| Integration Workbook |
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| Integration Workbook, Summer ’15 |
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| @salesforcedocs |
| Last updated: June 30, 2015 |
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| © Copyright 2000–2015 salesforce.com, inc. All rights reserved. Salesforce is a registered trademark of salesforce.com, inc., |
| as are other names and marks. Other marks appearing herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. |
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| CONTENTS |
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| Force.com Integration Workbook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 |
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| Before You Begin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 |
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| Tutorial #1: Create a New Heroku Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 |
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| Step 1: Clone the GitHub Project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 |
| Step 2: Create a Heroku Project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 |
| Step 3: Test the Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 |
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| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 |
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| Step 1: Create an External ID Field on Invoice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 |
| Step 2: Create a Remote Site Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 |
| Step 3: Create an Integration Apex Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 |
| Step 4: Test the @future Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 |
| Step 5: Create a Trigger to Call the @future Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 |
| Step 6: Test the Complete Integration Path . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 |
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| Tutorial #3: Update the Heroku App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 |
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| Step 1: Configure Your Connected App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 |
| Step 2: Update Your Application with a New Branch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 |
| Step 3: View the Invoice Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 |
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| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com Canvas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 |
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| Step 1: Update your Application with a New Branch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 |
| Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and Enable the App for Force.com Canvas . . . . . . . . . 16 |
| Step 3: Configure Access to Your Force.com Canvas App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 |
| Step 4: Make Your Force.com Canvas App Available from the Chatter Tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 |
| Step 5: Use Visualforce to Display the Canvas App on a Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 |
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| FORCE.COM INTEGRATION WORKBOOK |
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| One of the most frequent tasks Force.com developers undertake is integrating Force.com apps with existing applications. The tutorials |
| within this workbook are designed to introduce the technologies and concepts required to achieve this functionality. |
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| The Force.com Integration Workbook is intended to be the companion to the Force.com Workbook. The series of tutorials provided here |
| extend the Warehouse application by connecting it with a cloud-based fulfillment app. |
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| Intended Audience |
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| This workbook is intended for developers who are new to the Force.com platform but have basic working knowledge in Java. |
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| Tell Me More.... |
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| This workbook is designed so that you can go through the steps as quickly as possible. At the end of some steps, there is an optional |
| Tell Me More section with supporting information. |
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| • You can find the latest version of this and other workbooks at |
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| https://developer.salesforce.com/page/Force.com_workbook. |
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| • To learn more about Force.com and to access a rich set of resources, visit Salesforce Developers at |
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| https://developer.salesforce.com. |
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| 1 |
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| BEFORE YOU BEGIN |
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| Before you begin the tutorials, you’ll need to install the Warehouse data model in your organization, create a Heroku developer account, |
| and install the Heroku Toolbelt software on your local workstation. |
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| Step 1: Install the Warehouse Data Model |
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| This workbook uses a set of objects that represent a simple warehouse management system. To install these objects into your developer |
| organization: |
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| 1. |
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| If you don’t have a Developer Edition account, sign up for one at http://sforce.co/1ugNn2R. |
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| 2. Navigate to https://login.salesforce.com/packaging/installPackage.apexp?p0=04ti0000000Pi7P in your browser. |
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| 3. Log in using your Developer Edition organization username and password. |
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| 4. On the Package Installation Details page, click Continue. |
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| 5. Click Next. On the Security Level page, click Next. On the following page, click Install. |
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| 6. You’ll also want to add some sample records. Select the Warehouse app from the drop-down app menu in the upper-right corner |
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| of your current Salesforce page. |
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| 7. Click the Data tab, and then click Create Data to add sample records. |
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| Note: After you’ve gone through this workbook, you can uninstall the Warehouse data model and sample data from your |
| organization by navigating to Installed Packages under Setup and deleting the Warehouse package. |
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| Step 2: Create a Heroku Account |
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| Heroku is a cloud application platform separate from Force.com. It provides a powerful Platform as a Service for deploying applications |
| in a multitude of languages, including Java. It also enables you to easily deploy your applications with industry-standard tools, such as |
| Git. If you don’t already have a Heroku account you can create a free account as follows: |
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| 1. Navigate to http://heroku.com. |
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| 2. Click Sign Up. |
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| 3. Enter your email address. |
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| 4. Wait a few minutes for the confirmation email and follow the steps included in the email. |
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| Step 3: Install the Heroku Toolbelt |
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| The Heroku Toolbelt is a free set of software tools that you’ll need to work with Heroku. To install the Heroku Toolbelt: |
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| 1. Navigate to https://toolbelt.heroku.com. |
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| 2. Select your development platform (Mac OS X, Windows, Debian/Ubuntu). |
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| 3. Click the download button. |
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| 4. After the download finishes, run the downloaded install package on your local workstation and follow the steps to install. |
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| 2 |
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| TUTORIAL #1: CREATE A NEW HEROKU APPLICATION |
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| Heroku provides a powerful Platform as a Service for deploying applications in a multitude of languages, including Java. In this tutorial, |
| you create a Web application using the Java Spring MVC framework to mimic handling fulfillment requests from our Warehouse |
| application. |
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| Familiarity with Java is helpful, but not required for this exercise. The tutorial starts with an application template to get you up and |
| running. You then walk through the steps to securely integrate the application with the Force.com platform. |
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| Step 1: Clone the GitHub Project |
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| Git is a distributed source control system with an emphasis on speed and ease of use. Heroku integrates directly into Git, allowing for |
| continuous deployment of your application by pushing changes into a Heroku repository. GitHub is a Web-based hosting service for Git |
| repositories. |
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| You start with a pre-existing Spring MVC-based application stored on GitHub. Then, as you make changes, deploy them into your Heroku |
| account and see your updates available online via Heroku’s cloud framework. |
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| 1. Open a command line terminal. For Mac OS X users, this can be done by going to the Terminal program, under |
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| Applications/Utilities. For PC users, this can be done by going to the Start Menu, and typing cmd into the Run dialog. |
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| 2. Once in the command line terminal, change to a directory where you want to download the example app. For example, if your |
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| directory is “development,” type cd development. |
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| 3. Execute the following command: |
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| git clone https://github.com/sbob-sfdc/spring-mvc-fulfillment-base |
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| Git downloads the existing project into a new folder, spring-mvc-fulfillment-base. |
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| Step 2: Create a Heroku Project |
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| Now that you have the project locally, you need a place to deploy it that is accessible on the Web. In this step you deploy the app on |
| Heroku. |
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| 1. |
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| In the command line terminal, change directory to the spring-mvc-fulfillment-base folder you created in the last step: |
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| cd spring-mvc-fulfillment-base |
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| 2. Execute the following command to log in to Heroku (followed by Heroku login credentials, if necessary): |
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| heroku login |
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| Heroku uses Git with SSH to deploy code. If you haven’t used SSH on this machine, you’ll need to create a public key after you provide |
| your Heroku login credentials. On Microsoft Windows, you might need to add your Git directory to your system path before you can |
| create a public key. |
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| 3. Execute the following command to create a new application on Heroku: |
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| heroku create |
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| 3 |
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| Tutorial #1: Create a New Heroku Application |
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| Step 3: Test the Application |
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| Heroku creates a local Git repository as well as a new repository on its hosting framework, where you can push applications, and |
| adds the definition for that remote deployment for your local Git repository to understand. This makes it easy to leverage Git for |
| source control, make local edits, and deploy your application to the Heroku cloud. |
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| All application names on Heroku must be unique, so you’ll see messages like the following when Heroku creates a new app: |
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| Creating quiet-planet-3215... done |
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| Important: The output above shows that the new application name is quiet-planet-3215. You might want to copy |
| and paste the generated name into a text file or otherwise make a note of it. Throughout this workbook, there are references |
| to the application name that look like {appname} that should be replaced with your application name. So, if your application |
| name is quiet-planet-3215, when a tutorial step prompts you to enter a URL with the format |
| https://{appname}.herokuapp.com/_auth, use: |
| https://quiet-planet-3215.herokuapp.com/_auth. |
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| 4. To deploy the local code to Heroku, execute the following command: |
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| git push heroku master |
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| If prompted, select Yes to verify the authenticity of heroku.com. The deployment process will take a while as it copies files, grabs |
| any required dependencies, compiles, and then deploys your application. |
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| 5. Once the process is complete, you can preview the existing application by executing: |
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| heroku open |
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| You can also simply open https://{appname}.herokuapp.com in a browser. |
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| You now have a new Heroku application in the cloud. The first page should look like this: |
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| Tell Me More... |
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| Scroll back through the terminal log to the git push command, and you’ll see some magic. Early on, Heroku detects that the push |
| is a Spring MVC app, so it installs Maven, builds the app, and then gets it running for you, all with just a single command. |
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| Step 3: Test the Application |
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| This step shows you how to take your application for a quick test run to verify it’s working. |
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| 1. |
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| In a browser tab or window, navigate to https://{appname}.herokuapp.com. |
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| 2. Click Ajax @Controller Example. |
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| 4 |
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| Tutorial #1: Create a New Heroku Application |
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| Summary |
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| 3. |
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| In another browser tab or window, open the Warehouse application on your Force.com instance. |
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| 4. Click Invoices and then select an existing invoice or create a new one if necessary. |
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| 5. |
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| In the browser URL bar, select the invoice record ID, which is everything after salesforce.com in the URL. It should look |
| something like a01E0000000diKc. Copy the ID to your clipboard. |
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| 6. Return to the browser window or tab showing your Heroku application. |
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| 7. Paste the invoice record ID into the field under Id. |
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| 8. Click Create. An order is created with the Invoice ID. Note that this order is distinct from a Salesforce order record. |
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| 9. Click OK. Your page looks something like: |
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| Summary |
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| Heroku’s polyglot design lets you easily deploy your applications with industry-standard tools, such as Git. Typically, teams use local |
| development environments, like Eclipse, and in fact Heroku has released an Eclipse plug-in for seamless integration with Eclipse. You |
| can also interact with Heroku on the command line and directly access logs and performance tools for your applications. |
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| 5 |
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| TUTORIAL #2: CONNECT THE WAREHOUSE APP WITH AN |
| EXTERNAL SERVICE |
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| Force.com offers several ways to integrate with external systems. For example, without writing any code, you can declare workflow rules |
| that send outbound messages. You can implement more complex scenarios programmatically with Apex code. |
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| This tutorial teaches you how to create a Web service callout to integrate the Warehouse app with the fulfillment application you deployed |
| in Tutorial 1. This fulfillment system, written in Java, is hosted on Heroku, but it could be any application with a Web service interface. |
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| The following diagram illustrates the example scenario requirements: when an invoice’s status changes to Closed in your Force.com |
| system, the system sends a JSON-formatted message to the order fulfillment service running on Heroku, which then returns an order |
| ID to the Force.com system. The order ID is then added to the invoice. |
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| Step 1: Create an External ID Field on Invoice |
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| To start, create a custom field in the invoice custom object that can store the order ID returned by the Java app running on Heroku. The |
| field is an index into an external system, so it makes sense to make it an External ID. |
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| 1. Log in to your Salesforce organization. |
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| 2. Go to the Invoice Statement custom object from Setup by clicking Create > Objects > Invoice. |
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| 3. Scroll down to Custom Fields & Relationships, and then click New. |
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| 4. Select the Text field type, and then click Next. |
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| 5. Enter OrderId as the field label, and then enter 6 as the field length. Accept the default field name OrderId. |
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| 6. Select the External ID checkbox, and then click Next. |
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| 7. Click Next to accept the defaults, and then click Save. |
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| Step 2: Create a Remote Site Record |
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| The Force.com platform implements very conservative security controls. By default, Force.com prohibits callouts to external sites. This |
| step teaches you how to register the Heroku Java site in the Remote Site Settings page. |
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| 1. From Setup, click Security Controls > Remote Site Settings. |
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| 2. Click New Remote Site. |
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| 6 |
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| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
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| Step 3: Create an Integration Apex Class |
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| 3. |
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| 4. |
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| In the Remote Site Name field, enter FulfillmentWebService (no spaces). |
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| In the Remote Site URL field, enter https://{appname}.herokuapp.com. |
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| 5. Click Save to accept the remaining default values. |
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| Now any Apex code in your app can call the fulfillment Web service that you deployed in Tutorial 1. |
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| Tell Me More... |
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| Just for fun, you can delete this remote site record and create and test the callout in Step 3 and Step 4 below to observe the error message |
| that is generated when an app attempts to call a URL without permission. Don’t forget to come back and add the remote site record |
| again, though! |
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| Step 3: Create an Integration Apex Class |
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| Now that your app can access an external URL, it's time to implement the callout. Apex triggers are not permitted to make synchronous |
| Web service calls. This restriction ensures that a long-running Web service doesn’t hold a lock on a record within your Force.com app. |
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| The steps in this tutorial teach you how to build out the correct approach, which is to create an Apex class with an asynchronous method |
| that uses the @future annotation, and then build a trigger to call the method as necessary. When the trigger calls the asynchronous |
| method, Force.com queues the call, executes the trigger, and then releases any record locks. Eventually, when the asynchronous call |
| reaches the top of the queue, Force.com executes the call and posts the invoice to the order fulfillment Web service running on Heroku. |
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| Start by adding the code for the asynchronous method in a new Apex class. |
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| 1. From Setup, click Develop > Apex Classes. |
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| 2. Click New and paste in the following code: |
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| public class Integration { |
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| // The ExternalOrder class holds a string and integer |
| // received from the external fulfillment system. |
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| public class ExternalOrder { |
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| public String id {get; set;} |
| public Integer order_number {get; set;} |
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| } |
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| // The postOrder method integrates the local Force.com invoicing system |
| // with a remote fulfillment system; specifically, by posting data about |
| // closed orders to the remote system. Functionally, the method 1) prepares |
| // JSON-formatted data to send to the remote service, 2) makes an HTTP call |
| // to send the prepared data to the remote service, and then 3) processes |
| // any JSON-formatted data returned by the remote service to update the |
| // local Invoices with the corresponding external IDs in the remote system. |
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| @future (callout=true) // indicates that this is an asynchronous call |
| public static void postOrder(List<Id> invoiceIds) { |
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| // 1) see above |
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| // Create a JSON generator object |
| JSONGenerator gen = JSON.createGenerator(true); |
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| 7 |
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| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
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| Step 3: Create an Integration Apex Class |
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| // open the JSON generator |
| gen.writeStartArray(); |
| // interate through the list of invoices passed in to the call |
| // writing each invoice ID to the array |
| for (Id invoiceId : invoiceIds) { |
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| gen.writeStartObject(); |
| gen.writeStringField('id', invoiceId); |
| gen.writeEndObject(); |
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| } |
| // close the JSON generator |
| gen.writeEndArray(); |
| // create a string from the JSON generator |
| String jsonOrders = gen.getAsString(); |
| // debugging call, which you can check in debug logs |
| System.debug('jsonOrders: ' + jsonOrders); |
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| // 2) see above |
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| // create an HTTPrequest object |
| HttpRequest req = new HttpRequest(); |
| // set up the HTTP request with a method, endpoint, header, and body |
| req.setMethod('POST'); |
| // DON'T FORGET TO UPDATE THE FOLLOWING LINE WITH YOUR APP NAME |
| req.setEndpoint('https://{appname}.herokuapp.com/order'); |
| req.setHeader('Content-Type', 'application/json'); |
| req.setBody(jsonOrders); |
| // create a new HTTP object |
| Http http = new Http(); |
| // create a new HTTP response for receiving the remote response |
| // then use it to send the configured HTTPrequest |
| HTTPResponse res = http.send(req); |
| // debugging call, which you can check in debug logs |
| System.debug('Fulfillment service returned '+ res.getBody()); |
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| // 3) see above |
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| // Examine the status code from the HTTPResponse |
| // If status code != 200, write debugging information, done |
| if (res.getStatusCode() != 200) { |
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| System.debug('Error from ' + req.getEndpoint() + ' : ' + |
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| res.getStatusCode() + ' ' + res.getStatus()); |
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| } |
| // If status code = 200, update each Invoice |
| // with the external ID returned by the fulfillment service. |
| else { |
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| // Retrieve all of the Invoice records |
| // originally passed into the method call to prep for update. |
| List<Invoice__c> invoices = |
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| [SELECT Id FROM Invoice__c WHERE Id IN :invoiceIds]; |
| // Create a list of external orders by deserializing the |
| // JSON data returned by the fulfillment service. |
| List<ExternalOrder> orders = |
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| (List<ExternalOrder>)JSON.deserialize(res.getBody(), |
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| List<ExternalOrder>.class); |
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| 8 |
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| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
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| Step 4: Test the @future Method |
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| // Create a map of Invoice IDs from the retrieved |
| // invoices list. |
| Map<Id, Invoice__c> invoiceMap = |
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| new Map<Id, Invoice__c>(invoices); |
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| // Update the order numbers in the invoices |
| for ( ExternalOrder order : orders ) { |
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| Invoice__c invoice = invoiceMap.get(order.id); |
| invoice.OrderId__c = String.valueOf(order.order_number); |
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| } |
| // Update all invoices in the database with a bulk update |
| update invoices; |
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| } |
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| } |
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| } |
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| Don’t forget to replace {appname} with your Heroku application name. |
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| 3. Click Save. |
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| This code collects the necessary data for the remote service, makes the remote service HTTP call, and processes any data returned by |
| the remote service to update local invoices with the corresponding external IDs. See the embedded comments in the code for details. |
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| Step 4: Test the @future Method |
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| Before creating a trigger that calls an @future method, it’s best practice to interactively test the method by itself and validate that |
| the remote site settings are correctly configured. To test the method interactively, you can use the Developer Console. |
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| 1. Go to the Developer Console by clicking Your Name > Developer Console. |
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| 2. Click Debug > Open Execute Anonymous Window, and then enter the following code. |
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| // Get an Invoice__c for testing |
| Invoice__c invoice = [SELECT ID FROM Invoice__c LIMIT 1]; |
| // Call the postOrder method to test the asynchronous call |
| Integration.postOrder(new List<Id>{invoice.id}); |
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| This small snippet of Apex code retrieves the ID for a single invoice and calls your @future method using this ID. |
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| 3. Select the Open Log checkbox. |
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| 4. Click Execute. You should see two entries in the logs at the bottom of the page. Double click the second line — it should have |
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| Future Handler as its operation and a status of Success. |
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| 9 |
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| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
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| Step 5: Create a Trigger to Call the @future Method |
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| 5. Select the Filter checkbox under the Execution Log, above the Logs list, and then type DEBUG as the filter text. Scroll down and |
| double click the last line of the execution log. You should see a popup window with the response from the fulfillment Web service |
| that looks something like: |
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| 08:08:42:962 USER_DEBUG [58]|DEBUG|Fulfillment service returned |
| [{"order_number":2,"id":"a01E0000009RpppIAC"}] |
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| Now that you have a functional @future method that can call the fulfillment Web service, it's time to tie things together with a trigger. |
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| Step 5: Create a Trigger to Call the @future Method |
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| To create a trigger on the invoice object that calls the Integration.postOrder method that was created in Step 3, complete |
| the following steps: |
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| 1. Go to the invoice custom object from Setup by clicking Create > Objects > Invoice. |
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| 2. Scroll down to Triggers, click New, and then paste the following code in place of the trigger skeleton: |
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| trigger HandleOrderUpdate on Invoice__c (after update) { |
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|
| // Create a map of IDs to all of the *old* versions of records |
| // updated by the call that fires the trigger. |
| Map<ID, Invoice__c> oldMap = |
| Invoice__c>(Trigger.old); |
|
|
| new Map<ID, |
|
|
| // Create an empty list of IDs |
| List<Id> invoiceIds = new List<Id>(); |
|
|
| // Iterate through all of the *new* versions of Invoice__c |
| // records updated by the call that fires the trigger, adding |
| // corresponding IDs to the invoiceIds list, but *only* when an |
| // invoice's status changed from a non-"Closed" value to "Closed". |
| for (Invoice__c invoice: Trigger.new) { |
|
|
| if (invoice.status__c == 'Closed' && oldMap.get(invoice.Id).status__c != |
|
|
| 'Closed'){ |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| invoiceIds.add(invoice.Id); |
|
|
| } |
| // If the list of IDs is not empty, call Integration.postOrder |
| // supplying the list of IDs for fulfillment. |
| if (invoiceIds.size() > 0) { |
|
|
| Integration.postOrder(invoiceIds); |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| 3. Click Save. |
|
|
| The comments in the code explain what the code does. In particular, understand that Force.com triggers must be able to handle both |
| single-row and bulk updates because of the varying types of calls that can fire them (single-row or bulk update calls). The trigger creates |
| a list of invoice IDs that have been closed in this update, and then calls the @future method once, passing the list of IDs. |
|
|
| 10 |
|
|
| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
|
|
| Step 6: Test the Complete Integration Path |
|
|
| Step 6: Test the Complete Integration Path |
|
|
| With the trigger in place, test the integration by firing the trigger. |
|
|
| 1. Select the Warehouse app. |
|
|
| 2. Click the Invoices tab. |
|
|
| 3. Click one of the recent invoices and notice that there is no OrderId for the invoice. |
|
|
| 4. |
|
|
| If the Status is already Closed, double-click the word Closed, change it to Open and click Save. |
|
|
| 5. Double-click the Status value, change it to Closed and click Save. This triggers the asynchronous callout. |
|
|
| 6. Wait a few seconds and refresh the page in the browser. |
|
|
| 7. You should see an external order ID appear in the OrderId field. |
|
|
| The following screen shows the Invoices tab before any changes have been made: |
|
|
| The following screen shows the Invoices tab after the asynchronous call has returned the new order ID: |
|
|
| 11 |
|
|
| Tutorial #2: Connect the Warehouse App with an External |
| Service |
|
|
| Summary |
|
|
| Summary |
|
|
| Congratulations! Your app is sending invoices for fulfillment. You have successfully created an asynchronous Apex class that posted |
| invoice details to your fulfillment app hosted on Heroku. Of course, your external application could reside anywhere as long as you have |
| access via Web services. Your class uses open standards including JSON and REST to transmit data, and a trigger on invoices to execute |
| the process. |
|
|
| 12 |
|
|
| TUTORIAL #3: UPDATE THE HEROKU APP |
|
|
| You now have two sides of an integration in place: one running a Java endpoint on Heroku, and another in Force.com which communicates |
| with the endpoint when the appropriate changes take place. Now that you’ve got the connection in place, update the Heroku application |
| to retrieve the pertinent information and display it to the user. |
|
|
| Step 1: Configure Your Connected App |
|
|
| Before moving on, let’s go back to your Salesforce organization so that we can configure your connected app. At a high level, we will: |
|
|
| • Add your app to the available connected apps in your organization. |
|
|
| • Enable OAuth. External applications must authenticate remotely before they can access data. Force.com supports OAuth 2.0 (hereafter |
|
|
| referred to as OAuth) as an authentication mechanism. |
|
|
| Let’s go ahead and begin. |
|
|
| 1. From Setup, click Create > Apps. |
|
|
| 2. |
|
|
| In the Connected Apps section, click New. |
|
|
| 3. For Connected App Name, enter your app name. |
|
|
| 4. Enter the API Name, used when referring to your app from a program. It defaults to a version of the name without spaces. |
|
|
| 5. Provide your Contact Email. |
|
|
| 6. Under API (Enable OAuth Settings) select Enable OAuth Settings. |
|
|
| 7. For Callback URL, enter https://{appname}.herokuapp.com/_auth. |
|
|
| Note: Be sure to replace {appname} with your actual Heroku app name. |
|
|
| 8. |
|
|
| In the Selected OAuth Scopes field, select Full access (full) and Perform requests on your |
| behalf at any time (refresh_token, offline_access), and then add them to the selected OAuth scopes. |
|
|
| 9. Click Save. |
|
|
| Step 2: Update Your Application with a New Branch |
|
|
| While you were creating a new Apex trigger on your Force.com instance, other developers added new functionality to the original project |
| and placed it into a specific branch on GitHub. Using this branch you can test out new features, specifically, your Heroku application’s |
| ability to directly access your Salesforce records. It’s easy to add this branch, called “full,” to your codebase: |
|
|
| 1. Return to the command line, and make sure you’re in the spring-mvc-fulfillment-base folder. |
|
|
| 2. Enter the following command to fetch the “full” branch and merge it with your master branch, all in one step: |
|
|
| git pull origin full |
|
|
| a. Before continuing, go back to your org. |
|
|
| b. From Setup, click Create > Apps. |
|
|
| c. |
|
|
| In the Connected App Settings section, click your app name. |
|
|
| 13 |
|
|
| Tutorial #3: Update the Heroku App |
|
|
| Step 3: View the Invoice Information |
|
|
| d. Next to Consumer Secret, click Click to reveal. |
|
|
| e. Use your keyboard controls to copy the number that appears. |
|
|
| 3. You need to set your Access keys to your Heroku application. Enter: |
|
|
| heroku config:add OAUTH_CLIENT_KEY=PUBLICKEY OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET=PRIVATEKEY |
|
|
| Replace PUBLICKEY with the Consumer Key. Similarly, replace PRIVATEKEY with the Consumer Secret. It may be |
| helpful to do this in a text editor before putting it on the command line. |
|
|
| 4. Execute the following command to push the local changes to Heroku: |
|
|
| git push heroku master |
|
|
| 5. |
|
|
| In a browser tab or window, navigate to https://{appname}.herokuapp.com to see the changes (refresh your browser |
| if needed). |
|
|
| By adding an OAuth flow to your app, your app can request a user’s permission to work with session information without requiring the |
| third-party server to handle the user’s credentials. With this functionality added to the project, the fulfillment application can use the |
| Force.com REST API to access information directly from the user’s instance. |
|
|
| Tell Me More... |
|
|
| You can review all of the changes brought in by this branch on GitHub at: |
| https://github.com/sbob-sfdc/spring-mvc-fulfillment-base/compare/master...full. Notice that |
| the changes use the Force.com REST API to manipulate invoice records. Look at InvoiceServiceImpl.java in particular to see |
| how it creates, queries, retrieves and deletes invoices. This tutorial uses the findOrder() method only. The other methods are |
| included for your reference. |
|
|
| Step 3: View the Invoice Information |
|
|
| In the previous steps you added brand new functionality by merging a branch into your local code. The application now understands |
| how to use OAuth and how to access data from the Force.com platform. Now let’s view the invoice fields in your fulfillment app. |
|
|
| 1. Navigate to your fulfillment app in the browser, and then refresh the page. |
|
|
| 2. Click an order. |
|
|
| Notice that, given an ID, this code retrieves the corresponding invoice record. Because there might be mock ID's in the database that |
| are not in Force.com, the app handles the corresponding exception by showing default data. Adding the invoice to the model makes |
| it available to view. Now when you test the fulfillment application, it will show the invoice information currently in your Force.com |
| instance by grabbing the information via the REST API using the record ID. Your order detail page might look something like: |
|
|
| Tell Me More... |
|
|
| 14 |
|
|
| Tutorial #3: Update the Heroku App |
|
|
| Summary |
|
|
| Notice that the Web service call from Force.com to create orders is not secured. Securing the call goes beyond the scope of this workbook, |
| but a simple solution would be to set up a shared secret between the Force.com app and the fulfillment app. The Force.com app would |
| create an HMAC signature from the parameters in the request, using the secret, and the fulfillment app would verify the signature. |
|
|
| Summary |
|
|
| Congratulations! Your fulfillment app now retrieves invoice information via the Force.com REST API and displays it to the user. You |
| configured your app in Salesforce to use OAuth for authentication, and you added OAuth credentials to your app hosted on Heroku. |
| You can further modify your app to manipulate invoice information however you want. |
|
|
| 15 |
|
|
| TUTORIAL #4: ADD YOUR APP TO SALESFORCE USING |
| FORCE.COM CANVAS |
|
|
| You’ve done a lot already. Let’s go one step further and make your app accessible for your users right from within Salesforce. Force.com |
| Canvas enables you to easily integrate a third-party application in Salesforce. Force.com Canvas is a set of tools and JavaScript APIs that |
| you can use to expose an application as a canvas app. This means you can take your new or existing applications and make them available |
| to your users as part of their Salesforce experience. |
|
|
| Step 1: Update your Application with a New Branch |
|
|
| Earlier, we added a branch to the codebase named “full.” Now we’ll add one named “canvas.” |
|
|
| 1. Return to the command line, and make sure you’re in the spring-mvc-fulfillment-base folder. |
|
|
| 2. Enter the following command to fetch the canvas branch and merge it with your master branch, all in one step: |
|
|
| git pull origin canvas |
|
|
| 3. Execute the following command to push the local changes to Heroku: |
|
|
| git push heroku master |
|
|
| 4. |
|
|
| In a browser tab or window, navigate to https://{appname}.herokuapp.com to see the changes (refresh your browser |
| if needed). |
|
|
| Tell Me More... |
|
|
| You can review all of the changes brought in by this branch on GitHub at |
| https://github.com/sbob-sfdc/spring-mvc-fulfillment-base/compare/full...canvas. |
|
|
| Notice that the new branch uses the signed request from the Force.com Canvas API and not the Heroku-initiated OAuth from Tutorial |
| 3, Step 2. The new branch also uses the Force.com REST API to manipulate invoice records. Look at CanvasUiController.java |
| in particular to see how it retrieves, parses, and sets the signed request for use by the app. Also, order.jsp has changed to present |
| an easier-to-use screen on the invoice page layout. This tutorial has only set the signed request for use on the canvasui page and |
| the orders page in the app. |
|
|
| Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and Enable the App for |
| Force.com Canvas |
|
|
| We’ve already configured your connected app. Now we need to enable and configure it for Force.com Canvas. |
|
|
| 1. From Setup, click Create > Apps. |
|
|
| 2. |
|
|
| 3. |
|
|
| 4. |
|
|
| 5. |
|
|
| 6. |
|
|
| In the Connected App Settings section, select your application and click Edit. |
|
|
| In the Canvas App Settings section, select the Force.com Canvas checkbox. |
|
|
| In the Canvas App URL field, enter https://{appname}.herokuapp.com/canvasui. |
|
|
| In the Access Method field, select Signed Request (Post). |
|
|
| In the Locations field, select Chatter Tab and Visualforce Page, and then add them to the selected locations. |
|
|
| 16 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and Enable the App |
| for Force.com Canvas |
|
|
| 7. Click Save. |
|
|
| If you look at CanvasUiController.java, you’ll see something like the following, which shows Heroku obtaining a signed |
| request and validating it. We’re leveraging the OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET Heroku key set in Tutorial 3, Step 2 to validate the signed |
| request. |
|
|
| @Controller |
| @RequestMapping(value="/canvasui") |
| public class CanvasUIController { |
|
|
| private static final String SIGNED_REQUEST = "signedRequestJson"; |
| private CanvasContext cc = new CanvasContext(); |
|
|
| @Autowired |
| private OrderService orderService; |
|
|
| @Autowired |
| private InvoiceService invoiceService; |
|
|
| private Validator validator; |
|
|
| @Autowired |
| public CanvasUIController(Validator validator) { |
|
|
| this.validator = validator; |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| @RequestMapping(method= RequestMethod.POST) |
| public String postSignedRequest(Model model, |
| @RequestParam(value="signed_request")String signedRequest, HttpServletRequest request){ |
|
|
| String srJson = SignedRequest.verifyAndDecodeAsJson |
| (signedRequest, getConsumerSecret()); |
|
|
| CanvasRequest cr = SignedRequest.verifyAndDecode(signedRequest, getConsumerSecret()); |
|
|
| HttpSession session = request.getSession(true); |
| model.addAttribute(SIGNED_REQUEST, srJson); |
| cc = cr.getContext(); |
| CanvasEnvironmentContext ce = cc.getEnvironmentContext(); |
| Map<String, Object> params = ce.getParameters(); |
| if (params.containsKey("orderId")) { |
|
|
| invoiceService.setSignedRequest(cr); |
| Integer orderId = Integer.parseInt(params.get("orderId").toString()); |
| if(orderId != null) { |
|
|
| Order order = orderService.findOrder(orderId); |
| if (order == null) { |
|
|
| throw new ResourceNotFoundException(orderId); |
|
|
| } |
| model.addAttribute("order", order); |
|
|
| Invoice invoice; |
| try { |
|
|
| invoice = invoiceService.findInvoice(order.getId()); |
|
|
| } catch (ApiException ae) { |
|
|
| // No match |
| invoice = new Invoice(); |
|
|
| 17 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and Enable the App |
| for Force.com Canvas |
|
|
| } |
| model.addAttribute("invoice", invoice); |
|
|
| return "order"; |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| } |
| return getOrdersPage(model); |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| @RequestMapping(method=RequestMethod.GET) |
| public String getOrdersPage(Model model) { |
|
|
| model.addAttribute("order", new Order()); |
| model.addAttribute("orders", orderService.listOrders()); |
|
|
| return "orders"; |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| private static final String getConsumerSecret(){ |
|
|
| String secret = System.getenv("OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET"); |
| if (null == secret){ |
|
|
| throw new IllegalStateException("Client secret not found in environment. |
| You must define the OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET environment variable."); |
|
|
| } |
| return secret; |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| After the validation, the signed request is passed to order.jsp, where the browser can access it. |
|
|
| <%@ page session="false" %> |
| <%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core" prefix="c" %> |
| <%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/fmt" prefix="fmt" %> |
| <%@ taglib prefix="form" uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags/form" %> |
|
|
| <html> |
|
|
| <head> |
|
|
| <title>Order</title> |
| <link rel="stylesheet" href="<c:url value="/resources/blueprint/screen.css" />" |
| type="text/css" media="screen, projection"> |
| <link rel="stylesheet" href="<c:url value="/resources/blueprint/print.css" />" |
|
|
| type="text/css" media="print"> |
|
|
| <!--[if lt IE 8]> |
|
|
| <link rel="stylesheet" href="<c:url value="/resources/blueprint/ie.css" />" |
|
|
| type="text/css" media="screen, projection"> |
| <![endif]--> |
| <script type="text/javascript" src="<c:url value="/resources/jquery-1.4.min.js" /> "> |
| </script> |
| <script type="text/javascript" src="<c:url value="/resources/json.min.js" /> "> |
| </script> |
|
|
| <script type="text/javascript" src="<c:url value="/resources/canvas-all.js" /> "> |
|
|
| </script> |
|
|
| <script> |
|
|
| // Get the Signed Request from the CanvasUIController |
| var sr = JSON.parse('${not empty signedRequestJson?signedRequestJson:"{}"}'); |
|
|
| 18 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and Enable the App |
| for Force.com Canvas |
|
|
| // Set handlers for the various buttons on the page |
| Sfdc.canvas(function() { |
|
|
| $('#finalizeButton').click(finalizeHandler); |
| $('#deleteButton').click(deleteHandler); |
|
|
| }); |
|
|
| // This function will be called when the "Finalize" button is clicked. |
| // This shows using the Canvas Cross Domain API to hit the REST API |
| // for the invoice that the user is viewing. The call updates the |
| // Status__c field to "Shipped". If successful, the page is refreshed, |
| // and if there is an error it will alert the user. |
| function finalizeHandler(){ |
|
|
| var invoiceUri=sr.context.links.sobjectUrl + "Invoice__c/${order.id}"; |
| var body = {"Status__c":"Shipped"}; |
| Sfdc.canvas.client.ajax(invoiceUri,{ |
|
|
| client : sr.client, |
| method: 'PATCH', |
| contentType: "application/json", |
| data: JSON.stringify(body), |
| success : function() { |
|
|
| window.top.location.href = getRoot() + "/${order.id}"; |
|
|
| }, |
| error: function(){ |
|
|
| alert("Error occurred updating local status."); |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| }); |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| // This function will be called when the "Delete Order" button is clicked. |
| // It will delete the record from the Heroku database. |
| function deleteHandler(){ |
|
|
| $.deleteJSON("/order/${order.orderId}", function(data) { |
|
|
| alert("Deleted order ${order.orderId}"); |
| location.href = "/orderui"; |
|
|
| }, function(data) { |
|
|
| alert("Error deleting order ${order.orderId}"); |
|
|
| }); |
| return false; |
|
|
| } |
|
|
| // This function gets the instance the user is on for a page referesh |
| function getRoot() { |
|
|
| return sr.client.instanceUrl; |
|
|
| } |
| </script> |
|
|
| </head> |
| <body> |
|
|
| <div id="bodyDiv" style="width:inherit;"> |
|
|
| <div id="myPageBlockTable"> |
| <h2 id="OrderTitle"> |
|
|
| Order Number: <c:out value="${order.orderId}"/> |
|
|
| 19 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 3: Configure Access to Your Force.com Canvas App |
|
|
| </h2> |
| <table id="myTable" width="100%"> |
|
|
| <col width="20%"> |
| <tr><td class="myCol">Invoice Id:</td><td class="valueCol"> |
| <c:out value="${invoice.id}"/></td></tr> |
| <tr><td class="myCol">Invoice Number:</td><td class="valueCol"> |
| <c:out value="${invoice.number}"/></td></tr> |
|
|
| <tr><td class="myCol">Status:</td><td class="valueCol" valign="center"> |
|
|
| <c:out value="${invoice.status}"/> |
|
|
| <!-- Display a green check if the order is Shipped, or a red x if |
|
|
| not shipped --> |
|
|
| <c:choose> |
|
|
| <c:when test="${invoice.status == 'Shipped'}"> |
|
|
| <img src="/resources/images/shipped.png" /> |
|
|
| </c:when> |
| <c:otherwise> |
|
|
| <img src="/resources/images/pending.png" /> |
|
|
| </c:otherwise> |
|
|
| </c:choose> |
|
|
| </td></tr> |
|
|
| </table> |
| <!-- Display the Back and Delete Order Button if viewed outside |
| of salesforce (no signed request). --> |
| <!-- Display the Finalize Button if viewed inside of salesforce and |
| the Status is not Shipped. --> |
| <c:choose> |
|
|
| <c:when test="${empty signedRequestJson}"> |
|
|
| <button onclick="location.href='/orderui'">Back</button> |
| <button id="deleteButton">Delete Order</button> |
|
|
| </c:when> |
| <c:otherwise> |
|
|
| <c:if test="${invoice.status ne 'Shipped'}"> |
|
|
| <button id="finalizeButton">Finalize</button> |
|
|
| </c:if> |
| </c:otherwise> |
|
|
| </c:choose> |
|
|
| </div> |
|
|
| </div> |
|
|
| </body> |
|
|
| </html> |
|
|
| Step 3: Configure Access to Your Force.com Canvas App |
|
|
| Because this app is designed for use by a specific audience, let’s give access only to the users who need it. |
|
|
| 1. |
|
|
| In Salesforce, from Setup, click Manage Apps > Connected Apps. |
|
|
| 2. Click your app, and then click Edit. |
|
|
| 3. |
|
|
| In the Permitted Users field, select Admin approved users are pre-authorized. Click OK on the popup message that |
| appears. |
|
|
| 4. Click Save. |
|
|
| 20 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 4: Make Your Force.com Canvas App Available from |
| the Chatter Tab |
|
|
| Now you’ll use profiles and permission sets to define who can see your canvas app. In this example, we’ll allow anyone with the |
| System Administrator profile to access the app. |
|
|
| 5. |
|
|
| In the Connected App Detail page’s Profiles related list, click Manage Profiles. |
|
|
| 6. Select the System Administrator profile, and then click Save. |
|
|
| Your app is now available to anyone with the System Administrator profile. |
|
|
| Step 4: Make Your Force.com Canvas App Available from the Chatter |
| Tab |
|
|
| The values you selected in the Locations field when creating the connected app in Step 2: Edit the Connected App Details and |
| Enable the App for Force.com Canvas on page 16 determine where an installed canvas app appears. When an app is made available |
| to the Chatter tab, there’s nothing we need to do for this step. If you log into your Salesforce org and select the Chatter tab, you’ll see |
| that your canvas app appears in the app navigation list. |
|
|
| Note: When displaying the list of orders on the Chatter Tab, remember that orders.jsp has been set up to handle the signed |
| request POST. However, if you click into a record from this page, you are redirected to orderui, which uses OAuth. If the Heroku |
| OAuth flow is inactive, you may receive an error when viewing the individual order. |
|
|
| Click your app’s name. It should look something like this: |
|
|
| Step 5: Use Visualforce to Display the Canvas App on a Record |
|
|
| While you can certainly use the app based on the work completed so far, let’s take one more step and use Visualforce to display information |
| from your canvas app on the invoice record. |
|
|
| 1. From Setup, click Develop > Pages. |
|
|
| 2. Click New. |
|
|
| 21 |
|
|
| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
|
|
| Step 5: Use Visualforce to Display the Canvas App on a |
| Record |
|
|
| 3. |
|
|
| In Label, enter FulfillmentCanvas. You use this label to identify the page in Setup tools when performing actions such |
| as defining custom tabs or overriding standard buttons. |
|
|
| 4. |
|
|
| In Name, accept the default name FulfillmentCanvas. |
|
|
| 5. Add the following markup to the Visualforce Markup box, making sure to replace {appname} with your Heroku application name, |
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| and then click Save. |
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| <apex:page standardController="Invoice__c"> |
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| <apex:canvasApp developerName="{appname}" |
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| parameters="{'orderId':'{!Invoice__c.OrderId__c}'}" width="100%"/> |
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| </apex:page> |
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| Notice how the parameters tag in the apex:canvasApp component is set to |
| "{'orderId':'{!Invoice__c.OrderId__c}'}". This code sends a JSON object as part of the signed request to the |
| Heroku app when the page is loaded. In the signed request, the parameters object will look something like parameters : |
| {'orderId':'5'}, where '5' is the OrderId from the invoice record. Remember that this value is an external ID field that connects |
| the record in the Heroku database to the Salesforce invoice record. By delivering the OrderId to the Heroku app with the signed |
| request, the Heroku app can display the correct record on the invoice page layout. |
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| Your page should look something like this: |
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| Now let’s add your Visualforce page to the page layout. |
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| 6. From the Invoices tab, select a record. |
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| 7. Click Edit Layout and then Visualforce Pages. |
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| 8. Drag a section down to your page and name it Canvas Fulfillment. |
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| a. Make sure to deselect Edit Page. |
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| b. Select 1–Column for the layout. |
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| 9. Drag your FulfillmentCanvas page onto the new section. |
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| 10. Click the wrench to update your page properties. The width should be set to 100% and height set to 165 pixels. |
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| 11. Ensure that both Show scrollbars and Show label are deselected and click Save. |
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| 12. From Setup, click Create > Objects, and then click Invoice. |
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| 22 |
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| Tutorial #4: Add Your App to Salesforce Using Force.com |
| Canvas |
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| 13. In the Custom Fields & Relationships section, click Status. |
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| 14. Add another picklist item named Shipped. |
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| Now when users go to an invoice record, they’ll see the canvas app right on the record detail page: |
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| Summary |
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| Notice the Finalize button in the canvas app. If the invoice isn’t in 'Shipped' status, the red “X” and Finalize will show in the app. If you |
| click Finalize, Heroku uses the Force.com Canvas API to call the REST API and update the invoice Status field. Once the status is set to |
| 'Shipped', the red “X” is replaced and Finalize is hidden. |
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| Summary |
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| Congratulations! With a combination of OAuth authentication, Force.com REST API, Apex triggers, @future callouts, the polyglot |
| framework of the Heroku platform, Force.com Canvas, and Visualforce, you created and deployed a bi-directional integration between |
| two clouds. |
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| This workbook covers just one example of the many ways to integrate your applications with Salesforce. One integration technology |
| that we didn’t mention is the Streaming API that lets your application receive notifications from Force.com whenever a user changes |
| Salesforce data. You can use this in the fulfillment application to monitor when changes are made to invoices and to automatically |
| update the application pages accordingly. Visit https://developer.salesforce.com to learn more about all the ways you |
| can integrate your application with Salesforce. |
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