Integrations
The Integration is where most configuration and settings are stored.
An Integration defines the connection between a Process and the single system it’s connecting with. It is a record that contains all of the properties and configurations for that unique connection.
As previously stated, Integration has a many-to-one relationship with Process. This means multiple Integrations can exist for one Process and each unique integration will define the way in which the Process connects with that particular system.
Example
Incident Process - JIRA = one Integration
Incident Process - ATOS = one integration
Incident Process - SAP = one integration
Incident Process TOTAL = three integrations
Integration Fields
The Integration fields to be configured for the Integration record are as follows:
Field | Type | Description |
Name | String | The name of the integration. |
Company | Reference | The company this integration belongs to. |
Service type | String | The type of web service this integration is using (SOAP/REST). |
Process | Reference | The process this integration belongs to. |
State | String | The current state of the integration. It can be Active, Off, or Paused. |
Status | String | The current status of the integration. It can be Up, Down, or Awaiting. |
Build date | Glide Date Time | The last time the integration components were generated using the Build action. |
Application | Reference | Application containing this record. |
Active | Boolean | The integration is enabled when a connection is made active. |
Attach logs* | Boolean | Attach logs to transactions and requests. |
Attach payloads* | Boolean | Attach full inbound and outbound payloads (including attachment data) to HTTP Request records. |
Description | String | A description of what this Integration is for and what it does. |
Company
This is usually the name of the service provider being connected to, as opposed to the name of the manufacturer of the software.
Active
This field is not selectable and is controlled by the Connections. There can only be one active Connection at any time. If there is an active Connection, the Integration will be active. If there is no active Connection, the Integration will be inactive.
Attach logs/payloads
These are used for debugging purposes.
*Attach logs/payloads:
The attached logs were previously controlled by the Attach logs
and Attach payloads
checkboxes on Integration, but they are now overridden off by the Integration Enable Attachments
system property (logging attachments this way is now deprecated and has been replaced by the Unifi Operations Portal and Unifi Activity Logs).
This property acts as the master switch and effectively disables the checkboxes on the Integration.
Note: the checkboxes have been removed from the Integration form but can still be edited from the list view.
Properties Fields
Bringing the properties onto the Integration record allows for faster and more seamless configuration (particularly when dealing with multiple integrations), compared with searching for them on the [sys_properties] table.
The Properties fields to be configured for the Integration record are as follows:
Field | Type | Description |
Retry delay | Integer | The amount of time in seconds to wait before retrying a failed outbound request. |
Retry limit | Integer | The number of times sending an outbound request is attempted. |
Bond cleanup | Integer | Number of days after bond closure that all its associated Transactions, HTTP Requests and Bond Attachment records are deleted. |
Run event actions | Boolean | Should this integration run Event Actions for transactional events? |
Sync timeout | Integer | The amount of time in seconds to wait for a request to be accepted by the external system. |
Async timeout | Integer | The amount of time in seconds to wait for an asynchronous receipt. |
MID server timeout | Integer | The amount of time in seconds to wait for the MID server to respond (only applies to connections using MID servers). |
Bond cleanup
Although the associated transaction and attachment records data are deleted, Bond history will still be available. Setting the Bond cleanup
value to 0 means the cleanup is never performed.
Sync/Async/Mid server timeout
If there is no response/receipt within the time stipulated, then the request is errored. These errored requests can be rolled up to the record for them to deal with/escalate accordingly. Such insight allows the sender to remain informed of the condition of the request.
Message Configuration Fields
Messages are central to the functionality of Unifi. Upon receipt of an inbound request, Unifi will be able to identify the Message, know how to process it and subsequently what actions to perform based on the Message configurations. For that reason, it is very important that each Message within an integration be unique (more on that in the Messages section).
The Message Configuration fields to be configured for the Integration record are as follows:
Field | Type | Description |
Message format | String | Automatically pre-process incoming messages for simpler message scripting. |
Sync error message | Reference | The message to use when an inbound message cannot be processed synchronously. |
Async error message | Reference | The message to use when an inbound message cannot be processed asynchronously. |
Identify message script | Script plain | The script used to extract the unique message identifier from the incoming request payload. It identifies which message record is used to process the request. |
Message format
Choices: XML, JSON, Advanced
Sync/Async error message
In the case of a catastrophic failure (e.g. the inability to identify, access, or read an inbound request, or the inability to process the request asynchronously), this will be the message that is sent in response (which can be standard or customised to suit).
Identify message script (examples)
Unifi automatically looks for a header called X-SND-EB-Message-Name
to use as the message name. If the header is found then the Identify Message Script is not executed.
Both the payload
and headers
are passed into the script. The following example will parse the XML payload and identify the message name from the first child element of the body node:
The following is an example which returns the message name from a JSON payload:
Attachment Configuration Fields
The Attachment Configuration fields to be configured for the Integration record are as follows:
Field | Type | Description |
Max attachments per message | Integer | The maximum number of attachments allowed to be sent in each message. |
Max attachments per bond | Integer | The maximum number of attachments allowed to be sent per bond. |
Max attachments size per message | Decimal | The maximum size of all the attachments in a single message in MB. |
Max attachments size per bond | Decimal | The maximum size of all the attachments in a single bond in MB. |
Allowed content types | String | Comma separated list of attachment content types that are allowed to be sent to this integration. |
Max attachments
Setting any attachment value to -1 means there is no limit.
Allowed content types
OOTB you can send any content type (i.e. this field is empty). You may wish to limit the content type by ‘whitelisting’ (explicitly specifying the file type that is allowed) (e.g. TXT, PNG).
Notes Fields
The Notes fields to be configured for the Integration record are as follows:
Field | Type | Description |
Note bond history | Boolean | Use the ‘Note bond history’ to process bond history updates. |
Note attachment history | Boolean | Use the ‘Note attachment history’ to process attachment updates. |
Enable UI messages | Boolean | Allow information and error messages to be shown to the user as UI Notifications. Only applies to certain notifications. |
Add note script | Script plain | Script for adding integration updates to the target record. There is no need to call update() on the target. |
Note bond/attachment history
When the ‘Note… history’ checkbox is checked, the history will be promoted to the work notes fields of the record being integrated for the user to view.
Last updated