Python web services client examples

  • Release version: Xanadu
  • Updated August 1, 2024
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    Summary of Python web services client examples

    This document provides practical Python examples for integrating with ServiceNow SOAP web services using the SOAPpy library. It demonstrates how to perform common operations such as creating incidents, querying records, retrieving keys, and advanced use cases like monitoring log files and creating ECC Queue records. The focus is on leveraging Python scripts to interact programmatically with ServiceNow instances for automation and integration purposes.

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    Requirements

    • Python modules needed: fpconst, PyXML, and SOAPpy.
    • Always use the web services URL format: https://INSTANCE.service-now.com.

    Key Examples and Use Cases

    • Insert Incident: Script to create an incident record by passing parameters such as impact, urgency, priority, category, location, caller, assignment group, assigned to, short description, and comments.
    • Get Keys: Retrieves sysids of incident records filtered by a specified category, demonstrating basic authentication and querying.
    • Get Records: Fetches incident records matching a filter (e.g., category) and iterates over the results to access individual fields.
    • Get Record by sysid: Retrieves a specific incident record using its unique sysid.
    • Advanced ECC Queue Integration: Reads a log file to find lines matching a keyword ("invalid spi"), then creates ECC Queue records with XML payloads representing alerts. Includes error handling for file access and maintains state to process only new log entries.

    Practical Considerations for ServiceNow Customers

    • Use secure HTTPS URLs with correct instance naming to ensure proper connectivity.
    • Authenticate with valid ServiceNow user credentials (username/password) that have appropriate permissions for the targeted tables.
    • Enable debugging options in SOAPpy if needed to troubleshoot SOAP requests and responses.
    • For advanced scripting scenarios, maintain state between runs (e.g., last processed log byte) to avoid duplicate processing.
    • These examples illustrate how to automate incident management and event processing workflows by integrating Python scripts with ServiceNow’s SOAP API.

    Expected Outcomes

    By applying these examples, customers can programmatically create and query incident records, retrieve key identifiers, and automate alert ingestion into ServiceNow's ECC Queue. This facilitates efficient integration and automation of IT service management processes using Python-based clients.

    Examples demonstrating an integration with a Python web services client.

    Requirements

    The following examples require the installation of the following Python modules:

    insert

    This is an example of inserting an incident.
    #!/usr/bin/python
     
     from SOAPpy  import SOAPProxy
     import sys
     
     def createincident (params_dict ):
     
             # instance to send to
            instance = 'demo'
     
             # username/password
            username = 'itil'
            password = 'itil'
     
     
             # proxy - NOTE: ALWAYS use https://INSTANCE.service-now.com, not https://www.service-now.com/INSTANCE for web services URL from now on!
            proxy  = 'https://%s:%s@%s.service-now.com/incident.do?SOAP' %  (username , password , instance )
            namespace  = 'http://www.service-now.com/'
            server  = SOAPProxy (proxy , namespace )
     
             # uncomment these for LOTS of debugging output #server.config.dumpHeadersIn = 1 #server.config.dumpHeadersOut = 1 #server.config.dumpSOAPOut = 1 #server.config.dumpSOAPIn = 1
     
            response  = server. insert (impact = int (params_dict [ 'impact' ] ) , urgency = int (params_dict [ 'urgency' ] ) , priority = int (params_dict [ 'priority' ] ) , category =params_dict [ 'category' ] , location =params_dict [ 'location' ] , caller_id =params_dict [ 'user' ] , assignment_group =params_dict [ 'assignment_group' ] , assigned_to =params_dict [ 'assigned_to' ] , short_description =params_dict [ 'short_description' ] , comments =params_dict [ 'comments' ] )
     
             return response
     
    values  = { 'impact':  '1' , 'urgency':  '1' , 'priority':  '1' , 'category':  'High' , 'location':  'San Diego' , 'user':  'fred.luddy@yourcompany.com' , 'assignment_group':  'Technical Support' , 'assigned_to':  'David Loo' , 'short_description':  'An incident created using python, SOAPpy, and web services.' , 'comments':  'This a test making an incident with python.\n Isn \' t life wonderful?' }
     
    new_incident_sysid =createincident (values )
     
     print "Returned sysid: "+ repr (new_incident_sysid )

    getKeys

    This is an example of executing getKeys on the demo instance using basic authentication.
    #!/bin/env python
     
     # use the SOAPpy module from SOAPpy  import SOAPProxy
     
    username , password , instance  = 'admin' , 'admin' , 'demo'
    proxy , namespace  = 'https://username:password@www.service-now.com/'+instance+ '/incident.do?SOAP' , 'http://www.service-now.com/'
     
    server  = SOAPProxy (proxy ,namespace )
    response  = server. getKeys (category  = 'Network' )
     
     print response. sys_id. split ( ',' )

    getRecords

    In this example, we get an incident, querying for category == "Network" (with basic authentication).
    #!/bin/env python
     
     # use the SOAPpy module from SOAPpy  import SOAPProxy
     
    username , password , instance  = 'admin' , 'admin' , 'demo'
    proxy , namespace  = 'https://username:password@www.service-now.com/'+instance+ '/incident.do?SOAP' , 'http://www.service-now.com/'
     
    server  = SOAPProxy (proxy ,namespace )
    response  = server. getRecords (category  = 'Network' )
     
     for record  in response:
    	 for item  in record:
    		 print item

    get

    In this example, we get an incident record by sys_id (with basic authentication).
    #!/bin/env python
     
     # use the SOAPpy module from SOAPpy  import SOAPProxy
     
    username , password , instance  = 'admin' , 'admin' , 'demo'
    proxy , namespace  = 'https://username:password@www.service-now.com/'+instance+ '/incident.do?SOAP' , 'http://www.service-now.com/'
     
    server  = SOAPProxy (proxy ,namespace )
    response  = server. get (sys_id  = '9c573169c611228700193229fff72400' )
     
     for each  in response:
    	 print each

    Advanced

    This is an example of advanced Python script that reads a log file for a keyword invalid spi and creates an ECC Queue record where the payload is set to an alert of XML format.
    #!/bin/env python
     
     # kevin.pickard@service-now.com			2008.07.03		initial creation
     
     from SOAPpy  import SOAPProxy
     from xml. dom. minidom import getDOMImplementation
     import sys , os , socket , pickle , re
     
     # instance to send to
    instance = 'demo'
     
     # username/pass
    username = 'admin'
    password = 'admin'
     
     # log file to watch
    syslogfile = '/var/log/cisco.log.ksp'
     
     # state file
    statefile = '/tmp/syslog_ecc.state-test'
     
     # ECC queue values
    soapagent = 'SOAPpy'
    ecctopic = 'PIX Error: '
    eccname = 'Invalid SPI: '
    eccsource = 'Syslog'
     
     # regex string to match
    matchstring = 'invalid spi'
     
     try:
    	state = open (statefile , 'r' )
    	lastbyte = pickle. load (state )
    	state. close ( ) except:
    	lastbyte = 0
     
     #print 'DEBUG: lastbyte = '+str(lastbyte)
     
     try:
    	log = open (syslogfile , 'ro' ) except:
    	errortopic = 'Script Error'
    	errorname = 'Unable to open log file '+syslogfile+ '.'
    	errorpayload = 'This message was generated due to an error condition encountered in a script.  The name of the script is '+ os. path. basename ( sys. argv [ 0 ] )+ ' on server '+ socket. gethostname ( )+ '.'
     
    	proxy  = 'https://'+username+ ':'+password+ '@'+instance+ '.service-now.com/ecc_queue.do?SOAP'
    	namespace  = 'http://www.service-now.com/'
    	server  = SOAPProxy (proxy , namespace )
    	server. config. dumpSOAPOut = 1 
    	server. config. dumpSOAPIn = 1 
            response  = server. insert (agent =soapagent , topic =errortopic , name =errorname , source = sys. argv [ 0 ] , payload =errorpayload )
     
    	 sys. exit ( 1 )
     
     if lastbyte  != 0:
    	 try:
    		log. seek (lastbyte ) except IOError:
    		 pass
     
    loglines =log. readlines ( )
     
    lastbyte =log. tell ( )
     
    log. close ( )
     
    state = open (statefile , 'w' ) pickle. dump (lastbyte , state )
    state. close ( )
     
     # regex out the line
    matchedlines = [ ] for line  in loglines:
    	 if re. search (matchstring , line ) != None:
    		matchedlines. append (line )
     
     #print 'DEBUG: len->loglines = '+str(len(loglines)) #print 'DEBUG: lastbyte = '+str(lastbyte) #print 'DEBUG: matchedlines = '+str(matchedlines)
     
     if len (matchedlines ) == 0:
    	 sys. exit ( 0 )
     
    proxy  = 'https://'+username+ ':'+password+ '@'+instance+ '.service-now.com/ecc_queue.do?SOAP'
    namespace  = 'http://www.service-now.com/'
     
    server  = SOAPProxy (proxy , namespace ) #server.config.dumpSOAPOut = 1 #server.config.dumpSOAPIn = 1
     
    entriestosend = { } for line  in matchedlines:
    	device =line. split ( ) [ 3 ]
    	sourceip =line. split ( ) [- 1 ]
    	entriestosend [sourceip ] = [device , line ]
     
     for key ,value  in entriestosend. iteritems ( ):
    	 #impl=getDOMImplementation() #newdoc = impl.createDocument(None, "log_line", None) #top_element = newdoc.documentElement #text = newdoc.createTextNode(value[1]) #top_element.appendChild(text)
     
    	response  = server. insert (agent =soapagent , topic =ecctopic+value [ 0 ] , name =eccname+key , source =eccsource , payload =value [ 1 ] )