![]() It comes ultimately from the Greek words hieros (sacred) and archein (to rule). The word you’re trying to remember may be “hierarchy,” whose original, literal meaning was “sacred rule.” (In Greek, mono means single and oligoi means few.) This word ending comes from the Greek verb polein, which means to sell. For example, a “monopoly” is a market dominated by one seller an “oligopoly” is one dominated by a few. Words that end in “-poly” have to do with more earthly business-selling. We know of no word-unless it’s a deliberate joke-that combines “church” with “monopoly.” Do you know the word?Ī: We’d guess that your memory is playing tricks here. :)ĪrchInboundCallFlow.Q: Years ago I had to look up a word that combined “church” and “monopoly.” I can’t remember it. Time to turn off verbose logging so we get nice output. the valueText property value for ArchBaseValue instances. Here’s one that traverses a flow and for all arch base values will write out the value text which would be expression text, variable references, and whatnot: // Spin through a bunch of stuff on the flow and write out If you are not using I suggest you take look here. Please forgive me if I already sent you this and like I said, I am going to forward this forum post to our architect team.Īs for auditing the flows themselves, I don't know if you have seen them, but we do have a higher level SDK for querying and manipulating our flows. I think you and I exchanged some emails earlier, so I might be repeating myself but I am going to throw this out here for other forum users. Short video on how to use caching to avoid the need for unnecessary API calls. Using caching to mitigate rate-limits in Genesys Cloud.Short video overview of how to use our Java SDK's built-in retry logic. Using the Genesys Cloud Java SDK's retry logic.A short video discussion about how Genesys Cloud uses rate limits in their APIs. Github repository for building resilient applications in Genesys Cloud talk.45-minute webinar discussion going through the resiliency patterns. Building resilient applications in Genesys Cloud.Blog post covering basic resiliency patterns for cloud-based integrations. Building resiliency into your Genesys Cloud Integrations.Here are some additional materials around rate limiting and resiliency: ![]() ![]() We have a rate limit of 300 calls per minute for a single OAuth client and when you do hit this rate limit 1.5 seconds is usually not enough time to "cool" down from the rate limit. Here is a link to an article on our development center about rate limits. This will tell you how many seconds your code should wait before trying again. If you get a 429 you should check the HTTP Response headers and look at the value set in the retry-after header. First, if you are calling the platform APIs you should receive a 429 HTTP status code as your HTTP response code when you are getting rate limited. I am going to forward your question to our Architect team and see if they can you some help. I'm happy to post code, if that would help! I'd appreciate any and all thoughts on this. This is relatively easy for things like "Disconnect" since the default name is the same as the item type, but what about things like Tasks? I could look for the name beginning with "New" but I was hoping for a more elegant solution! I also need to determine what items / nodes etc have been left with their default names.I'm fairly sure that is an array describing the attributes, but I can't figure out what member contains the name! One of main things I need to grab the Participant Data that is set by the flow, but as I scan for the SetParticipantData nodes, I can't figure out how to get the name(s) of the attribute(s) being set. ![]() I have already inserted a 1.5 second delay between flow fetches, but it still happens and I don't want to simply put in relatively random delays as it extends the run time of the code! I am unsure how to capture the HTTP response and then force a pause before retrying.
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