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author | Sebastien Jodogne <s.jodogne@gmail.com> |
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date | Fri, 16 Oct 2020 10:53:56 +0200 |
parents | 416581db306e |
children | 50bdd7c7e9b9 |
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.. _rest-advanced: Advanced features of the REST API ================================= .. contents:: :depth: 3 This section of the Orthanc Book is a complement to the description of the :ref:`REST API of Orthanc <rest>`. It explains some advanced uses of the API. .. _jobs: Jobs ---- Since Orthanc 1.4.0, a jobs engine is embedded within Orthanc. Jobs are high-level tasks to be processed by Orthanc. Jobs are first added to a queue of pending tasks, and Orthanc will simultaneously execute a fixed number of jobs (check out :ref:`configuration option <configuration>` ``ConcurrentJobs``). Once the jobs have been processed, they are tagged as successful or failed, and kept in a history (the size of this history is controlled by the ``JobsHistorySize`` option). By default, Orthanc saves the jobs into its database (check out the ``SaveJobs`` option). If Orthanc is stopped then relaunched, the jobs whose processing was not finished are automatically put into the queue of pending tasks. The command-line option ``--no-jobs`` can also be used to prevent the loading of jobs from the database upon the launch of Orthanc. Note that the queue of pending jobs has a maximum size (check out the ``LimitJobs`` option). When this limit is reached, the addition of new jobs is blocked until some job finishes. Synchronous vs. asynchronous calls ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Some calls to the REST API of Orthanc need time to be executed, and thus result in adding a job to the processing queue. This notably includes the following URIs: * :ref:`Modifying and anonymizing <anonymization>` DICOM instances. * Creating ZIP or media archives. * C-Move SCU (``/queries/.../retrieve``). * C-Store SCU (``/modalities/.../store``). * Sending to an Orthanc peer (``/peers/.../store``). * :ref:`Split/merge <split-merge>`. * Sending images using the :ref:`transfers accelerator <transfers>` plugin. Such REST API calls can be configured to be executed in a synchronous or an asynchronous mode: * **Synchronous calls** wait for the end of the execution of their associated job. This is in general the default behavior. * **Asynchronous calls** end immediately and return a handle to their associated job. It is up to the caller to monitor the execution by calling the jobs API (e.g. to know whether the job has finished its execution). The choice between synchronous and asynchronous modes is done by setting the ``Synchronous`` field (or indifferently the ``Asynchronous`` field) in the POST body of the call to the REST API. Note that the :ref:`transfers accelerator <transfers>` only runs in asynchronous mode. An integer number (possibly negative) can be specified in the ``Priority`` field of the POST body. Jobs with higher priority will be executed first. By default, the priority is set to zero. Despite being more complex to handle, the asynchronous mode is highly recommended for jobs whose execution time can last over a dozen of seconds (typically, the creation of an archive or a network transfer). Indeed, synchronous calls can be affected by timeouts in the HTTP protocol if they last too long. .. _jobs-monitoring: Monitoring jobs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. highlight:: bash The list of all jobs can be retrieved as follows:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/jobs [ "e0d12aac-47eb-454f-bb7f-9857931e2904" ] Full details about each job can be retrieved:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/jobs/e0d12aac-47eb-454f-bb7f-9857931e2904 { "CompletionTime" : "20190306T095223.753851", "Content" : { "Description" : "REST API", "InstancesCount" : 1, "UncompressedSizeMB" : 0 }, "CreationTime" : "20190306T095223.750666", "EffectiveRuntime" : 0.001, "ErrorCode" : 0, "ErrorDescription" : "Success", "ID" : "e0d12aac-47eb-454f-bb7f-9857931e2904", "Priority" : 0, "Progress" : 100, "State" : "Success", "Timestamp" : "20190306T095408.556082", "Type" : "Archive" } Note that the ``/jobs?expand`` URI will retrieve this information in one single REST query. The ``Content`` field contains the parameters of the job, and is very specific to the ``Type`` of job. The ``State`` field can be: * ``Pending``: The job is waiting to be executed. * ``Running``: The job is being executed. The ``Progress`` field will be continuously updated to reflect the progression of the execution. * ``Success``: The job has finished with success. * ``Failure``: The job has finished with failure. Check out the ``ErrorCode`` and ``ErrorDescription`` fields for more information. * ``Paused``: The job has been paused. * ``Retry``: The job has failed internally, and has been scheduled for re-submission after a delay. As of Orthanc 1.7.4, this feature is not used by any type of job. In order to wait for the end of an asynchronous call, the caller will typically have to poll the ``/jobs/...` URI (i.e. make periodic calls), waiting for the ``State`` field to become ``Success`` or ``Failure``. .. _jobs-controlling: Interacting with jobs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Given the ID of some job, one can: * Cancel the job by POST-ing to ``/jobs/.../cancel``. * Pause the job by POST-ing to ``/jobs/.../pause``. * Resume a job in ``Paused`` state by POST-ing to ``/jobs/.../resume``. * Retry a job in ``Failed`` state by POST-ing to ``/jobs/.../resubmit``. The related state machine is depicted in the `implementation notes <https://hg.orthanc-server.com/orthanc/raw-file/default/OrthancServer/Resources/ImplementationNotes/JobsEngineStates.pdf>`__. Example: Asynchronous generation of an archive ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. highlight:: bash Sucessful jobs are associated with a set of so-called "outputs" that can be attached to the job. Here is a sample bash session to ask Orthanc to generate a ZIP archive, then to download it locally:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/studies/27f7126f-4f66fb14-03f4081b-f9341db2-53925988/archive -d '{"Asynchronous":true}' { "ID" : "82cc02d1-03fe-41f9-be46-a308d16ea94a", "Path" : "/jobs/82cc02d1-03fe-41f9-be46-a308d16ea94a" } $ curl http://localhost:8042/jobs/82cc02d1-03fe-41f9-be46-a308d16ea94a { "CompletionTime" : "20200817T144700.401777", "Content" : { "Description" : "REST API", "InstancesCount" : 232, "UncompressedSizeMB" : 64 }, "CreationTime" : "20200817T144658.011824", "EffectiveRuntime" : 2.3879999999999999, "ErrorCode" : 0, "ErrorDescription" : "Success", "ID" : "82cc02d1-03fe-41f9-be46-a308d16ea94a", "Priority" : 0, "Progress" : 100, "State" : "Success", "Timestamp" : "20200817T144705.770825", "Type" : "Archive" } $ curl http://localhost:8042/jobs/82cc02d1-03fe-41f9-be46-a308d16ea94a/archive > a.zip Note how we retrieve the content of the archive by accessing the ``archive`` output of the job (check out the virtual method ``IJob::GetOutput()`` from the `source code <https://hg.orthanc-server.com/orthanc/file/Orthanc-1.7.4/OrthancServer/Sources/ServerJobs/ArchiveJob.cpp>`__ of Orthanc). Here is the corresponding sequence of commands to generate a DICOMDIR media:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/studies/27f7126f-4f66fb14-03f4081b-f9341db2-53925988/media -d '{"Asynchronous":true}' $ curl http://localhost:8042/jobs/6332be8a-0052-44fb-8cc2-ac959aeccad9/archive > a.zip As of Orthanc 1.7.4, only the creation of a ZIP or a DICOMDIR archive produces such "outputs". .. _pdf: Attaching PDF file as DICOM series ---------------------------------- Among many different types of data, DICOM files can be used to store PDF files. The ``/tools/create-dicom`` URI can be used to upload a PDF file to Orthanc. The following scripts perform such a *DICOM-ization*; They convert the ``HelloWorld2.pdf`` file to base64, then perform a ``POST`` request with JSON data containing the converted payload. Using bash: .. code-block:: bash # create the json data, with the BASE64 data embedded in it (echo -n '{"Tags" : {"PatientName" : "Benjamino", "Modality" : "CT"},"Content" : "data:application/pdf;base64,'; base64 HelloWorld2.pdf; echo '"}') > /tmp/foo # upload it to Orthanc cat /tmp/foo | curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @- http://localhost:8042/tools/create-dicom Using powershell: .. code-block:: perl # create the BASE64 string data $fileInBase64 = $([Convert]::ToBase64String((gc -Path "HelloWorld2.pdf" -Encoding Byte))) # create the json data $params = @{Tags = @{PatientName = "Benjamino";Modality = "CT"};Content= "data:application/pdf;base64,$fileInBase64"} # disabling the progress bar makes the Invoke-RestMethod call MUCH faster $ProgressPreference = 'SilentlyContinue' # upload it to Orthanc $reply = Invoke-RestMethod http://localhost:8042/tools/create-dicom -Method POST -Body ($params|ConvertTo-Json) -ContentType 'application/json' # display the result Write-Host "The instance can be retrieved in PDF at http://localhost:8042$($reply.Path)/pdf" Please note that the ``/tools/create-dicom`` API call will return the Orthanc instance ID of the newly created DICOM resource. You can use the ``/instances/.../pdf`` URI to retrieve an embedded PDF file. .. _prometheus: Instrumentation with Prometheus ------------------------------- .. highlight:: text Orthanc publishes its metrics according to the `text-based format of Prometheus <https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/exposition_formats/#text-based-format>`__ (check also the `OpenMetrics project <https://openmetrics.io/>`__), onto the ``/tools/metrics-prometheus`` URI of the REST API. For instance:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/tools/metrics-prometheus orthanc_count_instances 1 1551868380543 orthanc_count_patients 1 1551868380543 orthanc_count_series 1 1551868380543 orthanc_count_studies 1 1551868380543 orthanc_disk_size_mb 0.0135002136 1551868380543 orthanc_jobs_completed 1 1551868380543 orthanc_jobs_failed 0 1551868380543 orthanc_jobs_pending 0 1551868380543 orthanc_jobs_running 0 1551868380543 orthanc_jobs_success 1 1551868380543 orthanc_rest_api_active_requests 1 1551868380543 orthanc_rest_api_duration_ms 0 1551868094265 orthanc_storage_create_duration_ms 0 1551865919315 orthanc_storage_read_duration_ms 0 1551865943752 orthanc_store_dicom_duration_ms 5 1551865919319 orthanc_uncompressed_size_mb 0.0135002136 1551868380543 .. highlight:: bash Note that the collection of metrics can be statically disabled by setting the :ref:`global configuration option <configuration>` ``MetricsEnabled`` to ``false``, or dynamically disabled by PUT-ing ``0`` on ``/tools/metrics``:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/tools/metrics 1 $ curl http://localhost:8042/tools/metrics -X PUT -d '0' $ curl http://localhost:8042/tools/metrics 0 .. highlight:: yaml Here is a sample configuration for Prometheus (in the `YAML format <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML>`__):: scrape_configs: - job_name: 'orthanc' scrape_interval: 10s metrics_path: /tools/metrics-prometheus basic_auth: username: orthanc password: orthanc static_configs: - targets: ['192.168.0.2:8042'] .. highlight:: bash Obviously, make sure to adapt this sample with your actual IP address. Thanks to Docker, you can easily start a Prometheus server by writing this configuration to, say, ``/tmp/prometheus.yml``, then type:: $ sudo run -p 9090:9090 -v /tmp/prometheus.yml:/etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml --rm prom/prometheus:v2.7.0