I am currently trying to automate new user creation in our Zendesk ticketing system using Powershell and Curl. The problem I am running into is that the curl json body is e
Try the following:
$Firstname = "Test"
$Lastname = "User"
$email= 'user@test.org'
$json=@"
{\"user\": {\"name\": \"$Firstname $Lastname\", \"email\": \"$email\"}}
"@
curl.exe https://mydomain.zendesk.com/api/v2/users.json -d $json -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -X POST -v -u myuser:mypass
Using a double-quoted here-string @"<newline>...<newline>"@
makes specifying embedded "
instances easy (no escaping for the sake of PowerShell's own syntax required), while still expanding variable references - see the docs online or Get-Help about_Quoting_Rules
.
You're clearly aware of the - unfortunate - additional need to \
-escape the "
instances, but just to explain why that is needed:
When passing arguments to an external program, PowerShell, after its own parsing and interpolation, conditionally wraps the resulting arguments in double quotes when concatenating them to form the argument list (a single string) to pass to the external utility. Unfortunately, this can result in embedded "
instances getting discarded, and the only way to preserve them reliably is to \
-escape them - see this answer for more information.
If you wanted to do it inline with a regular double-quoted string, you'd have to escape the "
instances for PowerShell too (as `"
), resulting in the awkward combination \`"
:
"{\`"user\`": {\`"name\`": \`"$Firstname $Lastname\`", \`"email\`": \`"$email\`"}}"
Afterthought:
Ryan himself points out in a comment that using a hashtable to construct the data and then converting it to JSON with ConvertTo-Json
and feeding it to curl
via stdin is an alternative that avoids the quoting headaches:
# Create data as PS hashtable literal.
$data = @{ user = @{ name = "$Firstname $Lastname"; email = "$adUsername@mydomain.org" } }
# Convert to JSON with ConvertTo-Json and pipe to `curl` via *stdin* (-d '@-')
$data | ConvertTo-Json -Compress | curl.exe mydomain.zendesk.com/api/v2/users.json -d '@-' -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -v -u myuser:mypass
I think we can use here-string as json body for Invoke-RestMethod as below
$bufferTime = 5
$requestBody = @"
{
"size": 0,
"aggs": {
"last_x_min": {
"filter": {
"range": {
"@timestamp": {
"gte": "now-$($bufferTime)m",
"lte": "now"
}
}
},
"aggs": {
"value_agg": {
"avg": {
"field": "time-taken"
}
}
}
}
}
}
"@
$esResponse = Invoke-RestMethod -URI http://locahost:9200 -TimeoutSec 15 -Method Post -ContentType 'application/json' -Body $requestBody
This is the script I use to query Elasticsearch. No need to escape double quotes.