty, change pointers are turned off for everybody and everything, regardless of the other settings.
    The two points read like you had the choice between turning it on generally or
    selectively. This is not the case: you always turn them on selectively. The switch to
    turn on generally is meant to activate or deactivate the whole mechanism.
    The change pointers which have not been processed yet, can be read with a function
    module.
    Call Function 'CHANGE_POINTERS_READ'
    The ABAP RBDMIDOC will process all open change pointers and distribute the
    matching IDocs.
    When you want to send out an IDoc unconditionally every time a transaction
    updates, you better use the workflow from the change documents.

  • Creation of Idocs from the change pointers by the program RBDMIDOC

    Hello,
    I'm Creating Idocs from the change pointers by the program RBDMIDOC.
    The IDOCS Created using the message type HRMD_A are Correct but when i try to RUN RBDMIDOC for message type HRMD_B no Data is selected for distribution.
    All the customizing are similar and i presume that all the change pointers are active (BD50 and IMG->Personnel Management -> Organizational Management  -> Basic Settings -> Activate change documents).
    Can anyone help me with the necessary steps to create this IDOC types.
    Do anyone know if the RBDMIDOC report is the Same for messages HRMD_A and HRMD_B.
    Thanks in Advance,
    Pedro Ferreira

    If the setting is fine, there may be some code in exit or badi for program RBMIDOC. Check the Exit and BADI.
    check the exit EXIT_SAPLBD11_001 and
    check the badi IDOC_CREATION_CHECK.
    Probably there may be some code on these exits which are stoping your code from getting generated.These are the two trigger happen once u execute the RBMIDOC program.for HR, we use RHALEINI program to generate the idoc. but even RBDMIDOC works. These 2 triggere will come with RHALEINI also.
    If there is no code here, Then there is problem in the setting only.

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