Integration Logs display the status of integration APIs such as Collect and Release commands used by external applications such as B2B Gateway to invoke file servers and transfer tasks. To filter the list of integration logs on the File Transfer Logs page, select Integration Logs. The integration logs are not displayed under the All Logs filter. You must use the Integration Logs filter to view the integration logs.
Viewing integration logs
To view integration logs in Monitor, click File Transfer Logs. To filter the list of integration logs, select Integration Logs.
The following image shows a sample File Transfer Logs page filtered for integration logs:
The File Transfer Logs page displays the following properties for each integration log:
Property
Description
Instance Name
Name of the integration log.
Asset Type
API, File Transfer Task, FTP Client, FTPs Client, or SFTP Client.
Command
Command type, such as Collect, Release, File Transfer Task, Upload, or Download.
End Time
Date and time when the action executed by the command ends.
# of Files
Number of files included in the action.
Status
Status of the action, such as Success or Failed.
Viewing details of the integration logs
To view details about an integration log, click the instance name on the File Transfer Logs page.
Depending on the Asset Type, perform one of the following steps to view the details of an integration log:
•To view the Upload, Download, Release, Collect, or File Transfer Task command logs, click the Actions icon in the row that contains the job and select Download Job Log. The log is downloaded as a .txt file.
The following image shows the download option for a sample file transfer task command job:
•To view the logs for Collect, Release, Upload, and Download API commands, click the instance name. To download the log of an instance, click Download Job Log in the Results area. Alternatively, click the Actions icon in the row that contains the instance and select Download Job Log on the Integration Logs page.
The following image shows the log of a sample Release command API:
Job Properties
The job properties display general properties about the instance.
The job properties include the following properties:
Property
Description
Job Name
The name of the job. This is for API, FTP Client, FTPs Client, and SFTP Client Asset Type.
Runtime Environment
Name of the runtime environment where you want to run the tasks.
Task Name
Name of the task. This applies only for theFile Transfer Task Asset Type.
Task Type
Task type. This applies only for file ingestion task.
Connection
The connection used to send files.
Started By
The name of the user or schedule that started the job.
Start Time
Date and time when the job started.
End Time
Date and time when the job completed or stopped.
Duration
The amount of time the job ran before it completed or was stopped.
Pattern
The pattern of the transferred file.
Command
Command type
Results
The job results display the status of the job and error statistics.
The job results include the following properties:
Property
Description
State
Job status. A job can have one of the following statuses:
- Running. The job is still running.
- Success. The job completed successfully.
- Failed. The job did not complete because it encountered errors
- Aborted. The job was aborted.
Log
Allows you to download the session log file.By default, Informatica Intelligent Cloud Services stores session logs for 10 runs before it overwrites the logs with the latest runs.If you need the session logs for earlier runs, take a backup of the directory that holds the session log files.
Session log files are written to the following directory:
The number of files that are transferred, downloaded or uploaded to the target.
Error Message
Error message, if any, that is associated with the job.
File Events
This section shows the total number of files that are transferred, with information about each file.
The File Events section is updated each time a file is transferred, and the state of the file updates throughout the file transfer process. You can track the progress of the transfer of a file based on the state of the file.
The File Events section displays the following properties for each file:
Property
Description
Source File Path
The path from where the files are transferred.
Target File Path
The path to where the files are transferred.
File Size
The size of the file in bytes.
State
The state of the file transfer. A file can have one of the following states:
- Success. The file transfer completed successfully.
- Failed. The file transfer did not complete because it encountered errors.
- Processing*. The file transfer is still running.
- Duplicate*. The task previously transferred a file with the same name, directory location, and size.
- In Doubt*. The previous task instance encountered errors while transferring the file. Applicable for tasks where the source is configured to skip duplicate files.
* These states are available only for the Download command.
You can monitor the State property to track the progress of the file transfer of each file.