You can assign an existing task to a user by using the
Java API and web service API. When a task is assigned to a user,
the task is placed in the user’s queue and the user can view and
complete the task in Workspace. If the task was previously assigned
to another user, it is moved from one user queue and placed into
the user queue to whom the task is assigned.
Note: The name of the service that is invoked when
assigning tasks is TaskManagerService. To create a proxy object
that lets you invoke its operations using a web service, specify
this WSDL definition: http://localhost:8080/soap/services/TaskManagerService?WSDL.
(See Invoking LiveCycle using Web Services.)
Summary of stepsTo assign a task to a user, perform the following tasks:
Include project files.
Create a TaskManager Client API object.
Get the identifier of the user to whom the task is sent.
Forward the task to the user.
Include project filesInclude necessary files into your development
project. If you are creating a client application by using Java,
include the necessary JAR files. If you are using web services,
make sure that you include the proxy files.
Create a TaskManager Client API objectBefore you can programmatically
assign a task to a user, you must create a TaskManager object.
Get the identifier of the user to whom the task is assignedTo
assign a task to a user, you require the identifier of the user
to whom the task is assigned. To obtain the user identifier, use
the User Manager API.
Forward the task to a userAfter you obtain the user identifier,
you can assign the task to the user.
Assign tasks using the Java APIAssign tasks by using the Java API:
Include project files
Include client JAR files,
such as adobe-taskmanager-client-sdk.jar, in your Java project’s
class path.
Create a TaskManager Client API object
Create
a ServiceClientFactory object that contains connection properties.
Create a TaskManager object by invoking
the TaskManagerClientFactory object’s static getTaskManager method
and passing the ServiceClientFactory object.
Get the identifier of the user to whom the task is assigned
Create a DirectoryManagerServiceClient object
by using its constructor and passing the ServiceClientFactory object
that contains connection properties (the DirectoryManagerServiceClient belongs
to the User Manager API).
Create a PrincipalSearchFilter object by
using its constructor.
Set the user name by invoking the PrincipalSearchFilter object’s setUserId method
and passing a string value that specifies the user name.
Find the user that corresponds to the user name by invoking
the DirectoryManagerServiceClient object’s findPrincipals method
and passing the PrincipalSearchFilter object. This method
returns a java.util.List object where each element
is a User object.
Create a java.util.Iterator object by invoking
the java.util.List object’s iterator method.
This object lets you iterate through the java.util.List instance
to retrieve User objects (in this situation, there
is only one User object).
Iterate through the java.util.List object
to determine where there are users. If so, each element is a User object.
Get the user identifier by invoking the User object’s getOid method.
This method returns a string value that represents the user identifier.
The format of a user identifier is a GUID.
Forward the task to a user
Forward the task to a user
by invoking the TaskManager object’s forwardTask method
and passing the task identifier and the user identifier value. You
can determine the task identifier by retrieving tasks that are assigned
to a specific user.
Assigning tasks using the web service APITo assign a task by using the web service API, perform
the following steps:
Include project files
Create a Microsoft
.NET client assembly that consumes the TaskManager service WSDL.
To create a proxy object that lets you invoke its operations by using
Base64 encoding, specify this WSDL definition:
http://localhost:8080/soap/services/TaskManagerService?WSDL
Reference the Microsoft .NET client assembly.
Create a TaskManager Client API object
Using
the Microsoft .NET client assembly, create a TaskManagerServiceService object
by invoking its default constructor.
Set the TaskManagerServiceService object’s Credentials data member
with a System.Net.NetworkCredential value that specifies
the user name and password value.
Get the identifier of the user to whom the task is assigned
Using the Microsoft .NET client assembly, create a DirectoryManagerServiceService object
by invoking its default constructor.
Set the DirectoryManagerServiceService object’s Credentials data
member with a System.Net.NetworkCredential value
that specifies the user name and password value.
Create a PrincipalSearchFilter object by
using its constructor.
Set the user name by assigning a string value to the PrincipalSearchFilter object’s userId data
member.
Find the user that corresponds to the user name by invoking
the DirectoryManagerServiceClient object’s findPrincipalsWithFilter method
and passing the PrincipalSearchFilter object. This
method returns an Object array where each element
is a User object (in this situation, only one User object
corresponds to the specified userId value).
Iterate through the Object array to determine
whether there are users. If so, each element is a User object.
Get the user identifier by getting the value of the User object’s oid data member.
The format of a user identifier is a GUID.
Forward the task to a user
Forward the task to a user
by invoking the TaskManagerServiceService object’s forwardTask method
and passing the task identifier and the user identifier value. You
can determine the task identifier by retrieving tasks that are assigned
to a specific user. (See Retrieving Tasks Assigned to Users.)
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