deleteBPMEndpoint command

 Traditional: 
Use the deleteBPMEndpoint command to delete an Business Automation Workflow endpoint. In stand-alone environments, such as the unit test environment of Integration Designer, the value of the endpoint is set immediately when you run the command. In network deployment (ND) environments, the value of the endpoint is set when the next node synchronization occurs. For both stand-alone and ND environments, it is not necessary to restart the server or cluster after running the command.

The deleteBPMEndpoint command is run using the AdminTask object of the wsadmin scripting client.

Prerequisites

The following conditions must be met:

  • In a network deployment environment, run the command on the deployment manager node. In a single-server environment, run the command on the stand-alone server.
  • If the deployment manager or stand-alone server is stopped, use the wsadmin -conntype none option to run the command in disconnected mode (which is the recommended mode for this command).
  • If the deployment manager or stand-alone server is running, you must connect with a user ID that has WebSphere® Application Server configurator privileges. Do not use the wsadmin -conntype none option.

Location

Start the wsadmin scripting client from the profile_root/bin directory. The deleteBPMEndpoint command does not write to a log file, but the wsadmin scripting client always writes a profile_root/logs/wsadmin.traceout log file where you will find exception stack traces and other information.

Syntax

deleteBPMEndpoint
[-de deployment_environment_name]
-scenario scenario_name

Parameters

-de deployment_environment_name
An optional parameter that specifies the name of the current deployment environment. If there is only one deployment environment in the WebSphere cell, you can omit this parameter.
-scenario scenario_name
A required parameter that specifies the scenario of the endpoint.
Tip: For a list of valid scenario values, see "Table 1" and "Table 3" in the topic Configuring endpoints to match your topology.

Examples

Note: The examples are for illustrative purposes only. They include variable values and are not meant to be reused as snippets of code.
The following Jython example uses the deleteBPMEndpoint command to delete an endpoint:
wsadmin -user admin -password admin -lang jython
wsadmin>AdminTask.deleteBPMEndpoint(['-de', 'De1', '-scenario', 'myScenario'])
wsadmin>AdminConfig.save()