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Enhancing Webex Messaging Using Webex APIs & AppleScript
Do you remember the “Alert When Available” feature in the (old) Cisco Jabber chat menu? If not, here is a quick recap. The “Alert When Available” option configured Cisco Jabber to notify you when your contacts are available (i.e., online/active). This makes it easier to know if other people are available to respond to your messages.
For some reason, this option is missing from the Webex chat menu 🙄. So, without getting into a Jabber vs. Webex discussion, I wondered how I can enhance the Webex user experience and add that missing functionality?
What can we do.. Let’s think… 🤔
- Does Webex expose its API?… YES!
- Is there an API call to check the user connection status?… YES!
- Can I use a CLI command to trigger an API call?… YES!
Interesting! But…
- How can I add a new option to the Webex chat menu?
- What about the Webex API tokens limitation?
- The personal access token is limited to 12 hours.
- The guest user token cannot access the “status” data as it isn’t part of the organization.
- The integration token (OAuth grant using a web browser) isn’t applicable for a simple script.
I got it! 💡
- True, I cannot modify the Webex chat menu… but, can AppleScript execute a CLI (cURL) command?… YES!
- Since a WebEx Bot is part of the organization, can I create a new Bot and use its (permanent) API token?… YES!
Problem Solved! 👍
So… I created a:
- cURL command & parsing statement to get the user status.
- New Webex Bot (for an “inside-org-permanent” API token).
- AppleScript to:
- Query (via dialog box) for the user CEC ID.
- Set a five seconds loop for the cURL command.
- Display a dialog box to notify when the user becomes active.
The Code (Mac OS only) 👨💻
1 set userName to text returned of (display dialog "Enter a CEC User Name (e.g., ymeloch)" default answer "" with title "Webex - Active User Notification" with icon file "Applications:Webex.app:Contents:Resources:webexteams.icns") 2 set theAlertText to "WebbEx Teams - Active User Notification" 3 set theAlertMessage to "" & userName & " User is now active" 4 5 set n to 1 6 repeat 7 delay 5 8 set theName to do shell script "curl -s --request GET --url 'https://api.ciscospark.com/v1/people?email=" & userName & "%40cisco.com' --header 'Authorization: Bearer [webex-bot-token]' | json_pp | grep status | awk '{print $3}' | tr -dc '[:alnum:]'" 9 if theName = "active" then (display dialog theAlertMessage with title "Webex - Active User Notification" with icon file "Applications:Webex.app:Contents:Resources:webexteams.icns" buttons {"Exit"} default button "Exit" cancel button "Exit") 10 end repeat
The Code Explained
- Line #1 – Define the “userName” variable (== AppleScript display dialog with an “userName” input request). BTW, see below for more information about the Webex icon path.
- Line #2 – Define the “theAlertText” variable (== Fixed text, will be used in the main method).
- Line #3 – Define the “theAlertMessage” variable (Includes the “userName” response and fixed text).
- Line #5 & #6 – Start loop.
- Line #7 – Define delay interval.
- Line #8 – Define the “theName” variable (== The cURL command). Note the cURL GET command and parsing 👉
curl -s --request GET --url 'https://api.ciscospark.com/v1/people?email=" & userName & "%40cisco.com' --header 'Authorization: Bearer [webex-bot-token]' | json_pp | grep status | awk '{print $3}' | tr -dc '[:alnum:]'
- cURL Command Explained:
- [REST API Call] -s – Silent operation (no cURL command output printouts).
- [REST API Call] –request GET – Send a GET request.
- [REST API Call] –url – The URL of the GET request.
- Note the “& userName &” in the URL. That is where we leverage the “userName” variable from line #1.
- Note the “%40cisco.com” string in the URL (I replaced the “@cisco.com” string with a parseable string “%40cisco.com”).
- [REST API Call] –header ‘Authorization: Bearer [webex-bot-token]’ – The authorization method (Bearer) to execute the API call.
- [Parsing Statment] | json_pp – Converert the API call output to a JSON format.
- [Parsing Statment] | grep status – Search for (only) a line with the word “status”.
- [Parsing Statment] | awk ‘{print $3}’ – If a line with the word “status” is found, print (only) the third word.
- [Parsing Statment] | tr -dc ‘[:alnum:]’ – Remove non-alphanumeric characters from the previous output (“active”, 👉 active).
- Line #9 – “If” statement (looking for “active” status).
- Line #10 – End loop (once execution completed).
❗️Note: To add the Webex icon to the AppleScript dialog, I extracted the webex.app file, and located the ”webexteams.icns” file.
Demo 🎥
Disclaimers
- In order to tweak the Webex status, I used internal API’s which are always subject to change.
- The above code is “POC (Proof of Concept) Grade” as I am polling for the user status every 5 seconds until it changes. A more scalable way will be to subscribe for notification through Webex internal API (I still need to find these calls 😉).
Final thoughts
- The power of automation, innovation, and integration – Cool, right! 😎
- What is your challenge? Can you leverage automation/different technologies/programming languages to mitigate it?
- Want to learn more about APIs (== integration glue), automation, and Integration? What about cURL and AppleScript programming? Check the AIDE User Guide or get in touch with the Cross-Domain TAB team.
Special thanks to Paul Giralt for his review and feedback! 🙏
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