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Dwayne-Dibbley
Calcite | Level 5

Hi, 

 

I am using the following code to pull a json file from a url :

 

options NOQUOTELENMAX;

filename usage "/folders/myfolders/sasuser.v94/usage.json";

%let AccessKey = reallylongstring;
	
proc http
 url="https://a.url"
 method="GET" out=usage;
 headers 
   "Authorization"="Bearer &AccessKey.";
run;

libname usage json "/folders/myfolders/sasuser.v94/usage.json";

data usage;
 set usage.data;
run;

proc print data=usage noobs;
run;

however now the results are returning more that 1000 results and i need to check for nextLink property somehow?

 

in .net you could use:

 

$usagerest = Invoke-Restmethod -url $usageurl -header $authheaders -method get

while ($null -ne $usageRest.nextLink) {
$usageRest = Invoke-Restmethod -uri $usagerest.nextlink -headers $authheaders -method get
}

is something like this possible with proc http in sas?

 

Thanks

 

 

3 REPLIES 3
ChrisNZ
Tourmaline | Level 20

 

Not too sure what your .Net code does, but you can post-process the data any way you want in the data step.

 

Would that help?

 

Dwayne-Dibbley
Calcite | Level 5

Hi,

 

the .net code basically fetches the initial json from the url ( which only returns 1000 rows ), then the last row in the json has a link to the next 1000 rows like:

 

......"}],"nextLink":"https://sameurl/nextpage?sessiontoken.......

 

it then runs another get request with the url from nextLink, and repeats until no more nextLink in the data

 

does that help with the explanation?

 

Thanks

ChrisNZ
Tourmaline | Level 20

> it then runs another get request with the url from nextLink, and repeats until no more nextLink in the data

 

In this case I would probably try to read the file as a simple text file using INFILE with the URL engine and FILEVAR= .

 

You can then update the next file to read using the FILEVAR= option and start over.

 

The tricky bit may be to identify the *last* nextLink call, depending on how the JSON file is built.

 

 

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