Difference between revisions of "Publicly Available FHIR Servers for testing"
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** "SMART on FHIR" Server: https://api.fhir.me | [https://github.com/jmandel/smart-on-fhir Source] | ** "SMART on FHIR" Server: https://api.fhir.me | [https://github.com/jmandel/smart-on-fhir Source] | ||
** "FHIR Starter" App Launcher https://apps.fhir.me | [https://github.com/jmandel/fhir-starter Source] | ** "FHIR Starter" App Launcher https://apps.fhir.me | [https://github.com/jmandel/fhir-starter Source] | ||
+ | * http://worden.globalgold.co.uk:8080/FHIR_a/hosted_demo.html Robert Worden / Open Mapping Software | ||
+ | ** Patient resource, read-only | ||
+ | ** Illustrates building a FHIR server on any existing application, any resource, by mapping to the application database | ||
+ | ** Tools to do this now available free, evolving | ||
== SSL Fix == | == SSL Fix == |
Revision as of 16:07, 18 January 2014
Back to FHIR home page
Introduction
This page lists FHIR servers that are publically available for testing. In order to avoid spam etc, the servers are generally password protected. A contact is provided to get a password.
List
Note that these servers are testing servers. They may be sporadically unavailable, and as the FHIR specification is a moving target, they may not always implement the latest version, or do so correctly.
- http://fhir.healthintersections.com.au/ - Grahame's test server.
- Supports all resource types, all operations, xml + json
- implementation details: open source - see [[1]]
- also available using SSL at https://fhir.healthintersections.com.au/ (not operational right now)
- see Health Intersections FHIR Server login documentation for OAuth
- http://spark.furore.com - Ewout's test server (previously fhir.furore.com). The actual service endpoint is at http://spark.furore.com/fhir.
- Supports all resource types, all operations, xml + json
- implementation details: C# reference implementation, WebApi 2.0 library, Mongo DB for storage and search.
- Server is running on AppHarbor, Mongo at MongoLab, and storage of binary is done on Amazon S3
- http://nprogram.azurewebsites.net/ - Rik Smithies/NProgram test server
- person and patient resources, read only (C#)
- http://oridashi.com.au/fhir/ - Brett Esler/Oridashi demo servers overview
- read-only implementation: .NET 2.0, C#, self-host web server, SQL Server DB - legacy CIS
- End point #1: 'Best Practice CIS' http://demo.oridashi.com.au:8190/
- End point #2: 'Medical Director CIS' http://demo.oridashi.com.au:8191/
- End point #3: 'Zedmed CIS' http://demo.oridashi.com.au:8192/
- https://api.fhir.me - Josh Mandel / SMART Platforms
- Open-source server in Grails (Java/Groovy) + MongoDB
- "SMART on FHIR" Server: https://api.fhir.me | Source
- "FHIR Starter" App Launcher https://apps.fhir.me | Source
- http://worden.globalgold.co.uk:8080/FHIR_a/hosted_demo.html Robert Worden / Open Mapping Software
- Patient resource, read-only
- Illustrates building a FHIR server on any existing application, any resource, by mapping to the application database
- Tools to do this now available free, evolving
SSL Fix
On Grahame's SSL server the SSL trust certificate is not signed by a known Cert Authority. At least in JAVA or SCALA to get the resources you will have to set up a trustStore and manually import the cert from the server and assert that it is trusted.
To create the trustStore use the Java utility called keytool. First create a trustStore in the directory of your choice like this.
keytool -genkeypair -keyalg RSA -keysize 1024 -dname "CN=hl7.kp.org, OU=Pleasanton, O=Kaiser Permanente , L=Corona, S=California, C=US, EMAILADDRESS=Me@server.com" -validity 365 -keystore fhirTruststore
Note you will be prompted for a new password. Choose one and remember it.
You can obtain the cert from Grahame's server with various browsers, instructions differ.
Once you have the cert add it as a trusted cert to the trustStore like this, the cert file is fhir_der_x509.cer.
keytool -import -trustcacerts -alias hl7.kp.org -file fhir_der_x509.cer -keystore fhirTruststore
You can confirm it worked with this line.
keytool -list -v -keystore fhirTruststore
Now that you have that done, know the directory you put it, and know the password, then in your JAVA code you must add these lines.
System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", "/Users/peterhendler/development/FHIR/certificates/fhirTruststore"); System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword", "fhirdemo");
Finally, and this is important, you can not use the URL published above. The cert is actually from Amazon AWS so you must connect like this.
url = new URL("https://ec2-107-20-116-177.compute-1.amazonaws.com/svc/fhir/people/@34234");
Note the server name been has changed.