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[软件技巧] 每日读书: SAP R/3 Handbook, Third Edition

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发表于 28-2-2010 22:30:54 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式

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很惊叹自己居然能孜孜不倦每天不断地追网络小说的更新(尤其最近书荒,根本没什么值得看的),要是能把这精神用在工作学习上该多好,遂起意每天贴几页SAP R/3 Handbookd的内容,大家一起来学习。(此书相对偏技术性,对我有点儿难,看了几个月了,还在第1章,感兴趣的同学可以自己从网上下)。


SAP R/3 Handbook, Third Edition

Chapter 1 - SAP: From SAP R/3 to SAP NetWeaver

Chapter 2 - The Architecture of the SAP Web Application Server

Chapter 3 - SAP NetWeaver: An Overview

Chapter 4 - Using SAP Systems

Chapter 5 - Upgrading to SAP R/3 Enterprise: The First Step into SAP NetWeaver

Chapter 6 - The Change and Transport System

Chapter 7 - Development Options with SAP Solutions: ABAP Engine

Chapter 8 - User Management and Security in SAP Environments

Chapter 9 - Web Application Server System Management

Chapter 10 -Performance and Troubleshooting with SAP Solutions

Chapter 11 - SAP for IT Managers: Implementation, Planning, Operation, and

Support of SAP Systems

Index

List of Figures

List of Tables

[ 本帖最后由 Mei_Meng 于 28-2-2010 22:52 编辑 ]

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2#
 楼主| 发表于 28-2-2010 22:45:45 | 只看该作者

SAP R/3 Handbook, Third Edition - Chapter 1: SAP: From SAP R/3 to SAP NetWeaver

Overview

This first chapter provides a broad overview of the current SAP solutions, how they have
evolved, and the basics of the new architecture or technology foundations that are found
in the new set of products or components of the SAP NetWeaver integration platform.

Because of the evolution of the SAP solutions, and although the third edition of this book
is still called SAP R/3 Handbook, you must notice that most topics apply the same way to
either R/3 Enterprise (mySAP ERP) or any other SAP solution that is based on the SAP
Web Application Server, including several of the SAP NetWeaver components.

At the same time, and since SAP R/3 is still and will be for the coming years, and
whatever the name it might have in the near future, the basic application platform for the
huge SAP customer base, in this chapter and in this book in general, SAP R/3 Enterprise
(release 4.7) and more specifically the SAP Web Application Server is the main topic. An
organizational and technical overview of the SAP NetWeaver components is presented in
Chapter 11.

Right now, one of the biggest concerns of SAP customers and prospects is to understand
the SAP solution sets, what business processes they are meant to solve, what benefits
they provide, and, most of all, what options are available to solve or improve their
business processes or business requirements.

Some of the common questions usually found in customers are as follows: What was
mySAP.com? What's the buzz about SAP NetWeaver? How do I evolve my SAP
systems? What are the options? How will the different solutions and components
integrate?

This chapter includes an overview of the current state of the SAP solutions, focusing on
the main features of SAP R/3 Enterprise release and providing background information
about the evolution of the SAP solutions so that SAP solution can be better understood, It
also provides useful information for the thousands of customers still running on previous
R/3 releases.


SAP Strategic Evolution

SAP AG started operations in 1972 and became successful in the 1980s with their SAP
R/2 solution. The company name, SAP, stands for Systems, Applications and Products in
Data Processing. After the introduction of SAP R/3 in 1992, SAP AG became the world's
leading vendor of standard application software.

SAP R/3 was the business solution that placed SAP in its leadership position and led to
the company becoming extremely successful in the 1990s. The introduction of release 3.1
of R/3 in 1996 provided the first SAP Internet-enabled solutions. In 1998 SAP
transformed from a single-product company to a global business solutions company. The
"first draft" of the mySAP.com strategy was introduced in 1999. The first years of the
new millennium (2001–2003) were the ones in which mySAP.com was adapting and
reinventing itself; the solid technological foundation was improved by the introduction of
the SAP Web Application Server, which enables running programs either on an ABAP or
on top of a Java engine (J2EE). During these years mySAP.com was also getting ready
for the massive deployment and benefits offered by a new Web services-based
architecture, which is now represented by a reality integration platform known as SAP
NetWeaver.

SAP NetWeaver is defined by SAP as the Web-based integration and application
platform that is used across all SAP solutions. In a general way, SAP NetWeaver is the
realization of what it was meant to be with the 1999 mySAP.com strategy.

SAP history is of an evolution from a traditional, integrated, and solid ERP software
company to one company that can offer a full set of business, integration, and
collaboration solutions and services in the open and global business world.

The ERP Basics

Enterprise Resource Planner (commonly known as ERP) software is a concept that
started in the 1970s and was meant to provide computerized solutions for integrating and
automating business processes across companies' back offices, such as the financial,
logistics, or human resources departments. The idea behind ERP was that companies
could see a cost reduction and better efficiency in the way they operated with their
business partners (customers, providers, banks, authorities, etc.) and also in the way their
users could access and process the information. From that concept, there were already
several solutions in the market during the 1980s and beginning of the 1990s. The
adoption of ERP software revolutionized the way companies conduct their traditional
business.

Since the introduction of SAP R/3 in the first part of the 1990s, SAP R/3 became a clear
market leader in ERP solutions.

SAP invests approximately 20 percent of its annual sales revenue in research and
development in order to remain at the edge of technological innovation. With more than
25 percent of its employees working in the research area, SAP wants to make sure that it
can maintain a constant dialogue with customers and users and exchange with them
experiences and ideas to enhance its systems and service offerings. This information
exchange is vital in order for SAP to maintain a long-term relationship with its customers
and to attract new ones not just to SAP R/3 but also to the SAP NetWeaver wave.

In the mid-1990s SAP had two main products in the business software market:
mainframe system R/2 and client/server R/3. Both were targeted to business application
solutions and feature a great level of complexity, business and organizational experience,
strength, and integration. SAP software systems can be used on different hardware
platforms, offering customers flexibility, openness, and independence from specific
computer technologies. Currently, the SAP offering is comprehensive and it's meant not
only for the ERP back office business processes but also for the Web-enabled
collaboration, integration, the full supply chain. In significant scenarios, it can also run
front office processes, such as CRM, or provide vertical solutions, such as SAP for
Healthcare. SAP R/3 and any of the solutions within mySAP Business Suite are all
business solutions providing a high degree of integration of business processes.

For SAP a business process is the complete functional chain involved in business
practices, whatever module, application, system, or Web Service that has to deal with it.
This means, specifically for the SAP R/3 systems, that the process chain might run across
different modules. SAP sometimes referred to this kind of feature as an "internal data
highway." For instance, travel expenses, sales orders, inventory, materials management,
and almost all types of functions have in common that most of them finally link with the
finance modules. SAP understands that business practices and organization change often
and quickly, so it left the systems flexible enough to adapt efficiently.

Currently, in the age of global business and collaboration, those business processes and
the integration chain can run across different services, which can be provided by SAP and
non-SAP solutions. The capacity of an integration platform and the concept of an
Enterprise Service Architecture is what best defined the need for the SAP NetWeaver
concept.

SAP R/3, which provides the core functionality for many SAP standards, mySAP
Business Suite, and SAP for Industries (formerly known as SAP Industy Solutions),
includes a large amount of predefined business processes across all functional modules
that customers can freely select and use for their own way of doing business.

With releases 4.5, 4.6, and 4.7 (Enterprise) of R/3, SAP has incorporated a library of
more than 1000 predefined business processes across all functional modules that
customers can freely select and use for their own way of doing business. SAP makes new
business functions available regularly.

Other main features that SAP R/3 included from the start were the internationalization of
the product and integration capability.

International applicability was a very important part of the strategy to meet today's
complex and global business needs. For SAP, this means not only having the software
available in different languages but also having the capacity to cover the differentiating
aspects of each country: currency, taxes, legal practices concerning human resources,
import/export regulations, and so on. Users from a multinational company in different-
countries can work simultaneously in the same system using their own language,
currency, and taxes. With Enterprise release (4.7) and SAP NetWeaver, most SAP
solutions are now able to run natively in Unicode format.

An additional aspect of the software integration capability is real time. In fact, the R from
R/3 originally is meant for real time. When new input is made into the system, the logical
application links will concurrently update related modules so that the business can react
to immediate information and changes. This type of updating reduces the overhead of
manual processing and communication and enables companies to react quickly in the
nonstop and complex business world, which makes SAP R/3 software and the SAP
Business Intelligence solutions very valuable tools for executive planning and decision
making.

ERP systems such as R/3 were often implemented as a result of a business process
reengineering, which was based on analysis of current business processes and how to
improve them. Many companies could improve radically their efficiency, but this change
process could not (can never) stop in a global and vast marketplace where the
competition is on every corner ("one click away").

From internal integrated ERP systems, companies look further to improve their supply
chain and therefore to extend the reach of their processes to other partner companies.
This step forward is known as interenterprise collaboration, and the goal was to integrate
and make more efficient the supply chain. This concept, together with the emergence of
eCommerce using the Web as the comprehensive communication platform, was key in
the emergence of mySAP.com strategy in 1999.

Let's review in the next section the motivations and strategic vision of SAP to transform
itself from a single-product company into a global business solutions company.

SAP Transformation into a Global Business Solutions Company

The evolution of information technology systems from the beginning was quite similar in
all industries and activity areas. In the 1960s and 1970s companies chose a hardware
provider, and from there some basic software development products (programming
languages), and started to develop their business applications. Most companies started
with critical areas, like accounting and financial applications, that were somehow easier.
Later, these companies advanced and introduced applications in other, more complex
areas like distribution and production.

In any case, they always made their own development using the previously chosen
hardware and software. Already in the 1970s there were some companies that realized the
possibility of developing business software that could be used by different companies; the
opportunity existed to develop the applications only once and then sell the software to
other companies. Among these companies was SAP AG, created in 1972.

Obviously the development of "standard" software was more viable in those business
areas that were more "standard," like accounting and financial services. There were also
more "standard" processes common to companies from the same or similar industry
sectors (like manufacturing or financial industries).

At the beginning, there were many problems with this standard software and many
technical obstacles that would make it difficult to sell these systems in large quantities.
One of these problems was the dependency of the hardware and software platforms in
which the systems were developed. At the time, it was not possible to use the same
software in different hardware platforms. Another problem was that companies did not
behave as standard as initially thought. For instance, payroll calculation was quite
different between companies, and even more different between countries, since each
country has its own laws and legal rules, agreements, contract types, and so on.

In the late 1970s and during the 1980s, these problems led to companies developing
standard applications that were flexible enough to provide functional features to different
types of companies and in different countries. During the 1980s, with the emergence of
PCs and the massive deployment of computing and computer networks in companies, it
was time to make applications independent of hardware platforms and to make those
applications portable among platforms. This was the open systems wave, when different
hardware vendors were designing computers that could work with (nearly) the same
operating systems (UNIX flavors, Windows NT) and with the same database engines
(Oracle, Informix, and others). This technological advance also enabled the development
of standard applications that could be independent of hardware and software platforms.

At the beginning of the 1990s, SAP AG had a product, SAP R/2, that covered reasonably
well the needs of different types of businesses in different countries and in different
areas, like financial services (accounting, accounts payable and receivable, controlling,
and so on), logistics (materials management, warehousing, distribution, sales, and
production), and human resources (payroll, time management, personnel development).
This system was installed in approximately 3000 companies around the world.

The logical and natural evolution from R/2 to an open systems environment led to the
birth of R/3 in 1992. SAP R/3 was developed through SAP AG's 20 years of accumulated
experience in solving the business problems of its customers, along with experience in
computing and managing complex networks. The company had experience and enough
technological background for R/3 to succeed.

In a few years, the growth in the number of customer installations of the R/3 system was
exponential: 900 installations at the end of 1993, 2400 in 1994, 5200 at the end of 1995,
20,000 by the middle of 1999, and more than 60,000 at the end of 2004, reaching the
amazing number of over 20,000 customers in more than 120 countries.

In the mid-1990s it was clear that the standard business software (commonly known as
ERPs or Enterprise Resource Planner applications) was mature enough so that many
companies chose standard software and could abandon the traditional strategy of local
and custom development, which was often more costly in the middle term. At the same
time, SAP AG started to gain enough critical mass to take a new step in the development
of standard software. This was to start developing software for those company areas that
were less standard and more dependent on the business or industry area. These were, for
instance, the upstream and downstream systems of oil companies, the call center and
customer care systems for telecom or utilities companies, the selling of advertisement in
the media sector, and so on. It was necessary to make a move from the back office
applications (financial, logistics, human resources) to the front office in the different
industry areas. It was also necessary to transform a company selling a product (SAP R/3)
independently of the target customer to a company offering specific solutions for the
needs of its customers.

SAP AG had enough customers in many different industries to think that the
development and selling of specific industry solutions could be profitable.
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3#
 楼主| 发表于 1-3-2010 20:48:00 | 只看该作者
SAP for Industries

Until 1996 SAP R/3 was traditionally presented in the classical diamond figure as shown
in Figure 1-1. There was an area representing financial applications, an area for logistics,
and one for human resources; the central area represented the basis and development
system.

Figure 1-1: SAP R/3 classical representation

In 1996 SAP's industry solutions started to appear. As a base for many of them, SAP used
solutions from R/2 or R/3, which had been previously developed by partners or customers
in different business areas, like RIVA in the utilities sector for customer billing. The
development of these industry solutions was first coordinated through the industry
centers of expertise (ICOEs), where SAP's experience in the development of standard
software is joined by the business knowledge and requirements of its customers, as well
as the experience of big consulting firms for the inclusion of best business practices for
each industry sector.

The initial step in developing industry solutions has been steadily consolidated and
required SAP to specialize its teams into different industries, called industry business
units (IBUs), which included and supplanted the previous ICOEs. These business units
are responsible for gathering the market and industry knowledge and developing specific
solutions and applications for each of the industry sectors in which SAP is committed to
provide. Currently (end of 2005), there are 23 different industry solutions.

Refer to http://www.sap.com/solutions/industry/ for updated information about SAP-
specific industry solutions.

From a technical point of view, the SAP Industry Solutions were a SAP R/3 system with
a special and industry-specific add-on that modified some of the standard R/3
transactions and applications to adapt them to that particular industry and that included
new functionality relevant to that industry sector.

The Emergence of the New Dimension Products

Around the end of the 1990s, SAP was developing additional modules that initially were
included within an IBU, but when looking more closely at these new developments, SAP
was aware that some of the requested functionalities for these modules were common to
different industry sectors. Examples of such common applications were the Customer
Interaction Center or Call Center (CIC) or the Sales Force Automation (SFA), which later
became Mobile Sales within the mySAP CRM and which matched those systems that
have the objective of automating sales and that can be deployed in industries as different
as consumer products, media, pharmaceuticals, and others.

Since these modules could not be grouped under a specific industry solution, they were
positioned by SAP as an equivalent to IBUs called Strategic Business Units (SBUs).
Initially SAP created three SBUs:

SAP Supply Chain Management (SCM), which included products such as SAP
Advanced Planner and Optimizer (APO), SAP Business to Business (B2B), and
SAP Product Data Management (PDM)
SAP Customer Relationship Management (CRM), which included SAP Sales,
SAP Marketing, and SAP Service
SAP Business Intelligence (BI), which included the SAP Business Information
Warehouse and the SAP Knowledge Warehouse (formerly InfoDB)

The New Dimension products evolved to become an integral part of the mySAP Business
Suite and SAP NetWeaver integration platform, as we will see in the following sections.

From these SAP products and solutions initiatives and the initial R/3 application
modules, SAP has significantly increased the number of solutions that can be sold
separately from R/3, some of which can also be deployed together with non-R/3
applications.

Solution Maps and Business Scenarios Maps

In 1998 SAP was ready to complete its strategic move from being a single-product (R/3)
company to being a company offering complete business solutions to its customers.

In 2004, after the adjustment and fine tuning and right placement of the products within
the initial mySAP.com offering, what started as complementary solutions became
components of the mySAP Business Suite.

SAP offered solutions for different industry sectors when it introduced New Dimension
and launched the SAP solution maps.

The solution maps gather not only the R/3 product vision but a full and structured view of
the customer business as well. This is achieved with a firm decision to complete the
company's catalog of products and services so that it can offer its customers a complete
solution, either directly with SAP products and services or with third-party products
developed by complementary software partners.

In the SAP solution maps, the customer business processes are collected in the horizontal
colored boxes. Different colors signify different processes within the company. To build
a complete solution for the customer business it will be necessary to deploy different
products. As an example, Figure 1-2 shows the SAP solution map for the media industry.


Figure 1-2: SAP solution map for the media industry


In this case, the SAP solution for the media industry would include several modules of
SAP R/3 Enterprise, such as FI for financial accounting and asset management, CO for
the economic and strategic management of business, TR for treasury, MM for
procurement, HR for human resources, and so on. It would then also include mySAP
Business Suite applications and SAP NetWeaver components like the SAP Business
Warehouse or the mySAP CRM. Finally would come IS-Media with its two modules:
Media Advertising Management (MAM) and Media Sales and Distribution (MSD),
which include the management of selling advertising for papers, journals, magazines,
television, radio, the Internet, and other venues, as well as the management of
subscriptions, paper and magazine sales, and distribution.

SAP considers it a must to provide its customers with a complete solution by developing
required connections with those systems that must coexist with SAP. In SAP for Media
this is the case with production systems that must interface with content servers or with
systems for the design and pagination of publications. This was achieved initially by the
Business Framework architecture based on open interfaces that could be used by products
of complementary software partners. Currently this is enabled by the SAP integration
technology represented by SAP NetWeaver.

This structure guarantees SAP customers a complete integration of products, providing a
full solution map for the integrated management of their businesses.
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4#
发表于 1-3-2010 21:53:04 | 只看该作者
你不是干IT出身,看这本书不容易啊。

原帖由 Mei_Meng 于 28-2-2010 22:30 发表
很惊叹自己居然能孜孜不倦每天不断地追网络小说的更新(尤其最近书荒,根本没什么值得看的),要是能把这精神用在工作学习上该多好,遂起意每天贴几页SAP R/3 Handbookd的内容,大家一起来学习。(此书相对偏技术性, ...
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5#
 楼主| 发表于 2-3-2010 21:29:47 | 只看该作者
mySAP.com

Making a debut in 1999, mySAP.com was the initial SAP strategy for providing
electronic commerce solutions in the age of the Net economy. With mySAP.com, SAP
aimed to help its customers in their e-business strategies, providing a full set of software
and service solutions that completely embraced the Internet strategy with a standard-
based technological foundation known as the Internet Business Framework.

At the time of its introduction, mySAP.com was defined as the collaborative e-business
platform that included all of the SAP solutions, technologies, and services. Figure 1-3
represents the mySAP.com strategy.

Figure 1-3: mySAP.com strategy

The mySAP concept, and specifically the Enterprise Portal component (initially the
mySAP Workplace), was designed by supporting itself in the broad knowledge and
experience of the different industries.

The mySAP components included solutions that could cover the specific requirements of
companies and their users, such as the following:

. Access to business solution applications
. Access to internal corporate information, reports, and press releases
. Access to services available on the Internet
. Access to any user applications
. Access to marketplaces
In order to support those requirements, the initial mySAP.com offering comprised the
following components:

. mySAP.com Workplace
. mySAP.com Business Scenarios
. mySAP.com Application Hosting
. mySAP.com Marketplace
All that came with the underlying technology represented by the solid foundation of the
SAP Basis Technology, whose name evolved to mySAP.com Technology.

mySAP.com could also be considered as an open, flexible, and comprehensive e-business
solution environment, and, as such, it can integrate all the SAP software solutions but
also other non-SAP applications. Clearly, it was the antecessor concept of what it is now
the SAP NetWeaver integration platform.

Within mySAP.com companies can design their corporate portal and integrate specific
Internet-and Web-based applications.

One of the main design principles of mySAP was to facilitate the integration of business
processes not only internally but also among different companies (collaboration), which
can be grouped by communities, with the purpose of increasing the effectiveness and
productivity by potentially reducing the cost of collaboration within a vast marketplace.

This complex and ambitious goal of mySAP.com was supported by the technological
foundation of the Internet Business Framework, so that there was an easy exchange of
data and communication among Internet applications using XML; security systems based
on standard certificates by certification authorities; content standards; and so on.

SAP Product Portfolio in the SAP NetWeaver Age

As of the end of 2004, SAP had repositioned its product strategy and solutions and the
NetWeaver platform brought new elements or components (Figure 1-4).


Figure 1-4: SAP product portfolio (2004)

This is a brief introduction, and major elements of this redefined solutions and product
portfolio are as follows:

. SAP for <Industry>, based on previous SAP Industry Solutions and for the most
part still based on SAP R/3 Basis (4.6C), is being migrated first to Enterprise R/3
and to the SAP Web Application Server and therefore will also have elements of
SAP NetWeaver.
. mySAP Business Suite represents the bundle of all cross-industry SAP products,
and it's based on the SAP NetWeaver integration platform. Some of the solutions
within the Business Suite are mySAP CRM, mySAP SCM, and mySAP ERP. A
key player here is mySAP ERP, or, in other words, a broader way of looking at
SAP R/3 Enterprise, with the inclusion of additional functions and solutions such
as Analytics and mySAP Human Resources. Figure 1-5 shows the role of mySAP
ERP, and Figure 1-6 shows how SAP R/3 has evolved into the current product
portfolio.

. SAP xApps, derived from SAP Cross Applications, is also a special development
based on Java that allows for the so-called Composite Applications, based on SAP
NetWeaver, that allow the integration of specific functions from several of the
SAP Solutions.
. SAP Smart Business Solutions, targeted to the market segment of the small and
medium business. The products within these solutions include the following:
o mySAP All-in-One is a special package based on a SAP R/3 system that
has been enhanced with functions and applications from other SAP
Solutions. This special solution is typically provided by SAP Business
Partners that create their own industry-specific solutions (packages) for
micro vertical markets.
o SAP Business One is a special product that is not directly based on the
SAP R/3 system, but rather programmed in C++, and that includes the
most important and critical functions needed in small and medium
businesses, such as accounting and warehouse management.
. SAP NetWeaver, which on one hand represents the technological infrastructure
for all the SAP Solutions and on the other defines an integration platform (People
Integration, Information Integration, and Process Integration), includes the
following components: SAP Enterprise Portal, SAP Business Intelligence, SAP
Master Data Management, SAP Exchange Infrastructure, SAP Mobile Business,
and SAP Web Application Server. Chapter 11 includes an introduction of SAP
NetWeaver architecture and components. Figure 1-7 shows the SAP NetWeaver
concept and integration layers.
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6#
 楼主| 发表于 2-3-2010 21:35:33 | 只看该作者
原帖由 ztdc 于 1-3-2010 21:53 发表
你不是干IT出身,看这本书不容易啊。



自己看是不容易坚持,所以才贴出来,有些动力,不过貌似每天看的越来越少了。
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7#
发表于 3-3-2010 13:41:51 | 只看该作者
发个下载,给大家一起看多好,你这样贴小心人家告你啊。
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