Pycronofy timezone id not being set correctly - python-3.x

Trying to integrate Cronofy to an app using the Python package pycronofy.
But cant seem to get the results back in the right timezone even after setting it as required.
events = cronofy.read_events(calendar_ids=('CAL_ID',),from_date=from_date, to_date=to_date, tzid='Asia/Kolkata')
print (events.json())
The returning json is always in the UTC timezone. This library doesnt seem to have an SO tag but hoping that someone could help.

The tzid parameter relates to the restriction of events for the request, to get richer time information in the response you need to request localized_times:
events = cronofy.read_events(calendar_ids=('CAL_ID',),
from_date=from_date,
to_date=to_date,
tzid='Asia/Kolkata',
localized_times=True)

Related

How to use fhir client search to include all resources i.e. ($everything)

How would you search for all resources for a given patient e.g. encounter, appointment, consent?
I know you could search for it via postman request http://localhost:9090/organId/Patient/12345/$everything and get the result. But I want to be able to execute the search query from my java program.
This is what I have so far, but I know the include part is not good and not working. Googling didn't return any result.
Bundle bundle = myFhirClient
.search()
.forResource(Patient.class)
.returnBundle(Bundle.class)
.where(new NumberClientParam(Patient.SP_RES_ID).exactly().number(patientId)).include(new Include("$everything"))
.sort(new SortSpec().setOrder(SortOrderEnum.DESC).setParamName(Patient.SP_RES_ID))
.execute();
Any help is much appreciated
I had to use Fhir Client operation instead of search. This will return all the reference resources for the given patientId.
Parameters outParams = myFhirClient
.operation()
.onInstance(new IdType("Patient", patientId))
.named("$everything")
.withNoParameters(Parameters.class) // No input parameters
.execute();

Can't seem to find the issue with the requestID parameter for the request header

I am trying to pull data from a REST API that uses a "similar standard to JSON RPC". The params I am passing look right according to the documentation here and here.
The error I am receiving is ...message:"Header missing request ID".... I am unsure what I am missing that would properly declare the requestID.
I have looked at the documentation provided via the API I am trying to pull data from but it's not very helpful considering it's all in PHP and cURL. I am trying to complete this task using python-requests.
getParams = {'method': 'getCustomers', 'params':{'where':'', 'limit': 2}, 'id': 'getCustomers'}
Result:
{"result":null,"error":{"code":102,"message":"Header missing request ID","data":[]},"id":null}
The return result should contain a list of All Customers and their attributes in JSON format.
Turns out there is nothing wrong with the code I am using. There is an issue with the API I am attempting to call.
In my situation, I was getting the same error back and was required to send a X-Request-ID header. I fixed it by adding the following to my headers:
headers = {
'X-Request-ID': str(uuid.uuid1()) # generate GUID based on host & time
...
Note that (for me) the GUID needed to be of a specific format (e.g. matching the Regex ^[{]?[0-9a-fA-F]{8}-([0-9a-fA-F]{4}-){3}[0-9a-fA-F]{12}[}]?$
taken from https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/how-to-validate-guid-globally-unique-identifier-using-regular-expression/). For example, it still gave the same error if I just sent "test".

How to record the timestamp of an XML request in SoapUI and use it in an assertion?

I have a test case in SoapUI NG Pro which has the following steps:
POST REST Request that starts a process
JDBC Request where I check that the process Start Date has been logged to a database table
Delay (to simulate the time it takes for the process to run)
JDBC Request where I check that the End Date and Duration have been logged to the table
I would like to capture the timestamp of the POST Request to use within my assertions in steps 2 and 4.
I have looked around online and some people have mentioned using Events while others have mentioned using a Script TestStep but I haven't been able to get either to work.
I can get the POST Response timestamp but am looking for the Request timestamp in particular. I also noticed that there is a timestamp in the Request Log but again I don't know how to access that.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Its probably also worth mentioning that I am using JavaScript instead of Groovy.
You can add a Script Assertion for the Soap Request test step and add the below statement in order to show the time taken.
log.info messageExchange.response.timeTaken
If you want the above value to be accessible in other steps, then use below(which stores the value to test case level, so that it is easy to access the test case property in other steps of the same test case):
context.testCase.setPropertyValue('TIME_TAKEN', messageExchange.response.timeTaken.toString())
In the later steps, use Property Expansion to read the test case level property value
def timeTaken = context.expand('${#TestCase#TIME_TAKEN}') as Integer

How can I clear an external ID on a record in NetSuite?

I need to clear/reset the external ID on a record in NetSuite, but nothing I do is working.
Some of the InventoryItem records are incorrectly mapped to records in another system. I have an application that can sync up the two systems, but I need to clear NetSuite's external IDs first.
Responses don't really need to be SOAP-specific. If you know how to do it with some specific NetSuite/SuiteTalk client, that might point me in the right direction.
What I've Tried
First up, I tried using the nullFieldList... but maybe it doesn't work because externalId is an attribute, not an element?
<messages:update>
<messages:record internalId="7777" xsi:type="accounting:InventoryItem">
<core:nullFieldList xsi:type="core:NullField">
<core:name>externalId</core:name>
</core:nullFieldList>
</messages:record>
</messages:update>
The external ID is just a string, so I tried just setting it to blank. Didn't work either.
<messages:update>
<messages:record internalId="7777" xsi:type="accounting:InventoryItem">
<accounting:externalId></accounting:externalId>
</messages:record>
</messages:update>
I even tried setting the external ID to 0, but I get back a "not unique identifier" error
<messages:update>
<messages:record internalId="7777" xsi:type="accounting:InventoryItem">
<accounting:externalId>0</accounting:externalId>
</messages:record>
</messages:update>
Other Info
I'm using NetSuite's SOAP API v.2013_1
When I say "it doesn't work", I mean: after I do the update, I get a success response similar to the following:
<readResponse>
<platformCore:status isSuccess="true" xmlns:platformCore="urn:core_2013_1.platform.webservices.netsuite.com"/>
<record internalId="7777" externalId="42" xsi:type="listAcct:InventoryItem" xmlns:listAcct="urn:accounting_2013_1.lists.webservices.netsuite.com">
<!-- snip -->
</record>
</readResponse>
If you are using scripts in netsuite you can run a scheduled script to clear records in NS by loading each record and setting the externalid to '' using the following simple code:
var rec= nlapiLoadRecord(type,id);
rec.setFieldValue('externalid','');
nlapiSubmitRecord(rec);
This seemed to work for me in my enviornment which was on 2015.2.
Unfortunately my understanding is that once you set an externalid you cannot clear it, you can set it to another value, but not back to null. I have experienced this both using SuiteScript as well as a Boomi process that uses the 2014.1 endpoint. This may have changed in the recent releases, as I have not tried it recently with SuiteScript nor with a newer endpoint.
You can eliminate the externalId on a record once it's been set. Here's an example using the NetSuite gem:
ns_customer = NetSuite::Records::Customer.get external_id: 'ext_id'
ns_customer.external_id = ''
ns_customer.update
Here's the corresponding XML for update:
<env:Body>
<platformMsgs:update>
<platformMsgs:record xsi:type="listRel:Customer" platformMsgs:internalId="199113" platformMsgs:externalId=""/>
</platformMsgs:update>
</env:Body>
I have had to attempt this before as well. I know the pains you describe. I ended up putting a "-" in front of my external ID to unlink it between my systems. You can do this in SOAP or even as a simple one time csv upload. As it was one time, I did csv.

alter date - postgreSQL and websockets

I am using websockets , nodejs v0.10.12 and also PostgreSQL 9.1, with PostGIS 2.0.
Now, on websockets, on the server side, in order to gather textual data and send them to the client I perform a query using node's pg plugin.
I have something like
var query = client.query('SELECT p_name,p_date FROM pins WHERE p_id ='+ja)
//send them and render in client as html
query.on("row", function (row, result) {result.addRow(row);});
query.on("end", function (result) {
for (var i=0; i<result.rows.length; i++){
connection.send(
'Name</br>'
+result.rows[i].p_name+
'</br>Date</br>'
+result.rows[i].p_date+
'</br>'
}
client.end();
});
Now, here is the tricky part. I want to render the date like 25/02/2012.
With the above code, I get Sat Feb 02 2002 02:00:00 GMT+0200 (Χειμερινή ώρα GTB)
To get DD/MM/YYYY I have to put a line of code like
SET datestyle = "SQL, DMY";
This is apparently PHP and I am using Javascript because I work with websockets.
The only thing I could think of is editing the above query like so
var query = client.query('SET datestyle = "SQL, DMY"; SELECT p_name,p_date FROM pins WHERE p_id ='+ja)
I dont get any errors, but on the client the date renders null.
How can I fix this?
Thanks
OK. Where to start?
This:
var query = client.query('SELECT p_name,p_date FROM pins WHERE p_id ='+ja)
is not the correct way to build a query. Used a parameterised query and protect yourself from SQL injection.
SET datestyle = "SQL, DMY";
This is apparently PHP and I am using Javascript because I work with websockets.
What? I'm trying to think of something constructive about this sentence, but the best I can think of is "What?". It is far from apparent that the above is PHP, because it isn't. The fact that you are sending it to the database ought to give you a hint that it's SQL. Also, you're not using javascript because you work with websockets. You're using javascript because you're using javascript - websockets are nothing to do with anything here.
The only thing I could think of...
Doesn't include looking in the manuals.
Go to the PostgreSQL website, click through to the documentation and manuals, and on the contents page click "Functions and Operators" and then "Data type formatting functions". Here is the link for you:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/functions-formatting.html
You'll notice that the PostgreSQL developers not only produce extensive and detailed manuals, but they keep multiple versions online and make it simple to switch back and fore to see what's changed.
There is a whole section on this page on how to format date-times in different ways, with clear descriptions of each effect. I didn't find this using the documentation search or anything clever like that - just the obvious links on each page.
If you did a search you would find plenty on the datestyle parameter, and a little further digging would show that you can set it per-session or as a default for a given user or database.
Finally though, don't do it that way at all. Return ISO-standard date formats like #mu said (YYYY-MM-DD etc). and format them in your javascript client code.
Oh - while I'm no expert, I'm not sure that </br> is valid HTML, XHTML or XML either. Did you perhaps mean <br/>?

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