On Sat, Apr 27, 2019 at 02:40:13PM +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
> On 27/04/2019 14:37, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
> > On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 07:28:39PM +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
> > > On 26/04/2019 19:06, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
> > > > This approach is similar to one used by HOT Tasking Manager [1]. In my
> > > >
On 27/04/2019 14:37, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 07:28:39PM +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
On 26/04/2019 19:06, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
This approach is similar to one used by HOT Tasking Manager [1]. In my "oauth
settings" section I have many many "Tasking Manager 3 - Prod" tokens. And I
f
On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 07:28:39PM +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
> On 26/04/2019 19:06, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
> > This approach is similar to one used by HOT Tasking Manager [1]. In my
> > "oauth
> > settings" section I have many many "Tasking Manager 3 - Prod" tokens. And I
> > feel this approach is not
On 26/04/2019 19:06, Jiri Vlasak wrote:
I would like to ask about the lifetime of OAuth token. I use OSM OAuth to log
into my web application. However, there is new token each time I log into the
web page.
I don't believe there is any expiry - once you have an access token
you can use it for a
Dear devs,
I would like to ask about the lifetime of OAuth token. I use OSM OAuth to log
into my web application. However, there is new token each time I log into the
web page.
This approach is similar to one used by HOT Tasking Manager [1]. In my "oauth
settings" section I have many many "Taskin
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