Am experimenting with salesforce apis by creating and patching with its api services.I dont know how to create a custom profile with the help of its apis and also i dont know what are all the required body parameters to create a profile. i tried sending a post request with the following body
{
"Name" : "testprofile"
}
to the url /services/data/v54.0/sobjects/Profile
i got this message as response
{
"message": "insufficient access rights on cross-reference id",
"errorCode": "INSUFFICIENT_ACCESS_ON_CROSS_REFERENCE_ENTITY",
"fields": []
}
i reffered https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.234.0.object_reference.meta/object_reference/sforce_api_objects_profile.htm
havent got any eloborate writings on what should be in the body while using post request.. but it says create() methods are allowed
It seems that i have to add user license with the body along with the name for the post to scceeded once added it should look like this
{
"Name":"profilename",
"UserLicenseId": "license id"
}
and thus made the request work
I'm trying to set up an API request for Dynamics 365 to send an email template to a specific user, and I am having a lot of difficulty getting it to do what I want.
I'm using the SendEmailFromTemplate action and so far only have access to global templates. Whenever I try to use a marketing email template, it says it's not found. Is it even possible for me to use Marketing email templates with this action?
Response
"error": {
"code": "0x80040217",
"message": "template With Id = 41deb0fa-c108-eb11-a813-000d3a8c09cf Does Not Exist"
}
Additionally, I've not been able to embed user data in the global templates such as {{contact.address1_city}}.
Current request:
{
"TemplateId": "TEMPLATE-ID",
"Regarding": {
"contactid": "CONTACT-ID",
"#odata.type": "Microsoft.Dynamics.CRM.contact"
},
"Target": {
"regardingobjectid_contact#odata.bind": "/contacts(CONTACT-ID)",
"email_activity_parties": [{
"partyid_systemuser#odata.bind": "/systemusers(SYSTEMUSER-ID)",
"participationtypemask": 1
}, {
"partyid_contact#odata.bind": "/contacts(CONTACT-ID))",
"participationtypemask": 2
}],
"#odata.type": "Microsoft.Dynamics.CRM.email"
}
}
I might be going about it the wrong way. Any assistance is appreciated.
Thanks!
No this is not supported.
Marketing emails and CDS emails are two separate things - both business-wise and technically. Marketing emails are meant for sending emails in business to business and business to customer scenarios and are part of marketing solution. CDS emails are piece of core functionality.
If you do want to send marketing email your best shot is to use "quick send" instead.
Per the recommendation in the defaultauth sample, I am trying to access the directory api for a domain which I have created a service account for. Here is the code I am attempting to connect with:
import { google } from 'googleapis'
const authClient = await google.auth.getClient({
scopes: ['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/admin.directory.user.readonly']
})
const service = google.admin('directory_v1')
console.log(
await service.users.list({
auth: authClient,
domain: <redacted>
})
)
However, when I attempt to connect I recieve an error saying Error: Not Authorized to access this resource/api. If I remove the creds.json file in ~/.google, the error changes to saying that it cannot find the credentials file. Also, I am able to access a bucket using the same file, so I'm pretty sure my local environment is set up correctly, authentication wise. I have also worked for the past few days with someone on the support team G Suite API team, who assures me that things are set up correctly on my domain.
After looking around online, it seems the thing I am missing is impersonating an admin account when trying to connect with my service-account. I have found a few examples online of doing this with a JWT auth strategy, but I would like to continue to use the default auth client, in order to abstract away the implementation details. Is this possible? If so, what do I have to change? I have tried setting subject, and delegationEmail in both of the calls (getClient and list).
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Just set subject of the client object:
authClient.subject = 'your email address'
Google's api documentations highly varies by language. No standart. Something documented in PHP client may be missing in nodejs client and it can take hours to find out how to do it.
You can pass clientOptions.subject in the constructor.
import { google } = from 'googleapis';
const authClient = new google.auth.GoogleAuth({
scopes: ['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/admin.directory.user.readonly'],
clientOptions: {
subject: "your email address"
});
Searched the net, youtube, and google forums/documentation but can't seem to find this one even if it is possible.
I'm using a google form as a starting point for a workflow that then gets turned into a google group. Is there any scripts that can auto create a google group from the google forms output in sheets once form is submitted?
Thanks in advance.
I haven't tested this yet, so just give it a try. This is what I've found. Directory API let's you create a group by making a POST URI request:
https://www.googleapis.com/admin/directory/v1/groups
with request body:
{
"email": "sales_group#example.com",
"name": "Sales Group",
"description": "This is the Sales group."
}
Since you are using Google Forms, the option would be to use AppScript to perform the XHR request.
Try to make use of Class UrlFetchApp in Appscript.
var options =
{
"method" : "post",
"payload" : payload
};
UrlFetchApp.fetch("http://example.com/upload_form.cgi", options);
I am playing with Google's OAuth 2.0 Playground using my own personal Google account, but I cannot seem to recover my Gmail address using the playground.
The scope I am using is:
email profile https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.login
But when I call the API:
https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v2/userinfo
I get various information about the user such as family name, first name, gender, picture, etc. but it does not return the user's email.
How do I retrieve the user's email address? Do I have the wrong scope or am I calling the wrong API? I feel like this should be very simple but I have literally been trying to figure this out for hours and I cannot find an API and scope combination that consistently provides the user's email address.
Update: December 2018
On December 20th, Google announced that the Google+ API would be turned down in March 2019, with intermittent failure starting at the end of January 2019. As part of the the plus.people.get endpoint is deprecated and scheduled to be terminated.
The userinfo endpoint is de-deprecated (see clarification) and should provide the info assuming
You request the https://developers.google.com/identity/sign-in/web/devconsole-project scope and
You request the email field.
Clarification: 24 Jan 2019
Google documented that the userinfo (v2) endpoint was deprecated, but later changed it to "deprecated, but kept available for backwards compatibility".
Current documentation discusses getting profile and email information through the currently supported openid method. This includes using the "userinfo" endpoint specified in their discovery document, as required by OpenID Connect.
At the moment, that URL is https://openidconnect.googleapis.com/v1/userinfo, but this has changed in the past and the discovery document at https://accounts.google.com/.well-known/openid-configuration is the authoritative source for the URL to use.
So, to be clear:
The old userinfo URL is maintained for backwards compatibility
The new userinfo URL is available at the discovery document
Regardless, the plus version of anything (described below) is deprecated and scheduled to be removed.
Original Answer
There are a lot of issues here in what you're doing and how you're trying to do it.
For starters, the https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v2/userinfo endpoint is deprecated, and scheduled to be removed in September 2014. It has begun working inconsistently - so don't use it.
As #abraham noted, you'll use the people.get endpoint at https://www.googleapis.com/plus/v1/people/me. This should give you the emails field containing an array of addresses. In your case, there will likely be only one that has a type of "account".
As of 2017: use the email scope. See Authorizing API requests.
This email scope is equivalent to and replaces the
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email scope.
For signing in with Google using OAuth 2.0, there's no need to make a separate request to get user's email.
When Google calls the callback URL, it provides a code in the query string that you could use to exchange for access token and ID token. The ID token is a JWT that contains identity information about the user, which includes the email address.
See more information here: https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/oauth2/openid-connect
You'll want to add the https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email scope or replace https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v2/userinfo with it. If you're using the HTML example they provide, you can list multiple scopes separated by a space.
<span
class="g-signin"
data-callback="signInCallback"
data-clientid="{{ plus_id }}"
data-cookiepolicy="single_host_origin"
data-requestvisibleactions="http://schemas.google.com/AddActivity"
data-scope="https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.login
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email">
</span>
To retrieve the email address, you need to include the scope: "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email" as mentioned in this document. If this scope is included while you generate the refresh token, you should be able to get the email address of the authenticating user by making the following request:
you can call this with your own access token then will give the response
https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v3/userinfo?access_token="YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN"
response will look like this
{
"sub": "1057abc98136861333615xz",
"name": "My Name",
"given_name": "My",
"family_name": "Name",
"picture": "https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a-/AOh14qiJarwP9rRw7IzxO40anYi4pTTAU_xseuRPFeeYFg",
"email": "MyName#gmail.com",
"email_verified": true,
"locale": "en"
}
or simply you can just write a function
import requests
def get_user_email(access_token):
r = requests.get(
'https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v3/userinfo',
params={'access_token': access_token})
return r.json()
I came here looking why my server did not get email in response to /oauth2/v2/userinfo api call. It was only once that I saw this & it has been working well in past.
The answer gave good lead. While fixing this, there were several other resources that helped. Still I am not sure whether expecting always email in the response is ok. so - put error handling in code in case emails are not returned.
Google api documentation about migrating to google+ signin.
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email scope
People resource documentation
Add google+ api to the project using google developer console. The complimentary (quota) of calls is quite high (20m for google+ signin api per day).
Add error handling & logging in server code in case api returns no emails. In my case, I was looking only type='account' email.
This is actually a bit of a challenge as Google does not provide an email by default. You must specifically request it from Google Plus.
const scope = [
'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me', // request access here
'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email',
];
auth.generateAuthUrl({
access_type: 'offline',
prompt: 'consent',
scope: scope,
});
const plus = google.plus({ version: 'v1', auth });
const me = await plus.people.get({ userId: 'me' });
const userEmail = me.data.emails[0].value;
There is a full version in this blog post I wrote: https://medium.com/#jackscott/how-to-use-google-auth-api-with-node-js-888304f7e3a0
by using google nodejs sdk:
const {google} = require('googleapis');
const oauth2Client = new google.auth.OAuth2(
googleClientIdPublic,
googleClientSecret,
googleRedirectUriPublic
);
//scope you need: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email
oauth2Client.setCredentials(tokens);
const googleAuth = google.oauth2({
version: "v2",
auth: oauth2Client,
});
const googleUserInfo = await googleAuth.userinfo.get();
const email = googleUserInfo.data.email;
more info
I have been following Prisoner's answer right above, and it helped me... until I received the email from Google Developers about how Google+ API will be shutdown on March 7, 2019.
I scrounged around and found this solution to get the email using an id_token that is returned when you authorize an app with the email scope on your developer console.
From Google Sign-in for Websites:
To validate an ID token in PHP, use the Google API Client Library for
PHP. Install the library (for example, using Composer):
composer require google/apiclient
Then, call the verifyIdToken() function. For example:
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
// Get $id_token via HTTPS POST.
$client = new Google_Client(['client_id' => $CLIENT_ID]); // Specify the CLIENT_ID of the app that accesses the backend
$payload = $client->verifyIdToken($id_token);
if ($payload) {
$userid = $payload['sub'];
// If request specified a G Suite domain:
//$domain = $payload['hd'];
} else {
// Invalid ID token
}
This will return an array that contains the user information, that also contains the email of the user who logged in. Hope this helps anyone else.
Please see my answer here to the identical issue:
how to get email after using google OAuth2 in C#?
In your scopes variable. Use the value "email" not the
full https address. Scope keywords in the web link are separated by spaces. I solve your issue with scopes written as: profile email openid.
https://developers.google.com/gmail/api/v1/reference/users/getProfile
For gmails api, add this to nodejs code:
function getUsersEmail (auth) {
const gmail = google.gmail({version: 'v1', auth})
gmail.users.getProfile({
userId: 'me'
}, (err, {data}) => {
if (err) return console.log('The API returned an error: ' + err)
console.log(data.emailAddress)
})
}
Gmails api: https://developers.google.com/gmail/api/guides/
Change the authorizationRequest with given scope: scope=openid%20email%20profile and use userinfoapi. This link worked for me
I suggest the following minimal code, which include '*/userinfo.email' and '#google-cloud/local-auth' package:
const path = require('path');
const { google } = require('googleapis');
const { authenticate } = require('#google-cloud/local-auth');
const scope = [
'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email'
];
async function runSample() {
const auth = await authenticate({
keyfilePath: path.join(__dirname, 'oauth2.keys.json'),
scopes: scope
});
google.options({ auth });
const dat = await google.oauth2('v2').userinfo.get()
console.log(dat.data.email);
}
if (module === require.main) {
runSample().catch(console.error);
}
module.exports = runSample;