Considering following code, which is part of a larger powershell script. When the scripts is triggered, a phone call is made by Twilio to 'To' with a text (in the XML $MessagURL) that is read with a TextToSpeech-Engine.
$params = #{ To = $XmlDocument.Response.Dial; From = $number; Url =
$MessageURL}
# Make API request, selecting JSON properties from response
Invoke-WebRequest -URI $url -Method Post -Credential $credential -Body
$params -UseBasicParsing
$MessageURL is an URL to an XML. The XML contains the data for the text that needs to be said when calling the numbeer 'To' (which comes from another XML).
When $MessageURL is to a private public webspace, everything works fine.
When i change the $MessageURL to a azure blob-location, then the Twilio-logic can't read/access the XML-file anymore. The XML on the blob-storage is also free accessable through the internet.
Anyone any ideas why the script has problems with calling an xml on an azure blob-storage?
Related
I need some help to get my code to create a Document Set in SharePoint Online using Graph API directly from a PowerShell script using Invoke-RestMethod.
I tested the request under the Graph Explorer portal and it works fine and I get a nice HTTP 201 (OK) as seen on the picture below:
Trying the very same request from my PowerShell script fails and returns HTTP 400 (Bad Request), I can't get the folder created and that is the first step to get the document set created, according to my research and an example found here:
Is it possible to create a project documentset using graph API?
As the first step mentioned in the example above, I need to first create the folder and then proceed to the following steps to achieve the creation of the document set but I can't get this first step done.
My application has the necessary permissions as I tested in the Graph Explorer:
Files.ReadAndWrite.All
Sites.ReadAndWrite.All
Sites.FullControl.All (not required but I had to try this one to make sure!)
I'm on the second step (folder creation) and I can't get past this point, according to the link above, once I get this working I will need to get the new folder ID, and then send a new PATCH to alter its content type to match the desire document set, I hope I can get some help, all the examples are vague and pretty much describe only on what to do but no actual functional code to sample from.
Thanks in advance!
$uri = "https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/drives/b!yVnguUBzyUC1PxgTM0JP-_ERFp1PTZFCjycaWZK6yKulBi9Ce_J8RIfF-OkWKE4B/root/children"
$headers = #{
"Authorization" = "$($token.token_type) $($token.access_token)"
"Content-Type" = "application/json"
}
$body = #{
"name" = "Test"
"folder" = {}
"#microsoft.graph.conflictBehavior" = "rename"
}
$request = Invoke-RestMethod -Headers $headers -Body $body -Method Post -Uri $uri
It should work when you modify $body like this
$body = #{
"name" = "Test"
"folder" = #{}
"#microsoft.graph.conflictBehavior" = "rename"
} | ConvertTo-Json
$body is a JSON object and you need to convert it to JSON. For initialing an empty folder object you have to use #{} instead of {}.
Thanks #user2250152, you gave me a great idea by solving part of the problem!
I did add the conversion to JSON as you recommended and decided to add the content-type back to my original header and it did the trick!
Adding the content-type solved the issue but your collaboration was essential, so thank you very much!
Now wish me luck to get the other steps done and achieve the conclusion of this thing!
$headers = #{
"Authorization" = "$($token.token_type) $($token.access_token)"
"Content-Type" = "application/json"
}
I am trying to use Invoke-Restmethod in Powershell to call an API (I'm fairly new to this). I can get it to POST and return the jwt access token. I can also use that token to return an id via GET, however I'm then having trouble with the next step of returning the next set of data. I can get it to work manually via curl. I believe the issue may be because multiple headers are required to return the tenant list and I'm unsure of the format to get this to work.
The curl script looks as follows, and works as expected:
curl -XGET -H "Authorization: Bearer <jwt access token>" -H "ID: <id>" https://theapiurl.com/.......
I've tried multiple ways to do this in powershell, most recently as below, but nothing I'm trying works. I've tried returning the individual $headers contents and building a string (i.e. $headers2 = $.headers.Item(Authorization) + ......) but that doesn't work either. To be honest, I've tried so many different things I've forgotten what I have and haven't tried
$headers = #{
'ID' = $id
'Authorization' = $auth_string
}
$response = Invoke-RestMethod -Method Get -Headers $headers -Uri $url
Please could you let me know the correct way to add multiple headers (which I think is the problem and what I'm getting wrong)?
In case it's useful to anyone else, another syntax for setting the parameters of this commandlet is as follows (real working example for uploading to the GitHub release repository). It's usful to set all the switches (without prepending a hyphen) in the parameters object like so:
$upload_params = #{
Uri = $upload_uri + "?name=$asset_name"
Method = 'POST'
Headers = #{
'Authorization' = "token $github_token"
'Accept' = 'application/vnd.github.everest-preview+json'
}
InFile = $asset
ContentType = 'application/octet-stream'
}
"Uploading $asset..."
$upload = Invoke-RestMethod #upload_params
"The server returned:"
echo $upload
The variable $upload contains the full object returned from the server (converted from json to a PowerShell object). So, for example, you can also get properties of this obect like so:
"Upload successfully posted as " + $upload.url
Thanks for all the responses - none of them were really the answer but they did give me the confidence I was doing it the right way.
I'd been using PS Write-Host to check the data returned - this was working for the tokens and ID's, but wasn't working for next step. I wasn't getting an error, just no data. (I did see the returned data when testing manually in a command prompt window).
As soon as I added an -OutFile to the PS and checked the file, I realised it was working all along and PS just wasn't showing me the results. 2 hours wasted, although I've learnt more as a result!
Website I am attempting to do this on: https://www.netvendor.net/login
I am trying to login to the website automatically and kick off a script to create users in bulk for us.
If you run an Invoke-WebRequest on this page, it returns information, but nothing about the forms. They are simply not displayed. However, if you view the page source or inspect element, there are clearly forms on the page and they are not composed of JS or anything else that would mess it up. How can I get PowerShell to recognize these fields? I am using the following command:
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "www.netvendor.net/login" -Method GET -UseBasicParsing
Because of the issue above, I decided I would just POST the information I needed by examining the request. The request requires three things:
email
password
_token
Unfortunately, the token is randomly generated each time a browser session is initiated. If you view source on the page and search for "_token", you will get the parameter that is needed. It doesn't seem like there is any way to retrieve this from the page? I am a bit lost as to what I can do at this point, especially since there is no API or anything else for me to work with.
For all interested, here is the final working script:
$nvlogin = Invoke-WebRequest "https://www.netvendor.net/login" -SessionVariable "netvendor"
$nvtoken = $nvlogin.InputFields.Where({ $_.Name -eq "_token" })[0].Value
$nvbody = #{
"_token" = $nvtoken
"email" = "your.name#website.com"
"password" = 'credentials'
}
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://www.netvendor.net/login" -WebSession $netvendor -Method 'POST' -Body $nvbody
I'm working on a powershell script that will create a printer on my Company Print Server, which is all done and working.
But we have however a location where we list all used IP's, which is a webpage.
So I'm trying to use Invoke-WebRequest to do this. Login to the page works but then when it tries to use the form to add the IP it doesn't.
Login only has one submit button in the form and to add the IP there is three buttons. I will list them in the order they are on the page
Clear the form
Apply
Cancel
So I'm thinking when I Invoke-Webrequest it is using the "clear form" function.
Is there any way I could specify which function to use when sending a webrequest?
I cant remove the "Clear form" button since it is being used frequently, just to get that clear.
$R = Invoke-WebRequest -URI http://localhost -SessionVariable IP
$Form = $R.Forms[0]
$Form.fields["ctlUsername"]=User
$Form.fields["ctlPassword"]=Pass
$R=Invoke-WebRequest -Uri ("http://localhost/" + $Form.Action) -WebSession
$IP -Method POST -Body $Form.Fields
$D = Invoke-WebRequest -URI http://localhost/addIP.php -WebSession $Test
$Form2 = $D.Forms[0]
$Form2.fields["IP"]="172.10.0.1"
$Form2.fields["name"]="Printer300"
$Form2.fields["location"]="Room407"
$Form2.fields["MAC"]="000"
$Form2.fields["ID"]="000"
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri http://localhost/addIP.php -WebSession $IP -Method POST -Body $Form2.Fields
Don't think in terms of "filling in web pages" when it comes to sending those requests. Web pages for a human user. Filling in a form and clicking a button is the manual way of creating an HTTP message with data.
When you post this form:
IP: [172.10.0.1 ]
Name: [Printer300 ]
Location: [Room407 ]
[Apply] [Cancel]
the browser creates a text string like this:
IP=172.10.0.1&Name=Printer300&Location=Room407
and sends it to the target URL.
Invoke-WebRequest can create this format directly from your data. This means, you don't need to "fill in" anything. Just pass a hashtable with the proper keys and values:
Invoke-WebRequest "http://localhost/addIP.php" -WebSession $IP -Method POST -Body #{
IP = "172.10.0.1"
Name = "Printer300"
Location = "Room407"
MAC = "000"
ID = "000"
}
Of course the keys must correspond to the form field names.
That being said, I don't see much of a need for authentication with requests coming from the localhost. You can save yourself some busywork by disabling authentication for all local requests, and requiring it only for remote requests.
Anyway, making a website request a password and then storing that password in clear text in a script is not exactly secure to begin with.
Invoke-WebRequest supports Windows integrated authentication, so that you don't have to bother with usernames and passwords at all. This would be my preferred authentication solution for such tasks.
Found the issue, it needed a hidden value that was not being sent via the form but was added in php function later.
Thanks for all your help.
When I provide this in PowerShell:
Invoke-RestMethod -Uri "https://outlook.office365.com/api/v1.0/users/andrew.stevens#mydomain.com/folders/"
-Credential $cred | foreach-object{$_.value |select DisplayName,ID}
I successfully determine Folder IDs, but not all folders are visible. How do I get a complete listing of folders (the one I particular want is recoverable items). I'm thinking once I get the ID I can see the messages the folder would contain?
Did you mean the Deleted Items folder?
If I understand correctly, it should be listed by the REST you calling. And we can use the well-known folder names: DeletedItems to get the messages. Here is an example for your reference:
Get: https://outlook.office.com/api/v2.0/me/MailFolders/DeletedItems/messages
Update
To use the Office 365 REST API, we need to use the bearer token which we need to register the app first. Below is an sample to get the access token via PowerShell for your reference(refer to Obtaining an Access Token):
#region Construct Azure Datamarket access_token
#Get ClientId and Client_Secret from https://datamarket.azure.com/developer/applications/
#Refer obtaining AccessToken (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh454950.aspx)
$ClientID = '<Your Value Here From Registered Application>'
$client_Secret = ‘<Your Registered Application client_secret>'
# If ClientId or Client_Secret has special characters, UrlEncode before sending request
$clientIDEncoded = [System.Web.HttpUtility]::UrlEncode($ClientID)
$client_SecretEncoded = [System.Web.HttpUtility]::UrlEncode($client_Secret)
#Define uri for Azure Data Market
$Uri = "https://datamarket.accesscontrol.windows.net/v2/OAuth2-13"
#Define the body of the request
$Body = "grant_type=client_credentials&client_id=$clientIDEncoded&client_secret=$client_SecretEncoded&scope=http://api.microsofttranslator.com"
#Define the content type for the request
$ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
#Invoke REST method. This handles the deserialization of the JSON result. Less effort than invoke-webrequest
$admAuth=Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $Uri -Body $Body -ContentType $ContentType -Method Post
#Construct the header value with the access_token just recieved
$HeaderValue = "Bearer " + $admauth.access_token
#endregion
#region Construct and invoke REST request to Microsoft Translator Service
[string] $text = "Use pixels to express measurements for padding and margins.";
[string] $textEncoded = [System.Web.HttpUtility]::UrlEncode($text)
[string] $from = "en";
[string] $to = "de";
[string] $uri = "http://api.microsofttranslator.com/v2/Http.svc/Translate?text=" + $text + "&from=" + $from + "&to=" + $to;
$result = Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $uri -Headers #{Authorization = $HeaderValue}
#endregion
$result.string.'#text'
After we get the access token, we can use the sample below to make the REST call:
$uri ="https://outlook.office.com/api/v2.0/me/MailFolders/DeletedItems/messages"
$accessToken=''
Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $uri -Headers #{Authorization=("bearer {0}" -f $accessToken)}
Links below are also helpful for you learning Office 365 REST API:
Manually register your app with Azure AD so it can access Office 365 APIs
Office 365 APIs platform overview
Thanks for the comment, and yes DeletedItems would be the folder name (for deleted items) but I discovered this..
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/dn424760(v=exchg.150).aspx.
And from this you can do this..
Invoke-RestMethod -Uri "https://outlook.office365.com/api/v1.0/users/andrew.stevens#anydomain.com/folders/recoverableitemsdeletions/messages?
" -Credential $cred | foreach-object{$.value |select #{n='Sender';e={$.sender.emailaddress.name}},Subject,DateTimeReceived}
So this gets messages in the recovered deleted items container.
Question now is how do I move them to inbox?
//A
OK.. thanks for the information regarding app registration and OAuth. But just to see the recovered deleted items the method using v1.0 does actually work..
What I now need to understand (apologies for my lack of knowledge on this) is how to move messages from the folder located (recovered deleted items) to say the Inbox (or perhaps another folder of choice). Since I was able to use V1.0 (with no requirement for app registration) can I use the same version to do this?
Your answer you provided for sending email worked perfectly and that didnt require any app registration.. so this would be a POST of somekind..
All I have to go on is
1. POST https://outlook.office.com/api/v1.0/me/messages/{message_id}/move
2. {
"DestinationId": "AAMkAGI2NGVhZTVlLTI1OGMtNDI4My1iZmE5LTA5OGJiZGEzMTc0YQAuAAAAAADUuTJK1K9aTpCdqXop_4NaAQCd9nJ-tVysQos2hTfspaWRAAAAAAEJAAA="
}
Which is a folder ID
//A