Publicly Available FHIR Servers for testing
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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, WCF Rest library, Mongo DB for storage, Lucene for 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
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.