Is there any way to set the collection where an NFT should be included upon mint, from its metadata on my back-end ( node + nestjs )?
I don't see anything about this on their docs website and I want to get rid of these weird looking collections which OpenSea creates by default for every new ERC721/ERC1155 contract.
Related
I'am currently playing around with the Couchbase Sync-Gateway and have built a demo app.
What is the intended behavior if a user logs in with the same username on a different device (which has an empty database) or if he deleted the local database?
I'am expecting that all the data from the server should get synced back to the clients.
Is this correct?
My problem is that if i'am deleting the database or login from a different device, nothing will get synced.
Ok i figured it out and it's exactly how i thought it would be.
If i log in from a different device i get all the data synced automatically.
My problem was the missing sync function. I thought it will use a default and route all documents to the public channel automatically.
I'am now using the following simple sync-function:
"sync": `function (doc, oldDoc) {
channel('!');
access('demo#example.com', '*');
}`
This will simply route all documents to the public channel and grant my demo-user access to it.
I think this shouldn't be used in production but it's a good starting point for playing around.
Now everything is working fine.
Edit: I've now found the missing info:
https://docs.couchbase.com/sync-gateway/current/configuration-properties.html#databases-this_db-sync
If you don't supply a sync function, Sync Gateway uses the following default sync function
...
The channels property is an array of strings that contains the names of the channels to which the document belongs. If you do not include a channels property in a document, the document does not appear in any channels.
I have 2 firestore collections - crews/{crew}/clients and crews/{crew}/pros. If a new client registers and a new document is created, I want to search collection pros for pros working the matching sector and living within 5 km (of the new client), and send notification to the pros filtered. In order to implement that in cloud functions,
I installed geofirestore using npm, saved crews/{crew}/pros like this;
https://i.stack.imgur.com/YwAFO.png
but after executing this function, I have error message on cloud functions console like this;
Error: Registration token(s) provided to sendToDevice() must be a non-empty string or a non-empty array
Is there anything wrong with my firestore data structure? Thank you.
I found that this data structure was correct, because I could get notification to work with this data structure. I tried another structure like this;
https://i.stack.imgur.com/vtB5X.jpg
However, it gave me another error.
Hope somebody can get me past this point... because I spend pretty much time on it and still not working.
Short story is that I want to use Azure Notification Hub for my Xamarin.Forms app.
It want's these info to work:
That's all good and I got all of them under control, expect the Token one.
Ok, so I follow the Microsoft docs on the subject:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/notification-hubs/notification-hubs-push-notification-http2-token-authentification
I follow along and got things under controls I think, until I get to:
"Authentication token"
Here it says:
The authentication token can be downloaded after you generate a token for your application. For details on how to generate this token, refer to Appleās Developer documentation.
Like it's no big deal and then it links to this page, which is suppose to help me. Read through it, clicked the links etc. read stuff.
I end up on this page: Establishing a Token-Based Connection to APNs
And the the craziness and confusion really kicks off for me, because, it then says, like it's the most common thing in the world:
Encrypt the resulting JSON data using your authentication token signing key and the specified algorithm
It doesn't really explain much, other than link to the jwt.io tool.
Well, that would have been great if I could make the tool work...
On the surface it's pretty easy, as the docs explains what to put in where, so I do that:
So the "header" and the "payload" is filled in and I assume it's correct - however, at the bottom I clearly need to put in some keys for this to be able to decrypted correctly on the other end...the question what do I put in here?
When I created my key in the Apple Developer portal, I of cause downloded the .p8 file, which I can see contains my PRIVATE key...but I have 2 problems.
Putting that into this jwt.io tool, result in a "invalid signature" right away, and I have no idea what to put into the "PUBLIC KEY" part.
So, what am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance and really hope somebody can help me, as I'm starting to go crazy over this, "tiny" step in the development that have been taking WAY too long now.
At the bottom of jwt.io there are libraries you can use to encrypt the token on your server. For example, this php library: https://github.com/lcobucci/jwt/blob/3.3/README.md
About public key. I think it's the KeyID that is the public key that APNs uses to verify. You only need the private key to generate the token. It goes like this in this php sample:
$token = (new Builder())->issuedBy('http://example.com') // Configures the issuer (iss claim)
->permittedFor('http://example.org') // Configures the audience (aud claim)
->identifiedBy('4f1g23a12aa', true) // Configures the id (jti claim), replicating as a header item
->issuedAt($time) // Configures the time that the token was issue (iat claim)
->canOnlyBeUsedAfter($time + 60) // Configures the time that the token can be used (nbf claim)
->expiresAt($time + 3600) // Configures the expiration time of the token (exp claim)
->withClaim('uid', 1) // Configures a new claim, called "uid"
->getToken($signer, $privateKey); // Retrieves the generated token
Just to whoever stumbles upon this question.
The token field in the Azure Notification Hubs Settings is the private key which you will find inside the .p8 file you downloaded from Apple Developer Account for Universal APN.
As for the JWT encryption, you need that when you sending a request to apple's apn server directly. You will need to send a Bearer token by encrypting the header and payload ( specifications are in apple's website). The encryption is done by crypto libraries, using algorithm ES256 ( only one supported for APN ) and the signing key is the token we mentioned above, that is the private key in the .p8. This creates a JWT that you include in your Authorization header for the request to APN server
I'm building an application that stores files into the FIWARE Object Storage. I don't quite understand what is the correct way of storing files into the storage.
The code python code snippet below taken from the Object Storage - User and Programmers Guide shows 2 ways of doing it:
def store_text(token, auth, container_name, object_name, object_text):
headers = {"X-Auth-Token": token}
# 1. version
#body = '{"mimetype":"text/plain", "metadata":{}, "value" : "' + object_text + '"}'
# 2. version
body = object_text
url = auth + "/" + container_name + "/" + object_name
return swift_request('PUT', url, headers, body)
The 1. version confuses me, because when I first looked at the only Node.js module (repo: fiware-object-storage) that works with Object Storage, it seemed to use 1. version. As the module was making calls to the old (v.1.1) API version instead of the presumably newest (v.2.0), referencing to the python example, not sure if that is an outdated version of doing it or not.
As I played more with the module, realised it didn't work and the code for it was a total mess. So I forked the project and quickly understood that I will need rewrite it form the ground up, taking the above mention python example from the usage guide as an reference. Link to my repo.
As of writing this the only methods that aren't implement is the object storage (PUT) and object fetching (GET).
Had some addition questions about the Object Storage which I sent to fiware-lab-help#lists.fiware.org, but haven't heard anything back so asking them here.
Haven't got much experience with writing API libraries. Should I need to worry about auth token expiring? I presume it is not needed to make a new authentication, every time we interact with storage. The authentication should happen once when server is starting-up (we create a instance) and it internally keeps it. Should I implement some kind of mechanism that refreshes the token?
Does the tenant id change? From the quote below is presume that getting a tenant I just a one time deal, then later you can use it in the config to make less authentication calls.
A valid token is required to access an object store. This section
describes how to get a valid token assuming an identity management
system compatible with OpenStack Keystone is being used. If the
username, password and tenant details are known, only step 3 is
required. source
During the authentication when fetching tenants how should I select the "right" one? For now i'm just taking the first one similar as the example code does.
Is it true that a object storage container belongs to only a single region?
Use only what you call version 2. Ignore your version 1. It is commented out in the example. It should be removed from the documentation.
(1) The token will be valid for some period of time. This could be an hour or a day, depending on the setup. This period of time should be specified in the token that is returned by the authentication service. The token needs to be periodically refreshed.
(2) The tenant id does not change.
(3) Typically only one tenant id is returned. It is possible, however, that you were assigned more than one id, in which case you have to pick which one you are currently using. Containers typically belong to a single tenant and are not shared between tenants.
(4) Containers are typically limited to a single region. This may change in the future when multi-region support for a container is added to Swift.
Solved my troubles and created the NPM module that works with the FIWARE Object Storage: https://github.com/renarsvilnis/fiware-object-storage-ge
I've successfully installed and run the Google Drive Quick Start application called DriveCommandLine. I've also adapted it a little to GET file info for one of the files in my Drive account.
What I would like to do now is save the credentials somehow and re-use them without the user having to visit a web page each time to get an authorization code. I have checked out this page with instructions to Retrieve and Use OAuth 2.0 credentials. In order to use the example class (MyClass), I have modified the line in DriveCommandLine where the Credential object is instantiated:
Credential credential = MyClass.getCredentials(code, "");
This results in the following exception being thrown:
java.lang.NullPointerException
at com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull(Preconditions.java:187)
at com.google.api.client.json.jackson.JacksonFactory.createJsonParser(JacksonFactory.java:84)
at com.google.api.client.json.JsonFactory.fromInputStream(JsonFactory.java:247)
at com.google.api.client.googleapis.auth.oauth2.GoogleClientSecrets.load(GoogleClientSecrets.java:168)
at googledrive.MyClass.getFlow(MyClass.java:145)
at googledrive.MyClass.exchangeCode(MyClass.java:166)
at googledrive.MyClass.getCredentials(MyClass.java:239)
at googledrive.DriveCommandLine.<init>(DriveCommandLine.java:56)
at googledrive.DriveCommandLine.main(DriveCommandLine.java:115)
I've been looking at these APIs (Google Drive and OAuth) for 2 days now and have made very little progress. I'd really appreciate some help with the above error and the problem of getting persistent credentials in general.
This whole structure seems unnecessarily complicated to me. Anybody care to explain why I can't just create a simple Credential object by passing in my Google username and password?
Thanks,
Brian O Carroll, Dublin, Ireland
* Update *
Ok, I've just gotten around the above error and now I have a new one.
The way I got around the first problem was by modifying MyClass.getFlow(). Instead of creating a GoogleClientServices object from a json file, I have used a different version of GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Builder that allows you to enter the client ID and client secret directly as Strings:
flow = new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Builder(httpTransport, jsonFactory, "<MY CLIENT ID>", "<MY CLIENT SECRET>", SCOPES).setAccessType("offline").setApprovalPrompt("force").build();
The problem I have now is that I get the following error when I try to use flow (GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow object) to exchange the authorization code for the Credentials object:
An error occurred: com.google.api.client.auth.oauth2.TokenResponseException: 400 Bad Request
{
"error" : "invalid_scope"
}
googledrive.MyClass$CodeExchangeException
at googledrive.MyClass.exchangeCode(MyClass.java:185)
at googledrive.MyClass.getCredentials(MyClass.java:262)
at googledrive.DriveCommandLine.<init>(DriveCommandLine.java:56)
at googledrive.DriveCommandLine.main(DriveCommandLine.java:115)
Is there some other scope I should be using for this? I am currently using the array of scopes provided with MyClass:
private static final List<String> SCOPES = Arrays.asList(
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.file",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile");
Thanks!
I feel your pain. I'm two months in and still getting surprised.
Some of my learnings...
When you request user permissions, specify "offline=true". This will ("sometimes" sic) return a refreshtoken, which is as good as a password with restricted permissions. You can store this and reuse it at any time (until the user revokes it) to fetch an access token.
My feeling is that the Google SDKs are more of a hinderence than a help. One by one, I've stopped using them and now call the REST API directly.
On your last point, you can (just) use the Google clientlogin protocol to access the previous generation of APIs. However this is totally deprecated and will shortly be turned off. OAuth is designed to give fine grained control of authorisation which is intrinsically complex. So although I agree it's complicated, I don't think it's unnecessarily so. We live in a complicated world :-)
Your and mine experiences show that the development community is still in need of a consolidated document and recipes to get this stuff into our rear-view mirrors so we can focus on the task at hand.
Oath2Scopes is imported as follows:
import com.google.api.services.oauth2.Oauth2Scopes;
You need to have the jar file 'google-api-services-oauth2-v2-rev15-1.8.0-beta.jar' in your class path to access that package. It can be downloaded here.
No, I don't know how to get Credentials without having to visit the authorization URL at least once and copy the code. I've modified MyClass to store and retrieve credentials from a database (in my case, it's a simple table that contains userid, accesstoken and refreshtoken). This way I only have to get the authorization code once and once I get the access/refresh tokens, I can reuse them to make a GoogleCredential object. Here's how Imake the GoogleCredential object:
GoogleCredential credential = new GoogleCredential.Builder().setJsonFactory(jsonFactory)
.setTransport(httpTransport).setClientSecrets(clientid, clientsecret).build();
credential.setAccessToken(accessToken);
credential.setRefreshToken(refreshToken);
Just enter your clientid, clientsecret, accessToken and refreshToken above.
I don't really have a whole lot of time to separate and tidy up my entire code to post it up here but if you're still having problems, let me know and I'll see what I can do. Although, you are effectively asking a blind man for directions. My understanding of this whole system is very sketchy!
Cheers,
Brian
Ok, I've finally solved the second problem above and I'm finally getting a working GoogleCredential object with an access token and a refresh token.
I kept trying to solve the scopes problem by modifying the list of scopes in MyClass (the one that manages credentials). In the end I needed to adjust the scopes in my modified version of DriveCommandLine (the one that's originally used to get an authorization code). I added 2 scopes from Oauth2Scopes:
GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow flow = new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Builder(
httpTransport, jsonFactory, CLIENT_ID, CLIENT_SECRET,
Arrays.asList(DriveScopes.DRIVE, Oauth2Scopes.USERINFO_EMAIL, Oauth2Scopes.USERINFO_PROFILE))
.setAccessType("offline").setApprovalPrompt("force").build();
Adding the scopes for user information allowed me to get the userid later in MyClass. I can now use the userid to store the credentials in a database for re-use (without having to get the user to go to a URL each time). I also set the access type to "offline" as suggested by pinoyyid.