This is a C# .NET Framework 4.6, MSSQL or PostgreSQL, FHIR server implementing FHIR Version STU-3.0.1
See the publicly accessible Pyro Server instance running here: Pyrohealth.net
See the official FHIR specification page here: FHIR specification STU-3.0.1
Read the servers rendered CapabilityStatement here: Pyro FHIR Server CapabilityStatement
HTTP Get the server's CapabilityStatement resource from the Pyrohealth.net server:
GET https://stu3.test.pyrohealth.net/fhir/metadata
This server implements the following FHIR specification components
- All resource types
- All resource's search parameters
- RestFul CRUD
- Compartments
- Chained search parameters
- _includes & _revinclude
- Custom search parameters
- Custom compartments
- History
- Conditional Create
- Conditional Update
- Conditional Read
- Conditional Delete
- Bundle Transactions
Base operations:
- $server-indexes-set
- $server-indexes-index
- $server-indexes-report
- $server-resource-report
Resource operations:
- $validate (All ResourceTypes)
- $x-ihisearchorvalidate (Patient ResourceTypes)
Resource instance operations:
- $validate (All ResourceTypes)
- $x-set-compartment-active (CompartmentDefinition ResourceTypes)
- $x-set-compartment-inactive (CompartmentDefinition ResourceTypes)
- Visual Studio 2017
- .NET Framework 4.6
- Microsoft SQL Server 2016 or higher, or
- PostgreSQL (Version 10)
- Clone from the GitHub repository: https://github.com/angusmillar/Pyro.git and then open in Visual Studio 2017.
- Right click the main solution 'Pyro' and select 'Restore Nuget packages' and then 'F6' to build the solution.
- You will then need to configure to your development environment database connection string by editing this file:
Pyro.ConsoleServer\App_Data\Connectons.config
- Right click the project named 'Pyro.DbManager' and select 'Set as StartUp Project'
- Hit 'F5' to start the 'Pyro.DbManager' console application project and follow the prompts to create the initial database.
- Right click the project named 'Pyro.ConsoleServer' and select 'Set as StartUp Project'
- Hit 'F5' to start the 'Pyro.ConsoleServer' project.
- A console window will start with the Pyro logo in yellow and the message "Please wait while database schema loads", this will take about 1 min.
- Once the load is completed the console will change from yellow to blue and the server is ready for calls to its FHRI API. The console will state the FHIR API endpoint. The default is
http://localhost:8888/fhir
Please note
On a clean install, the server runs a background task that loads all the FHIR specification SearchParameter resources to create the active search indexes for the server. While this is running the server is in read-only mode until it completes. This is required to prevent resources from being committed through the API before the resource indexes are ready. You can monitor the task's progress by either attempting to perform a POST or PUT or by performing a GET on the FHIR Task resource with the Id of: set-searchParameter-definitions. The server can be stopped and started while this task is running and it will continue from where it last left off.
There are three key projects you will need to understand:
Concept | Solution Project |
---|---|
Database Management | Pyro.DbManager |
Development Environment | Pyro.ConsoleServer |
Production Environment | Pyro.WebApi |
Database Management
The Pyro.DbManager
project is a console application that will connect to the database and create or upgrade the database as required. This project MUST be run first as it will create the database which the other projects depend upon.
When running in the debugger (Visual Studio) it uses the connection string found in the Pyro.ConsoleServer
project file found here: Pyro.ConsoleServer\App_Data\Connectons.config
. You must configure you database connection string in this file before running the Pyro.DbManager
project.
When running outside of the debugger the Pyro.DbManager
executable expects to find a web.config file in the parent directory from where it is run, it will use the connection string referenced from this web.config
file which will be the Connectons.config
file found in the App_Data
directory of the same parent directory. This is true when deployed in IIS where the Pyro.DbManager.exe
is found in the bin
folder. So in this case, you just need to run the Pyro.DbManager.exe
straight from the bin
folder to create or update the production database.
Here is a representation of this production IIS file structure
wwwRoot
│ web.config
│ ...
│
└───App_Data
│ │
│ │ Connectons.config
│ │ PyroApp.config
│ │ ...
│
└───bin
│ Pyro.DbManager.exe
│ ....
Development Environment
The Pyro.ConsoleServer
project will run the server in console mode and is the primary way to use the server if in a development environment. It's quicker to start and logs on screen the HTTP request coming in. The FHIR server is fully functional run this way.
Before you run this project you will need to have configured the connection string as shown below and you must have first run the Pyro.DbManager
project which will have initialised your database.
Pyro.ConsoleServer\App_Data\Connectons.config
You may also like to change the ServiceBaseURL
property which is the endpoint the FHIR server will run from. The default is http://localhost:8888/fhir
This can be changed in the file:
Pyro.ConsoleServer\App_Data\PyroApp.config
Below is the documentation about the property:
Item | Value |
---|---|
Command: | ServiceBaseURL |
Value: | URL String |
Description: | This setting sets the service's Service Base URL and must match the URL where the service is hosted. This is the URL that will host the FHIR API. Care must be taken changing this URL post the service being in operation as the physical Resources and the search indexes in the database, and any external references with still have the previous URL reference. In practice, all Resource would need to be updated and recommitted if this was to change. Simply changing the setting here does not initiate the updating of all these references. |
Production Environment
The Pyro.WebApi
project will run the server in Internet Information Services (IIS). This is primarily used for when the server is deployed in a production IIS instance. It does not provide any web page, only the FHIR API endpoints accessible and hosted in IIS.
There is a separate independent JavaScript React SPA website project named PyroWeb that provide a website landing page for the Pyro Server found here: PyroWeb WebSite.
Before you run this project you will need to have configured the connection string as shown below and you must have first run the Pyro.DbManager
project which will have initialised your database.
Pyro.WebApi\App_Data\Connectons.config
You will also need to set the ServiceBaseURL
property in the file below (See the same documentation above in "Development Environment" for this property)
Pyro.WebApi\App_Data\PyroApp.config
General Information
Database Migration Check
Both projects Pyro.WebApi
and Pyro.ConsoleServer
, require that you first run the Pyro.DbManager
to initialise the database. Furthermore, if the code is updated and a database upgrade is required the Pyro.DbManager
must be run. In general you should always run the Pyro.DbManager
when a code update is sourced. Their is never any harm in running it many times. If you do not do run it when it is required to be run, starting either Pyro.WebApi
or Pyro.ConsoleServer
will throw and log an error, and stop. That error will read:
Database upgrade is required.
Please consider running the Pyro.DbManager to upgrade your database.
The application must now exit
Development vs production enviroment setup
In general, you would only use Pyro.ConsoleServer
in your development environment and configure its connection strings and ServiceBaseURL to suit. You would then only configure the Pyro.WebApi
connection strings and ServiceBaseURL to be for your production instance ready for deployment.
Logging
The solution uses the NLog logging framework. By default, this is configured to log to the console and to AWS Cloudwatch logs for the Pyro.WebApi
project and for the Pyro.ConsoleServer
project it is configured to log to the console and to a system file located at `C:\PyroLogs'.
You may wish to reconfigure this for your needs.
The logging configuration lives in the following files and the NLog Configuration Documentation is found at this link.
NLog logging config file locations:
Pyro.WebApi\NLog.config
Pyro.ConsoleServer\NLog.config
Pyro.ADHA (Project)
This project contains the logic and libraries from the Australian Digital Health Agency to perform HI Service searches for the Australian Individual Healthcare Identifier (IHI) which is the Australian National identifier for healthcare
Pyro.ADHA_Test (Project)
This project holds test cases for the HI Service searches for IHI identifier
Pyro.Backburner (Project)
This project is a windows service that can be installed and run to perform long-running, out-of-band, asynchronous tasks for the FHIR Pyro Server. There is no hard dependency for this service to be running to use the Pyro FHIR Server. When running, it connects to the main Pyro FHIR server via SingnalR to receive notifications of tasks to perform. This is currently in development but in future will manage background task such as Subscription notifications and possibly long-running Patient merge operations.
This windows service uses the TopShelf framework and in as easy to install on the command line as follows:
C:\BackburnerService\Pyro.Backburner.exe install
See TopShelf Command Documentation for more info.
The only configuration this project requires is the database connection string for the Pyro FHIR server configured here: Pyro.Backburner\App_Data\Connections.config
Pyro.CodeGeneration (Project)
Please note: You don't need to do the following to get the server running, this is only for future development purposes when a new FHIR release is available'
This project holds the code generation logic used to generate new classes for when a new version of the FHIR specification is released i.e update from STU3 to R4. It interrogates the FHIR .NET API to get the source specification information.
When a new version of the FHIR is released (e.g STU3 to STU4) and the external fhir-net-api package updated and loaded (use NuGet package manager) you can then run the T4 template located in this project at Pyro.CodeGeneration.Template.MainTemplate.tt
.
This will update the key classes in the Pyro.DataLayer
& Pyro.Common
projects to adapt to
the new fhir-net-api and FHIR release bringing in any new FHIR resources and base standard search
parameters.
Before running the T4 template MainTemplate.tt
you will need to manually update the static assembly references within this file to point to the new packages as updated by Nuget package manager.
Below are examples of the four references discussed:
<#@ Assembly Name="$(SolutionDir)packages\Newtonsoft.Json.9.0.1\lib\net45\Newtonsoft.Json.dll"#>
<#@ Assembly Name="$(SolutionDir)packages\Hl7.Fhir.STU3.0.93.3\lib\net45\Hl7.Fhir.STU3.Core.dll"#>
<#@ Assembly Name="$(SolutionDir)packages\Hl7.Fhir.Support.0.4.2\lib\net45\Hl7.Fhir.Support.dll"#>
<#@ Assembly Name="$(SolutionDir)packages\Hl7.FhirPath.0.4.2\lib\net45\Hl7.FhirPath.dll"#>
Once these are updated first build the project Pyro.CodeGeneration
in debug and then right-click the
MainTemplate.tt
file and select 'Run Custom Tool'. This will generate the code classes as discussed.
You may need to delete all contents in the sub T4 file MainTemplate.cs
if you receive a compile error.
Note that no database upgrades have been implemented for this type of modification so post this process you will need to delete the database which will be recreated as the first call is made to the FHIR endpoint.
Pyro.Common (Project)
This project holds all common cross-cutting code used by the entire solution.
Pyro.ConsoleServer (Project)
This project allows the server to be started up in a console window and is the primary way to run the server in a development environment. This is the project to set as start-up when running in Visual Studio.
Pyro.DataLayer (Project)
This is the data layer project which handles all database access
Pyro.DbManager (Project)
This is a console application that manages the Pyro server database initialisation and migrations/upgrades. You must run this before running either the Pyro.ConsoleServer
or the Pyro.WebApi
and it should be run after any code updates to apply any database changes that may be required. It is safe to run at any time and multiple times as it tracks what it has done within the database table __SchemaVersions
.
When run, it will first list the SQL scripts that it has detected as required to be run. It will then ask whether you would like these SQL scripts written to a folder for your own inspection or review. It will warn you to back up your database and then finally will ask: "Do you wish to perform the upgrade against the database?"
If you answer No it will abort if you answer Yes the scripts will be executed against the database. It will eventually finish with the word "Success!" in green, or a red "Failed!" and some error messages.
If you wished to automate this task you can provide the switch parameter '-UnattendedMode True' to the launch and it will run without requiring any user interactions, it will just attempt to run the scripts against the database and nothing else.
Pyro.Engine (Project)
This is the business logic layer
Pyro.Identifiers (Project)
This project is a library for parsing and validating healthcare identifiers, primarily Australian identifiers, (Medicare Number, Medicare Provider number, DVA Number, IHI Number, HPI-I Number, HPI-O Number)
Pyro.Identifiers_Test (Project)
This project holds test cases for the Pyro.Identifiers project.
Pyro.Smart (Project)
This project implements SMART (SMART on FHIR) elements. Currently under development and not used by the server as yet.
Pyro.Smart_Test (Project)
This project is the test cases for the Pyro.Smart project (SMART on FHIR) elements
Pyro.Test (Project)
This project houses all unit tests and integration tests for the FHIR server.
Pyro.WebApi (Project)
This is the project used when hosting in a production IIS instance. It is this project that you publish from for your production instance.
SMART on FHIR and Authentication I am slowly progressing to an Authentication system for the server with key elements beginning to fall in place to finally implement. I now have a SMART parser and FHIR compartments. Need to start work on the OAuth component possibly using Identity server: https://www.nuget.org/packages/IdentityServer4/
FHIR Release 4 (R4) A FHIR R4 version of the Pyro Server is in development and should be be ready soon, see the GitHub repository branch develop-r4
.
Angus Millar: angusbmillar@gmail.com