Disabling/enabling a user account

To disable a user account

  1. Authenticate to the cloud platform via the Python shell.

    The following variables should be available now:

    >>> base_url  # the base URL of the API
    '<the data center URL>/api/2'
    >>> auth  # the 'Authorization' header value with the access token
    {'Authorization': 'Bearer eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6ImMwMD...'}
    >>> tenant_id  # the UUID of the tenant to which the token provides access
    'ede9f834-70b3-476c-83d9-736f9f8c7dae'
    
  2. Assign the user_id variable the UUID of a user account created via the API or a user account found via search:

    >>> user_id = created_user_id
    >>> user_id
    '1c234e69-5469-424a-a6d1-ff5658b387a6'
    
  3. Fetch the revision number of the user account as described in Fetching user account information. The following variable should be available now:

    >>> version
    1
    
  4. Define a variable named user_data, and then assign the user account contact information to update to this variable:

    >>> user_data = {
    ...     "enabled": False,
    ...     "version": version
    ... }
    

    Name

    Value type

    Required

    Description

    enabled

    boolean

    No

    Flag, that disables or enables user account in the platform.

    version

    number

    Yes

    Revision number.

  5. Convert the user_data object to a JSON text:

    >>> user_data = json.dumps(user_data, indent=4)
    
  6. Send a PUT request with the JSON text to the /users/{user_id} endpoint:

    >>> response = requests.put(
    ...     f'{base_url}/users/{user_id}',
    ...     headers={'Content-Type': 'application/json', **auth},
    ...     data=user_data,
    ... )
    
  7. Check the status code of the response:

    >>> response.status_code
    200
    

    Status code 200 means that the user account status has been successfully updated.

    Note

    A different status code means that an error has occurred. For details of the error, see HTTP status response codes and API error codes.

    Also, the response body contains the user account information, formatted as a JSON text. When converted to an object, it will look like this:

    >>> pprint.pprint(response.json())
    {'activated': True,
     'business_types': [],
     'contact': {'address1': '',
                 'address2': '',
                 'city': '',
                 'country': '',
                 'email': 'johndoe@mysite.com',
                 'firstname': 'John',
                 'lastname': 'Doe',
                 'phone': '',
                 'state': '',
                 'zipcode': ''},
     'created_at': '2019-07-25T07:11:02.807354+00:00',
     'enabled': False,
     'id': '1c234e69-5469-424a-a6d1-ff5658b387a6',
     'idp_id': '11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111',
     'language': 'en',
     'login': 'JohnDoe',
     'mfa_status': 'disabled',
     'notifications': ['quota', 'reports', 'backup_daily_report'],
     'personal_tenant_id': None,
     'tenant_id': 'ede9f834-70b3-476c-83d9-736f9f8c7dae',
     'terms_accepted': False,
     'version': 2}
    

Note

The revision number increments with each update, so update the version variable where necessary.