Using and managing OData feeds
This article explains how to set up a Devo data query as an OData feed. This will allow you to stream the data to external tools like, for example, Microsoft Excel, Tableau or Power BI. Currently, Devo feeds implement OData version 2.0.
The service root URL for OData feeds depends on your Devo domain region:
EU |
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USA |
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Set up an OData feed
Manage feeds
All the feeds that have been created in your domain are listed in the API & OData Feeds tab of the Administration → Credentials → Tokens area. Check the Authentication tokens article for more information.
OData feed parameters
You can add query string parameters to the OData feed URI to specify the data you want to retrieve. These parameters can be used to, for example, control the amount and order of the data that an OData service returns for the query identified by the URI.
OData feed URIs may include as many parameters as required, which are always prefixed with a "&" character (except the $metadata
parameter).
The following table lists the supported parameters using a feed URL for a Devo domain in the USA cloud region:
| Add the Example
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| Add the Example
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| Add the Example
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| Add the
Add Example
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| Add the Example
Note that if no timezone is specified then UTC is always used by default. In the example provided, Madrid is UTC+2 during summertime and UTC+1 during daylight savings time. |
| Add the To add this parameter to the OData feed URI, first remove the query time information at the end of the URL, then add the parameter without including the '&' character. Example
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The following is an example of an OData feed with four different parameters:
https://api-us.devo/odatav2/Query.svc/0c6f1165-4ac8-4ca4-87df-06bede2d1f53/e59f069b5bf113da8101372f50d90b8b/query?from=2018-10-02T09:40:18.224&to=2018-10-03T09:40:00&$select=eventdate,cid&$top=10&$skip=9&$format=json
In this case, you will only receive the data in the eventdate and cid columns, as specified in the select
parameter. The top
parameter indicates that only the first 10 events will be shown and the skip
parameter will make the counting start after the first nine events. As a result, only 10 events from the event number 10 will be shown. Data will be retrieved in JSON format as indicated in the format
parameter.
See the OData documentation for further details.
Working with relative time ranges
A relative date range is a period of time that is relative to the current date (last week, last month, etc). There are some rules to consider when using the relative date ranges in OData URI:
If you run a query without
from
, the request will use [dateTo - 1h, dateTo] as time range.If you run a query without
to
, the request will use [dateFrom, now] as time range.If you run a query without
from
andto
, the request will use [now - 1h, now] as time range.If you run a query using
to
→from
, the request will use [from, now] as time range.If you run a query using
now
→from
, the request will use [now - 1h, now] as time range
See below the parameters you can add to your OData URI to apply relative date ranges.
From (defines the start date)
Relative - It retrieves the current time (day, month, hour, minutes and seconds) excluding a specified range of days/hours. The valid range dates you can use are days(d) and hours(h).
Example
Suppose the current date is 22/08/2016 15:20:00.
&from=1d → 21/08/2016 15:20:00
&from=7d → 15/08/2016 15:20:00
&from=24h → 21/08/2016 15:20:00
&from=11h → 22/08/2016 04:20:00
&from=26h → 21/08/2016 13:20:00
Absolute - The only valid range date you can use is days(d).
Example
Suppose the current date is 22/08/2016 15:20:00.
&from=1ad → 21/08/2016 00:00:00
&from=7ad → 15/08/2016 00:00:00
Specific - They are specific filters using the current date and hour,but the minutes and seconds are setup as 0.
Example
Suppose the current date is 22/08/2016 15:20:00.
the result will be 22/08/2016 00:00:00
To (defines the end date)
Relative - The valid range dates you can use are days(d) and hours.
Absolute - The only valid range dates you can use are days(d).
Specific - Based on specific operators such as end of day, end of month, etc.
&to=now - it retrieves the current hour, minutes and seconds.
&to=endday - covers the range time between "from" date and the end of the day. It's the same as "&to=1ad".
&to=endmonth - covers the range time between the current date and the end of the month.