I am pretty new to this so all help you could provide would be greatly appreciated!
I am trying to use Here.com API's and on their example page for Traffic Incidents it has this example:
https://traffic.hereapi.cn/traffic/6.3/incidents.json
?app_id={YOUR_APP_ID}
&app_code={YOUR_APP_CODE}
&bbox=37.586,126.969;37.477,127.106
&criticality=minor
When I go to my account all I have are:
1) APP ID
2) API Key
There is nothing labeled "YOUR APP CODE". Can someone please tell me what they are looking for? Also when I do get the right info do I replace everything AFTER the '=' sign with these ID's or do I put the data between the curly brackets?
Thanks in advance for any guidance you can give...
When we log into Developer Portal, we
Create a project
We then generate an App by clicking on Generate APP. This creates your application and shows you application authentication credentials. An APP ID is generated for identifying your application.
Next, you click on Create API Key and you get your API KEY.
This API KEY is what you will be using for all your API calls and write it wherever it says {YOUR_API_KEY} by replacing the complete curly bracket and the content inside it with your API KEY.
For Traffic API, see Traffic Dev Guide
Related
I have a mobile app that does two things. The first one is to use Firebase to implement a chat. On the other side, the apps, uses a REST API to retrieve some info from a database and do some writes on it. Simple as that. The app provides a login system: two text fields and a button. The user provides an email address and a password then I used the standard Firebase function to do the login using signInWithEmailAndPassword(). The thing is that I should use the same credentials to do the login using the REST API to access the other database. At first I decided to do the call to Firebase and to the REST API in the same function. One other possible solution could be a web service. I'll explain how. A web services written in Python, PHP or JavaScript generates a JWT token that is sent to the mobile app after the user asks to sign in. I'm pretty sure that this is possible like shown here: https://firebase.google.com/docs/auth/admin. The latter seems too over-complicated to me. Now, the question is. Can someone suggest a solution, the most simple one, that can be used is a scenario like this? Thanks all in advance.
This is my first attempt in creating any kind of chatbots.
So created the necessary accounts and followed the process of creating a knowledge base and bot framework.
Inputted all 3 parameters and saved correctly
QnAKnowledgebaseId
QnAAuthKey
QnAEndpointHostName
Event restarted the bot. However, the bot would not connect to the knowledge base hence does not return answers to any of my queries.
Can someone please guide me how to connect the bot to knowledge base properly. Any steps missing
Looks for help and advise.
Thanks
This is the tutorial I have used to create a QnA KB along with a Azure Web App Bot.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/cognitive-services/qnamaker/tutorials/create-qna-bot#connect-your-qna-maker-knowledge-base-to-the-bot
What happens when you try the "Test in Web Chat" option within the Azure Portal. Does it work for you?
Can you double check your applications settings on your Web App Bot?
QnAKnowledgebaseId = This should be just the GUID and not /knowledgebases/GUID/generateAnswer
QnAAuthKey = This should be just the AUTH_KEY and should not include the word EndpointKey AUTH_KEY
QnAEndpointHostName = Should be the QnA Maker URI such as: https://QNA_URI.azurewebsites.net/qnamaker
Thanks.
James
Scenario: Auth0 Single Page application client. .NET Web API and Angular SPA both configured to use this client. Works great.
I'd like to add Azure API Management as a layer in front of the API. Have set up the API in the Management Portal, updated SPA to call API, tested calls from SPA, works great.
Now, I'd like to configure API Management Portal with the right security settings such that people can invoke API calls from the Developer Portal. I've used this [https://auth0.com/docs/integrations/azure-api-management/configure-azure] as a guide.
Where I'm at:
From the Developer portal, I can choose Authorization Code as an Auth type, go through a successful sign-in process with Auth0 and get back a Bearer token. However, calls made to the API always return 401. I think this is because I'm confused about how to set it up right. As I understand it:
either I follow the instructions and setup a new API client in Auth0, but if that's the case then surely it's not going to work, because tokens generated from one client aren't going to work against my SPA client? (or is there something I need to change to make it work)
or, how should I configure Azure API Management to work with a SPA application. (this would be my preferred method, having two clients in Auth0 seems 'messy'). But, don't I need an 'audience' value in my authorization endpoint URL? How do I get that?
If anyone has done this, would very much appreciate some guidance here.
Well, I didn't think I'd be back to answer my own question quite so soon. The reason is mostly rooted in my general ignorance of this stuff, combined with trying to take examples and fuse them together for my needs. Posting this to help out anyone else who finds themselves here.
Rather than take the Single Application Client in Auth0 and make it work with Azure API Management, I decided to go the other way, and make the non-interactive Client work with my SPA. This eventually 'felt' more right: the API is what I'm securing, and I should get the API Management portal working, then change my SPA to work with it.
Once I remembered/realised that I needed to update my audience in the API to match the audience set in the Client in Auth0, then the Management Portal started working. Getting the SPA to work with the API then became a challenge: I was trying to find out how to change the auth0 angular code to pass an audience to match the one the API was sending, but it kept sending the ClientID instead. (by the way, finding all that out was made easier by using https://jwt.io/ to decrypt the Bearer tokens and work out what was happening - look at the 'aud' value for the audience.
In the end, I changed my API, in the new JwtBearerAuthenticationOptions object, the TokenValidationParameters object (of type TokenValidationParameters) has a property ValidAudiences (yes, there is also a ValidAudience property, confusing) which can take multiple audiences. So, I added my ClientID to that.
The only other thing I then changed (which might be specific to me, not sure) is that I had to change the JsonWebToken Signature Algorithm value in Auth0 for my non-interactive client (advanced settings, oAuth tab) from HS256 to RS256.
With all that done, now requests from both the API Management Portal, and my SPA work.
Curious to know if this is the "right" way of doing it, or if I've done anything considered dangerous here.
Since you're able to make the validation of the jwts with the .Net API work, Only few changes are actually necessary to get this working with Azure API Management.
In API management,
Create a validate-jwt inbound policy on an Operation (or all operations)
set the audiences and issuers the same as what you've used with your .NET web api. (you can check the values in Auth0 portal if you don't know this yet)
The important field that is missing at this point is the Open ID URLs since auth0 uses RS256 by default. The url can be found in you Auth0 portal at: Applications -> your single page application -> settings -> Scroll down, Show Advanced Settings -> End points. Then copy the OpenID Configuration
Here's the reference for API management's requirement for JWT tokens
optional reading
Background: This is my first standalone web development project, and my only experience in Meteor is building the Discover Meteor app over the last summer. I come from about a year of CS experience as a side interest in school, and I am most comfortable with C and C++. I have experience in python and java.
Project so far: I'm creating a calendar management system (for fun). Using accounts-google, I have created user accounts that are authenticated through google. I have requested the necessary permissions that I need for my app, including 'identity' and 'calendar read/write access'. I've spent the last week or so trying to get over this next hurdle, which is actually getting data from google.
Goal: I'd like to be able to make an API call to Calendar.list using a GET request. I've already called meteor add http to add the GET request functionality, my issue comes with the actual implementation.
Problem: I have registered my app on the developer console and set up Accounts using the client ID and secret, but I have not been able to find/generate my 'API key' for use in the request. Here is the google guide for creating the access token by using my (already) downloaded private key. I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around an implementation on the server side using JS because I don't have a lot of experience with what is mentioned in the HTTP/REST portion of the implementation examples. I would appreciate some help on how to implement a handshake and receive an access token for use in my app. If there is a call I can make or some package that will handle the token generation for me, that would be even better than implementation help. I believe an answer to this would also benefit this other question
The SO answer that I've been referring to so far: https://stackoverflow.com/a/14543159/4259653 Some of it is in spanish but it's pretty understandable code. He has an API key for his request, which I asked this question to help me with. The accounts-google documentation isn't really enough to explain this all to me.
Also an unrelated small question: What is the easiest way to deal with 'time' parameters in requests. I'm assuming JS has some sort of built-in functionality that I'm just not aware of yet.
Thanks for your research. I have also asked a very similar question, and right now I am looking into the package you recommend. I have considered this meteor-google-api package, but it looks abandoned.
Regarding your question about time manipulation, I recommend MomentJS. There are many packages out there; I am using meteor add mrt:moment
EDIT: MomentJS now has an official package for Meteor, so use meteor add momentjs:moment instead of the mrt command above
Below is a snippet of what moment can do. More documentation here.
var startTimeUTC = moment.utc(event.startTime, "YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss").format();
//Changes above formatting to "2014-09-08T08:02:17-05:00" (ISO 8601)
//which is acceptable time format for Google API
So I started trying to implement all of this myself on the server side, but was wary of a lot of the hard-coding I was doing and assumptions I was making to fill gaps. My security prof. used to say "never implement encryption yourself", so I decided to take another gander for a helpful package. Revising search criteria to "JWT", I found jagi's meteor-google-oauth-jwt on Atmosphere. The readme is comprehensive and provides everything I need. Following the process used in The Google OAuth Guide, an authorization request can be made and a key generated for making an API call.
Link to Atmosphere: https://atmospherejs.com/jagi/google-oauth-jwt
Link to Repo: https://github.com/jagi/meteor-google-oauth-jwt/
I will update this answer with any additional roadblocks I hit in the Google API process and how I solved them:
Recently, I've been running into problems with the API request result. I get an empty calendarlist back from the API call. I suspect this is becuase I make an API call to my developer account rather than to the subject user. I will investigate the problem and either create a new question or update this solution with the fix I find.
Fix: Wasn't including the 'sub' qualifier to the JWT token. Fixed by modifying JWT package token generation code to include delegationEmail: user.services.google.email after scope. I don't know why he used such a long designation for the option instead of sub: as it is in the google API, but I appreciate his package nontheless.
I'm quickly becoming proficient in this, so if people have meteor-related google auth questions, let me know.
DO NOT USE SERVICE ACCOUNTS AS POSTED ABOVE!
The correct approach is to use standard web access + requesting offline access. The documentation on the api page specifically states this:
Typically, an application uses a service account when the application uses Google APIs to work with its own data rather than a user's data.
The only exception to this is when you are using google apps domain accounts and want to delegate access to your service account for the entire domain:
Authorizing a service account to access data on behalf of users in a domain is sometimes referred to as "delegating domain-wide authority"
This makes logical sense as a user must be allowed to "authorise" your application.
Back to the posters original question the flow is simple:
1) Meteor accounts google package already does most of the work for you to get tokens. You can include the scope for offline access required.
2) if you are building your own flow, you will go through the stock standard process and calls as explained on auth
This will require you to:
1) HTTP call to make the original request or you can piggyback off some of the internal meteor calls : Package.oauth.OAuth.showPopup() -- go look at the source there are more nifty functions around there.
2) Then you need to create an Iron router server side route to accept the oauth response which will contain a code parameter that you will use to exchange for tokens.
3) Next use this code to make a final call to exchange the "code" for the token + refresh_token
4) Store these where ever you want - my requirement was to store them not at the user level but multiple per user
5) Use a package like GoogleAPI this wraps up Google API calls and refreshes when required - it only works when tokens are stored in user accounts so you will need to rip it apart a bit if your tokens are stored somewhere else (like in my case)
I want to use Webex API [www.webex.com] to create meeting from my site.
For that I need my own domain in the case of URL API in this way:
"https://yourWebExHostedName.webex.com/yourWebExHostedName/".
And in the case XML API, I need WebexID, SiteID, ParternerID.
Those are mentioned in this Webex official document.
https://developer.cisco.com/documents/4733862/4736679/URL+API+WBS+27+Ref+Guide.pdf
I want to say that these parameters are available in testing environment.
But I don't have my own domain to use this API in production environment.
So I want to know that it is possible to use this API in production environment without owning a domain.
Do you have any Idea? Have you faced such problem? I need urgent solution regarding that.
For the XML API, you can obtain those parameters from this page (you need to login or register first to be able to see the form):
https://developer.cisco.com/site/webex-developer/develop-test/try-webex-apis/
To test the API, all the requests would be made to the sandbox site https://apidemoeu.webex.com
No
You cam't go for production without Webexdomain. Because For recording of video,Host users's and Attendee user's it take space on server to stored all this data you need your web-ex hosting site.