Default Workflow Studio
The Default Workflow Studio contains the Schneider Electric-provided workflows. It is akin to a library of provided workflows for you to use as they are, or you can create copies of them in order to manipulate them to suit your company’s needs.
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The Default Workflow Studio also comes with default test cases Schneider Electric has used to validate the provided workflows.
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Each subtab represents a type of workflow family that corresponds to a client application, and contains OOTB workflows including for example, Session Manager and Designer XI Workflows on the Hosted tab, and autoupdaters on the ArcGIS Server tab. The node actions available in each workflow family are different.
If you are ready to modify a default workflow, press the Override in Tenant button at the bottom of the interface. This toggles you to the Studio tab, and it creates a draft copy of the workflow from Default Workflow Studio.
Available Tools
The following buttons are available on all subtabs in Default Workflow Studio. The Studio tab provides a few additional tools. Refer to the Studio topic to learn more.
Clicking the Show Revision History button displays the history of a particular workflow. A workflow that has passed through a number of iterations as an administrator made changes may look similar to this example below. In this example, we are using the Auto Angle Setter AU workflow found on the ArcGIS Server subtab.
The latest version of this AU uses a Workflow Metadata ID GUID that starts with 115. You see it is the published version by nature of it being at the top of the workflow history on the left, and the diagram at the bottom of the page showing its status as published. If you click on the second iteration of this AU, identified by its Workflow Metadata ID GUID that starts with 6ea, you can see its status reads as retired.
Workflow Properties
Workflow Properties vary between hosted and client-side workflows and can be unique to a specific workflow family. For a description of the property fields, continue reading about the types of workflows you’re interested in.