Pesquisas recentes
Sem pesquisas recentes

Bryan Flynn
Entrou em 15 de abr. de 2021
·
Última atividade em 01 de fev. de 2022
Seguindo
0
Seguidores
0
Atividade total
161
Votos
24
Assinaturas
85
VISÃO GERAL DA ATIVIDADE
MEDALHAS
ARTIGOS
PUBLICAÇÕES
COMENTÁRIOS NA COMUNIDADE
COMENTÁRIOS EM ARTIGOS
VISÃO GERAL DA ATIVIDADE
Atividade mais recente por Bryan Flynn
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi @...,
Please give the API call that you are making at any returned HTTP status codes (removing any confidential information of course).
Are you using the example cURL code in the reference documentation for POST /api/v2/uploads.json?
Also check out another community post where the tool Postman was used for a file upload: Unable to upload image file via /api/v2/uploads.json through postman
Keep in mind that uploading and attaching to a ticket is a two step process described here: Attaching files to tickets via API.
Exibir comentário · Publicado 22 de set. de 2020 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi @.... Looks like this question was also cross-posted in the developer community. I posted an answer there — please see https://develop.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/360050023554/comments/360012872554. If you have follow-up questions, I can answer them there. Thanks!
Exibir comentário · Publicado 18 de set. de 2020 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
1
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi Brandon. It is a bit confusing. There's the ticket field's meta information (the example you gave), which is the "schema" of the field, no matter the ticket. Then there's the custom field's actual value stored for a given ticket.
To get the a custom field's value for the currently displayed ticket use:
client.get('ticket.customField:custom_field_123456789')
Hope this helps!
Exibir comentário · Publicado 24 de jun. de 2020 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi @... -- I suggest submitting a ticket, so your specific account can be examined more closely.
Know that this particular workflow is not officially supported. See Can I use a trigger and a target to update tickets? for more details.
Exibir comentário · Publicado 23 de jan. de 2020 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
It does seem odd at first why all settings are not treated the same way. The reason is because secure settings, due to their nature, are never meant to be seen on the client side, so they have to be treated differently. The only point that they are retrieved and inserted into a client.request call is on the backend proxy server that Zendesk hosts.
This enables an administrator to confidently enter, say, a remote server's API token and not have to worry about anyone on the client side having access to that value. Hope this clarifies things!
Exibir comentário · Publicado 14 de nov. de 2019 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Closing this post -- moved conversation over to AMA post: https://develop.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/360037266834-Doubts-about-Authenticating-Zendesk-in-your-server-side-app
Exibir comentário · Publicado 05 de nov. de 2019 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
That sounds reasonable Calum. So I'll just point out again then, an end-user account can generate an OAuth token and use it against the /api/v2/requests.json API. It sounded like this wasn't working for you when I read the original post. If that's still the case, then more details will probably be needed via a private ticket. Let me know and I can create one for you.
Exibir comentário · Publicado 09 de jul. de 2019 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi Calum -- just to clarify, a new request/ticket created by an end user using an OAuth/Bearer token should work.
To simplify the above and using the cURL command line tool, the request would look something like:
curl -v -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: Bearer d482cccebdd482cccebdd482cccebdd482cccebdd482cccebdd482cccebd" https://yourownsubdomain.zendesk.com/api/v2/requests.json -X POST -d '{"request":{"subject":"Test Ticket Subject","comment":{"body":"Test Ticket Body"}}}'
You can quickly generate an OAuth token for the above example using your own account and end-user by:
1. In an incognito browser window, go to https://developer.zendesk.com/requests/new
2. Enter your Zendesk instance's subodomain
3. Click Authorize (then select 'Allow' in the popup window that's displayed if needed)
4. Then copy the entire returned OAuth token
I would not recommend using the "API Token"/Basic authorization approach from a client-side solution -- it exposes your account to possible abuse. By switching out the email address before the "/token" portion, you can impersonate other users. You should only use an API token within the context of a secure server-side solution (one that will not expose the API token to any client agents).
Exibir comentário · Publicado 08 de jul. de 2019 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Hi Felipe. GET /api/v2/ticket_fields.json will return all ticket fields in your instance regardless of what Ticket Form they're used on. As for searching, the link you gave is the best reference for what is searchable.
If you're looking for the ability to search a specific custom field, the 'fieldvalue:' option is the closest there is. It searches all custom fields, however -- you can't currently search only a specific custom field. This is a very popular feature request that has yet to be implemented. Hope this helps move you forward.
PS -- Also thanks McCabe as well for the above answer!
Exibir comentário · Publicado 01 de mai. de 2019 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários
Bryan Flynn comentou,
Here's the syntax for getting a custom field's value:
client.get('ticket.customField:custom_field_12345678')
...where the '12345678' value is *your* custom field's unique ID, prefixed by the literal string "ticket.customField:custom_field_"
This is documented here:
https://developer.zendesk.com/apps/docs/apps-v2/support_api#ticket.customfieldfieldname
One way of getting your custom field's ID value in Zendesk is by going to to Admin > Manage/Ticket Fields > edit -- it will be listed at the top of the Ticket Field Edit page.
Exibir comentário · Publicado 27 de jun. de 2017 · Bryan Flynn
0
Seguidores
0
Votos
0
Comentários