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Announcement
Anastasia Dyubaylo · Apr 16

Code Your Way to InterSystems READY 2025

Hi Community! We know that every developer has small side projects — apps where you experiment with new technologies, test ideas before implementing them in bigger solutions, or just build something fun for the sake of curiosity. But what if one of those projects could take you all the way to the InterSystems READY 2025? We’re launching a unique opportunity: show us your passion, creativity, and love for IRIS, and win a free pass to the InterSystems READY + hotel accommodation! The rules are simple: upload your fun IRIS-based side project to Open Exchange, and record a short inspirational video about why you should be the one to get the pass to THE event of the year and win! Duration: April 21 - May 04, 2025 Prizes: hotel accommodation and free passes to the InterSystems READY 2025! 🛠 What do you need to do? Upload a fun IRIS-based side project to Open Exchange (How to publish an application on Open Exchange). Be creative - it can be useful, quirky, fun, or just something you’ve always wanted to try. Record a short inspirational video (up to 5 minutes): Tell us how InterSystems technologies or the Developer Community impacted your project or career. Explain why YOU should get a ticket to the InterSystems READY 2025. Submit your video and link to your app via this form. 🧠 General Requirements for Applications An application or library must be fully functional. It should not be an import or a direct interface for an already existing library in another language (except for C++). It should not be a copy-paste of an existing application or library. Accepted applications: new to Open Exchange. Our team will review all applications before approving them. The application should work on either IRIS, IRIS for Health or IRIS Cloud SQL. The first two could be downloaded as host (Mac, Windows) versions from Evaluation site, or can be used in the form of containers pulled from InterSystems Container Registry or Community Containers: intersystemsdc/iris-community:latest or intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:latest . The application should be Open Source and published on GitHub or GitLab. The README file to the application should be in English, contain the installation steps, and either the video demo or/and a description of how the application works. An application can have only one author. NB. Our experts will have the final say in whether the application is approved for this initiative based on the criteria of creativity and originality of approach. Their decision is final and not subject to appeal. 👨‍💻 Who Can Participate Any Developer Community member, except InterSystems employees or contractors. Create an account! 🏆 Prizes 🥇 1st place: free pass to InterSystems READY 2025 + hotel accommodation 🥈 2nd & 3rd places: free pass to InterSystems READY 2025 ❗️The prize is not exchangeable for cash or any other alternative. ✨ Bonus Points You can boost your chances of winning by submitting additional activities: Publish a tech article about your project Create an extra video demo of your project Share your inspirational video on your social media using hashtag #Ready2025 and mention @InterSystems and @InterSystemsDev Get inspired. Build something fun. Share your story. It’s your time to shine - CODE your way to InterSystems READY 2025!
Discussion
Harshitha Balakrishna · Mar 23

InterSystems Training Course: Features and Certification Details

What features and benefits do we get from an InterSystems training course? Does it include certification?
Article
Kristina Lauer · Jan 23

InterSystems IRIS for Health: A Comprehensive Onboarding Guide

Updated 02/27/25 Hi Community, Looking for a way to onboard your team with InterSystems IRIS® for Health? Unlock the full potential of this platform by using these InterSystems learning resources. With a mix of online and in-person training, you can support various roles in your organization and equip your team for success. Onboarding Resources for Every Role Developers Online Learning Program: Getting Started with InterSystems IRIS for Health for Coders (21h) Classroom Training: Developing with InterSystems Objects and SQL and Building and Managing HL7 Integrations (5 days each) System Administrators Learning Path: InterSystems IRIS Management Basics (10h) Classroom Training: Managing InterSystems Servers (5 days) Data Analysts Video: Introduction to Analytics with InterSystems (6m) Learning Paths for every tool: Analyzing Data with InterSystems IRIS BI Delivering Data Visually with InterSystems Reports (1h 15m) Build Data Models Using Adaptive Analytics (2h 15m) Classroom Training: Using InterSystems Embedded Analytics (5 days) System Integrators Learning Program: Getting Started with InterSystems IRIS for Health for Integrators (14h) Classroom Training: Developing System Integrations and Building and Managing HL7 Integrations (5 days each) Learning Paths for integrators working with HL7® FHIR®: Building Basic FHIR Integrations with InterSystems (4h) and FHIR-Enabling Your Applications with InterSystems (3h 30m) Project managers Watch product overview videos. Read success stories to get inspired—see how others are using InterSystems products! Other Resources from Learning Services 💻 Online Learning: Register for free at learning.intersystems.com to access self-paced courses, videos, exercises, task-based learning paths, role-based programs, and more. 👩‍🏫 Classroom Training: Sign up for live, in-person or virtual training, or request a private course for your team. Find details at classroom.intersystems.com. 📘 InterSystems IRIS documentation: Comprehensive reference materials, guides, and how-to articles. Explore the documentation. 📧 Support: For technical support, email support@intersystems.com. Certification Opportunities Once you and your team members have gained enough training and experience, get certified according to your role! Learn from the Community 💬Engage in learning on the Developer Community: Chat with other developers, post questions, read articles, and stay updated with the latest announcements. See this post for tips on how to learn on the Developer Community.
Announcement
Anastasia Dyubaylo · Apr 22

Early bird discount for the InterSystems READY 2025

Hey Community, Great news for all those of you who have missed the Super Early Bird discount for the InterSystems READY 2025! You still have a chance to get an Early bird discount up until 26th of May! So don't miss you chance to participate in the event of the year. ➡️ InterSystems Ready 2025 🗓 Dates: June 22-25, 2025 📍 Location: Signia Hilton Bonnet Creek, Orlando, FL, USA Also, there are several ways you can get your passes without paying a dime! Check out our newest competition Code Your Way to InterSystems READY 2025. The rules are simple: upload your IRIS-based side project to Open Exchange, and record a short inspirational video about why you should be the one to get the pass to THE event of the year! Redeem the reward in your Global Masters My Rewards section if you have enough points. It comprises a ticket and a three-night hotel accommodation (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday). Please note that flights/transportation costs are not included. We hope to see you there! Awesome! I'll be there!
Announcement
Anastasia Dyubaylo · Mar 10

Winners of the InterSystems Technical Article Contest 2025

Hi Community! It's time to celebrate our 25 fellow members who took part in the latest InterSystems Technical Article Contest and wrote 🌟 38 AMAZING ARTICLES 🌟 The competition was filled with outstanding articles, each showcasing innovation and expertise. With so many high-quality submissions, selecting the best was no easy task for the judges. Let's meet the winners and look at their articles: ⭐️ Expert Awards – winners selected by InterSystems experts: 🥇 1st place: Creating FHIR responses with IRIS Interoperability production by @Laura.BlázquezGarcía 🥈 2nd place: Monitoring InterSystems IRIS with Prometheus and Grafana by @Stav 🥉 3rd place: SQLAchemy-iris with the latest version Python driver by @Dmitry.Maslennikov ⭐️ Community Award – winner selected by Community members: 🏆 Generation of OpenAPI Specifications by @Alessandra.Carena And... ⭐️ We'd like to highlight the author who submitted 8 articles for the contest: @Julio.Esquerdo Let's congratulate all our heroes who took part in the Tech Article contest #6: @Robert.Cemper1003 @Stav @Aleksandr.Kolesov @Alessandra.Carena @Dmitry.Maslennikov @André.DienesFriedrich @Ashok.Kumar @Julio.Esquerdo @Andre.LarsenBarbosa @Yuri.Marx @sween @Eric.Fortenberry @Jinyao @Laura.BlázquezGarcía @Corentin.Blondeau @Rob.Tweed @Timothy.Scott @Muhammad.Waseem @Robert.Barbiaux @rahulsinghal @Alice.Heiman @Roy.Leonov @Parani.K @Suze.vanAdrichem @Sanjib.Pandey9191 THANK YOU ALL! You have made an incredible contribution to our Dev Community! The prizes are in production now. We will contact all the participants when they are ready to ship. Congratulations to all the winners and participants Honored to receive second place and grateful to be part of such a talented community. Congratulations to all winners and participants! Congratulations to all the winners 🎉 Congratulations to the participants and winners.Special BIG THANKS to the organizers and administrators of this contest. 💐🏵🌷🌻🌹I'm really proud to see how this community has grown and raised in quality. Congratulations to all the winners and participants! Congratulations everyone, and thank you so much for making such an excellent community of developers possible !💐 Congratulations to all the winners and participants. Your articles were truly inspiring and showcased exceptional creativity and insight. Congratulations to all the winners and participants. All the articles are excellent!!! Congratulations to everyone! Great articles all around! Congratulations to all the participants! Thanks a lot for all your support! It's been a pleasure to participate 😊 And congratulations to everyone! I think it was a tough competition, all articles were so great! good turn out here, congrats all. Congratulations to all the participants! Congratulations to the winners... the best community ever !!! Amazing contributions! Thanks to all the participants! Kudos to all participants and winners🎉! Congratulations all! Congratulations to all the winners 🎉 Congratulations all winners and participants!!!! Congratulations to everyone👏 Congulations all!
Announcement
Bob Kuszewski · May 21

InterSystems Platforms Update Q2-2025

We have a big update this quarter. RHEL 10 was released yesterday, read on for what that means for you 2025.3 will use OpenSSL 3 across all operating systems  SUSE 15 sp6 will be the minimum OS for orgs using SUSE The minimum CPU standards are going up in 2025.3 Older Windows Server operating systems will no longer be supported in 2025.3 If you’re new to these updates, welcome! This update aims to share recent changes as well as our best current knowledge on upcoming changes, but predicting the future is tricky business and this shouldn’t be considered a committed roadmap. InterSystems IRIS Production Operating Systems and CPU Architectures Minimum Supported CPU Architecture In 2024, InterSystems introduced a minimum supported CPU architecture for all Intel- & AMD-based servers that allows us to take advantage of new CPU instructions to create faster versions of InterSystems IRIS. InterSystems IRIS 2025.3 will update that list to require the x86-64-v3 microarchitecture level, which requires the AVX, AVX2, BMI, and BMI2 instructions. For users with Intel-based systems, this means that Skylake and up will be required while Hasell/Broadwell will not be supported. For users with AMD-based systems, this means that Excavator and up will be required while Piledriver & Steamroller will not be supported. Are you wondering if your CPU will still be supported? We published a handy article on how to look up your CPU’s microarchitecture in 2023. Red Hat Enterprise Linux Upcoming Changes RHEL 10 - Red Hat released RHEL 10 on May 20th. We’ve been testing on the latest beta of RHEL 10 on InterSystems IRIS 2025.1. InterSystems IRIS 2025.1 support – We anticipate officially adding support for RHEL 10 in about a month. That’s assuming the GA version of RHEL 10 doesn’t introduce any significant problems, of course. Moving forward – once we have support for RHEL 10 in InterSystems IRIS, we will stop supporting RHEL 8 on moving forward versions of InterSystems IRIS. This likely means that InterSystems IRIS 2025.2 will just support RHEL 9 & 10. Previous Updates RHEL 9.5 has undergone minor OS certification without incident. Further reading: RHEL Release Page Ubuntu Current Update Ubuntu 24.04.2 has just been released and minor OS certification has begun. Further Reading: Ubuntu Releases Page SUSE Linux Upcoming Changes InterSystems IRIS 2025.3+ will require SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 or greater – SLES 15 sp6 has given us the option to use OpenSSL 3 and, to provide you with the most secure platform possible, we’re going to change InterSystems IRIS to start taking advantage of it. In preparation for moving to OpenSSL 3 in IRIS 2025.3, there will be no IRIS 2025.2 for SUSE. Further Reading: SUSE lifecycle Oracle Linux Upcoming Changes We’re expecting Oracle Linux 10 to be released around the same time as RHEL 10. Since we support Oracle Linux via the IRIS RHEL kit, we’re expecting Oracle Linux 10 support at the same time as RHEL 10 support is released. Further Reading: Oracle Linux Support Policy Microsoft Windows Recent Changes Windows Server 2025 is now supported in InterSystems IRIS 2025.1 and up. Upcoming Changes InterSystems IRIS 2025.3+ will no longer support Windows Server 2016 & 2019. Microsoft has pushed back the anticipated release date for Windows 12 to the fall of 2025. We’ll start the process of supporting the new OS after it’s been released. Further Reading: Microsoft Lifecycle AIX Upcoming Changes IBM is rolling out new Power 11 hardware this summer. We anticipate running the new hardware through the paces over the course of the late summer and early fall. Look for a full update on our findings in the Q4 newsletter. Previous Changes IRIS 2024.3 and up only support OpenSSL 3. NOTE: This means that 2024.2 is the last version of IRIS that has both OpenSSL 1 and OpenSSL 3 kits. In IRIS 2023.3, 2024.1, & 2024.2, we provided two separate IRIS kits – one that supports OpenSSL 1 and one that supports OpenSSL 3. Given the importance of OpenSSL 3 for overall system security, we’ve heard from many of you that you’ve already moved to OpenSSL 3. Further Reading: AIX Lifecycle Containers Previous Updates We changed the container base image from Ubuntu 22.04 to Ubuntu 24.04 with IRIS 2024.2 We’re considering changes to the default IRIS container to, by default, have internal traffic (ECP, Mirroring, etc) on a different port from potentially externally facing traffic (ODBC, JDBC, etc). If you have needs in this area, please reach out and let me know. InterSystems IRIS Development Operating Systems and CPU Architectures MacOS Recent Changes IRIS 2025.1 adds support for MacOS 15 on both ARM- and Intel-based systems. InterSystems Components Upcoming Releases InterSystems API Manager 3.10 will be released soon. InterSystems Kubernetes Operator 3.8 will be released in the coming weeks as well. Caché & Ensemble Production Operating Systems and CPU Architectures Previous Updates A reminder that the final Caché & Ensemble maintenance releases are scheduled for Q1-2027, which is coming up sooner than you think. See Jeff’s excellent community article for more info. InterSystems Supported Platforms Documentation The InterSystems Supported Platforms documentation is the definitive source information on supported technologies. IRIS 2025.1 Supported Server Platforms IRIS 2024.1 Supported Server Platforms IRIS 2023.1 Supported Server Platforms Caché & Ensemble 2018.1 Supported Server Platforms … and that’s all folks. Again, if there’s something more that you’d like to know about, please let us know. IBM POWER supported processors continues the same as POWER 8 or later? My mistake - please ignore this.. That's right. There's no planned change in supported POWER processors. IBM does a good job of phasing out older processors with new versions of the OS.
Question
Ashok Kumar T · Jun 10

InterSystems Package Manager (ZPM) Installation errors

Hello Community, I encountered the following errors while installing the ZPM module on version 2025.1. The ZPM install command failed on the Community Edition of IRIS for Health. Skipping installation of python wheel 'attrs-25.1.0-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM. Full error message Skipping installation of python wheel 'attrs-25.1.0-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'certifi-2025.1.31-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'charset_normalizer-2.1.1-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'idna-3.10-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'jsonschema-4.23.0-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'jsonschema_specifications-2024.10.1-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'oras-0.1.30-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'referencing-0.36.2-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'requests-2.32.3-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'typing_extensions-4.12.2-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM.Skipping installation of python wheel 'urllib3-2.3.0-py3-none-any.whl' due to error: '0 ;«WCould not find a suitable pip caller. Consider setting UseStandalonePip and PipCallerÓUSERÇ'e^OnAsStatus+1^%Exception.General.1^1/e^AsStatus+1^%Exception.AbstractException.1^15e^OnPhase+28^%IPM.ResourceProcessor.PythonWheel.1^1)e^%Initialize+8^%IPM.Lifecycle.Base.1^1-e^ExecutePhases+163^%IPM.Storage.Module.1^1+e^LoadNewModule+118^%IPM.Utils.Module.1^1e^Load+44^%IPM.Main.1^1"d^ShellInternal+48^%IPM.Main.1^1d^Shell+2^%IPM.Main.1^1e^ZPMLoad+3^IPM.Installer.1^1e^setup+63^IPM.Installer.1^1"e^AsyncSetup+2^IPM.Installer.1^1d^^^0'. You may need to install this wheel manually or from PyPI to use certain features of IPM. The ZPM installation failed with a 'not found in any repository' error for the applications I attempted to install on the 2024 and 2025 versions. USER>zpm "install System-Task-REST" ERROR! 'System-Task-REST' not found in any repository. USER>zpm ============================================================================= || Welcome to the Package Manager Shell (ZPM). Version: 0.10.2 || || Enter q/quit to exit the shell. Enter ?/help to view available commands || || No registry configured || || System Mode: <unset> || || Mirror Status: NOTINIT || ============================================================================= IRIS for Windows (x86-64) 2025.1 (Build 223U) Tue Mar 11 2025 18:18:59 EDT [Health:8.2.2] zpm:USER>install "System-Task-REST" ERROR! 'System-Task-REST' not found in any repository. zpm:USER>install swagger-ui ERROR! 'swagger-ui' not found in any repository. zpm:USER>install "swagger-ui" ERROR! 'swagger-ui' not found in any repository. zpm:USER> @Ashok.Kumar - could you please raise it here too? As for community images - the latest releases do not have community registry enabled by default. Use this command to make them work: USER>zpm repo -r -n registry -url https://pm.community.intersystems.com/ -user "" -pass "" I've raised the issue. Thanks! The issue is caused by the PythonRuntimeLibrary not being configured. Starting from version 2024.2, Python is no longer bundled with IRIS due to the introduction of the Flexible Python Runtime feature. As a result, the Python directory is missing, preventing the installation of the Wheel file. Check this post about this configuration.
Announcement
Anastasia Dyubaylo · May 20

Vote for the Best Demo! The InterSystems Demo Games Are On!

Hi Community, We’ve got something exciting for you — it’s time for a new demo video contest, and this time, you’re in the judge’s seat! 📺 Demo Games for InterSystems Sales Engineers 📺 For this contest, InterSystems Sales Engineers from around the world submitted short demo videos showcasing unique use cases, smart solutions, and powerful capabilities of InterSystems technologies. Now it’s your turn! We’re opening up voting to the entire Developer Community. Your insight and perspective as developers make you the perfect experts. 👉 How to participate Watch the demos on the Demo Games Contest Page Vote for your favourite entries (Developer Community login required) 🗓 Contest period Voting is open from May 26 until September 14, 2025, and winners will be announced shortly after. New videos will be added throughout the contest — so keep checking back. You might find a favourite right at the end! ✅ How to vote: All active members who have made a valid contribution to the Developer Community or Open Exchange — such as asking or answering questions, writing articles, or publishing applications — are eligible to vote. This includes customers, partners, and employees who registered using their corporate email addresses. To vote: Log in (or create an account) on the Developer Community Visit the Contest Page Select your top 3 favourite videos and click the “Vote” button for each 🏆 Scoring system: 1st place vote = 9 points 2nd place = 6 points 3rd place = 3 points 🔁 Votes from the Official Community Moderators* count double, so your top picks really matter! * Moderators are indicated by a green circle around their avatar. Let the Demo Games begin – and may the best demo win!
Announcement
Anastasia Dyubaylo · May 21, 2022

[Video] Drinking Our Own Champagne: InterSystems AppServices' Move from Zen Reports to InterSystems Reports

Hey Community, Check out the latest video on InterSystems Developers YouTube channel: ⏯ Drinking Our Own Champagne: InterSystems AppServices' Move from Zen Reports to InterSystems Reports The InterSystems internal applications team, which manages the Change Control Record System for both internal and for customer use, moved all reporting capabilities from Zen Reports to InterSystems Reports last year. Join us for a look at the before and after, hear about lessons learned, and learn about the move's unexpected benefits. 🗣 Presenter: @Jean.Millette, Developer AppServices, InterSystems Support this video with your 👍
Announcement
Bob Kuszewski · Jun 2, 2022

InterSystems announces General Availability of InterSystems IRIS, IRIS for Health, & HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1

InterSystems is pleased to announce the 2022.1 releases of InterSystems IRIS Data Platform, InterSystems IRIS for Health, and HealthShare Health Connect are now Generally Available (GA). 2022.1 is an extended maintenance release, which means that maintenance builds will be available for two years, followed by an additional two years of security-specific builds. Release Highlights Platform Updates InterSystems IRIS Data Platform 2022.1 expands support to include the following new & updated operating systems for production workloads: Windows Server 2022 Windows 11 AIX 7.3 Oracle Linux 8 We’re also happy to announce that both Apple’s M1 & Intel chipsets are supported with MacOS 12 (Monterey) for development environments. Better Development Embedded Python – use Python & ObjectScript inside IRIS Interoperability Adapters for Kafka, AWS S3, AWS SNS, & CloudWatch Redesigned user experience for Production Extensions (PEX) Speed, Scale, & Security Online Shard Rebalancing Adaptive SQL Journal & Stream Compression TLS 1.3, OAuth 2 Support for email Analytics & AI SQL Loader InterSystems Reports deployment improvements More details on all of these features can be found in the product documentation: InterSystems IRIS 2022.1 documentation and release notes InterSystems IRIS for Health 2022.1 documentation and release notes HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1 documentation and release note How to get the software The software is available as both classic installation packages and container images. For the complete list of available installers and container images, please refer to the Supported Platforms document. Full installation packages for each product are available from the WRC's Software Distribution page. Using the Custom installation option, you to pick the options you need, such as InterSystems Studio and IntegratedML, to right-size your installation footprint. Container images for the Enterprise Editions of InterSystems IRIS and IRIS for Health and all corresponding components are available from the InterSystems Container Registry using the following commands: docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-ml:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-ml-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 For a full list of the available images, please refer to the ICR documentation. Container images for the Community Edition can also be pulled from the InterSystems Container Registry using the following commands: docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-community:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-community:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-community-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-community-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-ml-community:2022.1.0.209.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-ml-community-arm64:2022.1.0.209.0 InterSystems IRIS Studio 2022.1 is a standalone IDE for use with Microsoft Windows and can be downloaded via the WRC's components download page. It works with InterSystems IRIS and IRIS for Health version 2022.1 and below. InterSystems also supports the VSCode-ObjectScript plugin for developing applications for InterSystems IRIS with Visual Studio Code, which is available for Microsoft Windows, Linux and MacOS. Our corresponding listings on the main cloud marketplaces will be updated in the next few days. The build number for this release release is 2022.1.0.209.0. Is this issue first added with 2022.1, solved in this latest build? Unfortunately, we do not have a workaround for Docker's breaking change included in 2022.1. The instructions in my Docker post should still be followed. What about previous images in containers.intersystems.com? It seems they are gone? What about InterSystems images on the DockerHub? Will they be published there too? Previously we had irishealth-ml images too, e.g. containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-ml:2021.2.0.651.0 What about this brunch of images? And images with ZPM package manager 0.3.2 are available accordingly: intersystemsdc/iris-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm intersystemsdc/iris-community:2021.2.0.651.0-zpm intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2021.2.0.651.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2021.2.0.651.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2021.2.0.651.0-zpm And to launch IRIS do: docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm And for terminal do: docker exec -it my-iris iris session IRIS and to start the control panel: http://localhost:9092/csp/sys/UtilHome.csp To stop and destroy container do: docker stop my-iris And the FROM clause in dockerfile can look like this: FROM intersystemsdc/iris-community:2022.1.0.209.0-zpm Or to take the latest image: FROM intersystemsdc/iris-community So if you are on the latest image already just rebuild the repository to get the latest IRIS production image with ZPM onboard. Also to stay up-to-date with InterSystems containers repository images I recommend taking a look at this remarkable free extension to Docker Desktop by @Dmitry.Maslennikov he contributed to the community: As is our long standing practice, preview releases are taken down once a GA release is available. We currently have the following versions available on IRC: 2019.1.3.722.0, 2020.1.3.521.0, 2021.1.2.338.0, 2021.2.0.651.0, 2022.1.0.209.0 Thanks, Bob! Community images are published to DockerHub, as is the longstanding practice. Docker is currently semi-retiring their old "store" portion of DockerHub leaving a confusing interface to find our containers. We expect that Docker will clear this up in the next few months. In the meanwhile, you can easily find InterSystems community containers via the InterSystems Organization on DockerHub: https://hub.docker.com/u/intersystems containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-ml:2022.1.0.209.0 is available on ICR, if that's what you're asking. We didn't list every single container in the announcement because, well, there are a lot of them Got it! It was listed in the previous GA announcement, that's why I'm asking. This is very helpful, thanks!
Announcement
Benjamin De Boe · Jun 14, 2021

InterSystems IRIS, InterSystems IRIS for Health & HealthShare Health Connect 2021.1 are now Generally Available

InterSystems is very pleased to announce the 2021.1 release of InterSystems IRIS Data Platform, InterSystems IRIS for Health and HealthShare Health Connect, which are now Generally Available to our customers and partners. The enhancements in this release offer developers more freedom to build fast and robust applications in their language of choice, both server-side and client-side. This release also enables users to consume large amounts of information more effectively through new and faster analytics capabilities. We expect many customers and partners to upgrade their Caché and Ensemble deployments to this InterSystems IRIS release and have made every effort to make that a smooth and worthwhile transition. Most applications will see immediate performance benefits just from running on InterSystems IRIS, even before they explore the many powerful capabilities IRIS brings to the table. We kindly invite you to join our webinar presenting the highlights of the new release, at 11AM EDT on June 17. The webinar will be recorded and made available for replay afterwards. Or listen to our Data Points podcast episode on what's new in 2021.1. Release Highlights With InterSystems IRIS 2021.1, customers can deploy InterSystems IRIS Adaptive Analytics, an add-on product that extends InterSystems IRIS to provide business users with superior ease of use and self-service analytics capabilities to visualize, analyze, and interrogate vast amounts of data to get the information they need to make timely and accurate business decisions, without being experts in data design or data management. Adaptive Analytics transparently accelerates analytic query workloads that run against InterSystems IRIS by autonomously building and maintaining interim data structures in the background. Other spotlight features new in this release include: Improved manageability for our External Language Servers, which now also cover R and Python. This gateway technology enables robust and scalable leveraging of server-side code in your language of choice The InterSystems Kubernetes Operator (IKO) offers declarative configuration and automation for your environments, and now also supports deploying InterSystems System Alerting & Monitoring (SAM). InterSystems API Manager v2.3, including an improved user experience, Kafka support and hybrid mode. Mainstream availability of IntegratedML, enabling SQL developers to build and deploy Machine Learning models directly in a purely SQL-based environment. Support for stream fields on sharded tables, giving you full SQL schema flexibility on InterSystems IRIS horizontally scalable architecture An iris-lockeddown container image, implementing many security best practices such as disabling web access to the management portal and appropriate OS-level permissions. Support for Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE) for Oauth 2.0 InterSystems IRIS for Health 2021.1 includes all of the enhancements of InterSystems IRIS. In addition, this release further extends the platform's comprehensive support for the FHIR® standard through APIs for parsing & evaluating FHIRPath expressions against FHIR data. This is in addition to the significant FHIR-related capabilities released since 2020.1, including support for FHIR Profiles, FHIR R4 Transforms and the FHIR client API. This release also includes HealthShare Health Connect, our InterSystems IRIS for Health based integration engine that delivers high-volume transaction support, process management, and monitoring to support mission critical applications. For a detailed overview of how its feature set compares to InterSystems IRIS for Health, please see here. More details on all of these capabilities can be found in the product documentation, which has recently been made even easier to navigate through a convenient Table of Contents sidebar. InterSystems IRIS 2021.1 documentation and release notes InterSystems IRIS for Health 2021.1 documentation and release notes HealthShare Health Connect 2021.1 documentation and release notes If you are upgrading from an earlier version and use TLS 1.3, please see these upgrade considerations. How to get the software InterSystems IRIS 2021.1 is an Extended Maintenance (EM) release and comes with classic installation packages for all supported platforms, as well as container images in OCI (Open Container Initiative) a.k.a. Docker format. Full installation packages for each product are available from the WRC's product download site. Using the "Custom" installation option enables users to pick the options they need, such as InterSystems Studio and IntegratedML, to right-size their installation footprint. Container images for the Enterprise Editions of InterSystems IRIS and InterSystems IRIS for Health and all corresponding components are available from the InterSystems Container Registry using the following commands: docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/iris-ml:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/irishealth-ml:2021.1.0.215.0 For a full list of the available images, please refer to the ICR documentation. Container images for the Community Edition can also be pulled from the Docker store using the following commands: docker pull store/intersystems/iris-community:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull store/intersystems/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull store/intersystems/irishealth-community:2021.1.0.215.0 docker pull store/intersystems/irishealth-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0 Alternatively, tarball versions of all container images are available via the WRC's product download site. InterSystems IRIS Studio 2021.1 is a standalone IDE for use with Microsoft Windows and can be downloaded via the WRC's product download site. It works with InterSystems IRIS and InterSystems IRIS for Health version 2021.1 and below. InterSystems also supports the VSCode ObjectScript plugin for developing applications for InterSystems IRIS with Visual Studio Code, which is available for Microsoft Windows, Linux and MacOS. Other standalone InterSystems IRIS 2021.1 components, such as the ODBC driver and web gateway, are available from the same page. Sharing your experiences We only get to announce one EM release per year, so we are excited to see this version now hitting the GA milestone and eager to hear your experiences with the new software. Please don't hesitate to get in touch through your account team or here on the Developer Community with any comments on the technology or the use cases you're addressing with it. For selected new capabilities and products, we've set up Early Access Programs to allow our users to evaluate software before it gets released. Through these focused initiatives, we can learn from our target audience and ensure the new product fulfills their needs when it gets released. Please reach out through your account team or watch the Developer Community if you're interested in participating in any of these. Thanks for the new release, @Benjamin.DeBoe ! Is there any publicly available list of publicly available images on the InterSystems registry? Are there any ARM images available? Yes to both questions: For a full list of the available images, please refer to the ICR documentation. Our doc team is updating that page today, but generally anything for which there was a 2021.1.0.205.0 tag, there should also be a 2021.1.0.215.0. There were a few open questions on the new permutations that we were looking through this morning. Improved manageability for our External Language Servers, which now also cover R and Python. Are there any docs for that, especially R and Python? I think you're looking for this. The doc is not separate for each language, but the quick reference in the last section points you at the respective class references. Thank you Benjamin! But I see it does not mention R at all and there's no corresponding R method in $system.external: set javaGate = $system.external.getJavaGateway() set netGate = $system.external.getDotNetGateway() set pyGate = $system.external.getPythonGateway() Can't wait for Python, I checked out R on Wiki. It looks interested for graph plotting and statistical analysis. The Wiki page also mentioned APL which is defined as: APL (named after the book A Programming Language)[3] is a programming language developed in the 1960s by Kenneth E. Iverson. Its central datatype is the multidimensional array. It uses a large range of special graphic symbols[4] to represent most functions and operators, leading to very concise code. It has been an important influence on the development of concept modeling, spreadsheets, functional programming,[5] and computer math packages.[6] It has also inspired several other programming languages.[7][8] in Wiki I learned this language while I was studying to become an actuary and during the university holidays I worked at Legal & General who were the Insurance company who were sponsoring my University Tuition and during or of these work experience holidays, instead of putting me in the room where the actuaries worked, they put me ina room with an IBM computer with a special keyboard and told me that this computer was specifically designed to run APL programs. Here are some examples of the language: Simple statistics[edit] Suppose that X is an array of numbers. Then (+/X)÷⍴X gives its average. Reading right-to-left, ⍴X gives the number of elements in X, and since ÷ is a dyadic operator, the term to its left is required as well. It is in parenthesis since otherwise X would be taken (so that the summation would be of X÷⍴X, of each element of X divided by the number of elements in X), and +/X adds all the elements of X. Building on this, ((+/((X - (+/X)÷⍴X)*2))÷⍴X)*0.5 calculates the standard deviation. Further, since assignment is an operator, it can appear within an expression, so SD←((+/((X - AV←(T←+/X)÷⍴X)*2))÷⍴X)*0.5 Prime numbers[edit] The following expression finds all prime numbers from 1 to R. In both time and space, the calculation complexity is {\displaystyle O(R^{2})\,\!} (in Big O notation). (~R∊R∘.×R)/R←1↓ιR Executed from right to left, this means: Iota ι creates a vector containing integers from 1 to R (if R= 6 at the start of the program, ιR is 1 2 3 4 5 6) Drop first element of this vector (↓ function), i.e., 1. So 1↓ιR is 2 3 4 5 6 Set R to the new vector (←, assignment primitive), i.e., 2 3 4 5 6 The / replicate operator is dyadic (binary) and the interpreter first evaluates its left argument (fully in parentheses): Generate outer product of R multiplied by R, i.e., a matrix that is the multiplication table of R by R (°.× operator), i.e., 4 6 8 10 12 6 9 12 15 18 8 12 16 20 24 10 15 20 25 30 12 18 24 30 36 Build a vector the same length as R with 1 in each place where the corresponding number in R is in the outer product matrix (∈, set inclusion or element of or Epsilon operator), i.e., 0 0 1 0 1 Logically negate (not) values in the vector (change zeros to ones and ones to zeros) (∼, logical not or Tilde operator), i.e., 1 1 0 1 0 Select the items in R for which the corresponding element is 1 (/ replicate operator), i.e., 2 3 5 And I wrote a number of programs which had the IT department asking "How on earth did you do that and what does it mean?" to which I replied "I asked the computer to do this for me and it said 'Yes Nigel' and the programs worked. It was then that I knew I was destind to become a developer . When, a few years later in London I was introduced to Multidimedsional structures I already knew what they were because of my exposure to APL. Dear InterSystems, how about introducing APL into our library of analytical programming languages? Nigel I believe the R one goes through the Java gateway, but not sure why it's not described (yet) in the docs. Pinging @Robert.Kuszewski for more detail Hi Nigel, glad you like the Python Gateway work. Perhaps you're also interested in participating in the embedded python EAP? As for APL, we're typically looking for some critical mass of customer demand before embarking on such a development project and only recall it being mentioned once before. But thanks for bringing it up, as each critical mass starts somewhere :-). This said, we've had some really great work pioneered in the community here. The Python Gateway project is one example that originated here and its popularity (thanks @Eduard.Lebedyuk and @Sergey.Lukyanchikov !) inspired the one now released as part of the core InterSystems IRIS platform. Similar concepts, such as the Julia Gateway are still "incubating" as a community-driven project. Maybe APL could fit that same path? And we updated the images with ZPM 0.2.14 too: intersystemsdc/iris-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm intersystemsdc/iris-community:2020.4.0.547.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2020.4.0.547.0-zpm And to launch IRIS do: docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-community:2020.4.0.547.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2020.4.0.547.0-zpm And for terminal do: docker exec -it my-iris iris session IRIS and to start the control panel: http://localhost:9092/csp/sys/UtilHome.csp To stop and destroy container do: docker stop my-iris Hi Ben Yeah, I added the comments about APL because I just happened to notice it in Wiki while looking at R and it reminded me of my Actuarial days. It was a curious language being almost entirely symbolic in nature. The standard "Hello World" program that every language tutorial teaches was something more like I learned it in 1981 and I see that there have been releases of APL2 and so I guess that somewhere someone is using it (probably in Mathematical Modelling which is what many Actuaries do instead of designing Insurance Policies and staring at Life Expectancy Tables which was what Actuaries did in those day) and I think that a language like Julia (which I have also downloaded and played with a few months ago is much more suited to Pure Math). Can I ask a question, I notice that Python is an Interpreted language like ObjectScript. Was that part of the decision to include it into InterSystems IRIS (and also that it is one of the most popular languages on the Top 10 language list) based on the fact that it could ultimately be compiled down to .obj code? You're spot on. The similarity between Python and ObjectScript plus its popularity (Python's, that is ;-) ) are exactly what drove us to build Embedded Python. We're not compiling it to .obj code though, but running it "as Python" in the kernel. @Robert.Kuszewski and @David.McCaldon are much better at explaining that nuance (and actually do in the intro webinar to our early access program for this upcoming feature. Thank you Benjamin! Is community edition download is available to run directly from windows other then docker image? Yes. If you navigate to the WRC software distribution site or even just https://download.intersystems.com/, you can select community edition kits for a variety of platforms, including Windows. You are right Benjamin, the R gateway go through the Java gateway with two helper classes : - com.intersystems.rgateway.Helper - org.rosuda.REngine.Rserve An example can be found here : - https://github.com/grongierisc/iris-r-gateway-template If I may, I prefer the approach of Eduard for the R gateway : https://github.com/intersystems-community/RGateway who by pass the java gateway and directly use socket connection to the R Server. @Eduard.Lebedyuk : you are right no documentation a this time for the R Gateway. Thank you for the info Guillaume! I would like to clarify that I'm not an author of Community R Gateway (although I do publish it). Shiao-Bin Soong is the author of both Community R Gateway and R Gateway. Hi Ben I certainly would like to join the Python EAP. I was actually sent an invite but it slipped through the gap and I had communicated with Eduard to issue another Invite. I have already installed the InterSystems IRIS 2021.1 PYTHON kit and I just need a license. At Anastasia's recommendation, I sent a request to Bob to get a license. I don't know if it's too late to join the current EAP as gather there will be another one but if I can join in the current one then that would be great When i run the following: set srv = $system.external.getServers() write srv.%ToJSON()["%DotNet Server","%IntegratedML Server","%JDBC Server","%Java Server","%Python Server","%R Server","%XSLT Server"] R does appear Nigel I'm running: store/intersystems/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.0 And $zv is: IRIS for UNIX (Ubuntu Server LTS for x86-64 Containers) 2021.1 (Build 215U) Wed Jun 9 2021 12:37:06 EDT Are $zv for ml and non ml builds the same? How can I distinguish if my app is running on ml or non ml build? Use docker-ls: PS D:\Cache\distr> .\docker-ls tags --registry https://containers.intersystems.com intersystems/iris-community requesting list . done repository: intersystems/iris-community tags: - 2020.1.1.408.0 - 2020.3.0.221.0 - 2020.4.0.547.0 - 2021.1.0.215.0 Any new speed testing doing or planing on InterSystems IRIS 2021? @Amir.Samary ? eh, it's the sixth item in the list? yes, they are the same. Like Studio and ODBC, it's an install-time option to right-size your footprint (and therefore highly relevant for container images). I'm not sure if there's a handy utility method to check if it's been installed or not, but @Thomas.Dyar would know. What happened to intersystems/arbiter? I can't find it in containers.intersystems.com registry: >docker-ls.exe repositories --registry https://containers.intersystems.com requesting list . done repositories: - intersystems/iris-community - intersystems/iris-community-arm64 - intersystems/iris-ml-community - intersystems/irishealth-aa-community - intersystems/irishealth-community - intersystems/irishealth-community-arm64 - intersystems/irishealth-ml-community - intersystems/sam However, a direct pull succeeds: docker pull containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/arbiter:2021.1.0.215.0 2021.1.0.215.0: Pulling from intersystems/arbiter f22ccc0b8772: Already exists 3cf8fb62ba5f: Already exists e80c964ece6a: Already exists cc40d98799c0: Pull complete 4179ff34652c: Pull complete 70ed38c703cc: Pull complete ab1c2108b984: Pull complete 758289e88757: Pull complete Digest: sha256:51c31749251bea1ab8019a669873fd33efa6020898dd4b1749a247c264448592 Status: Downloaded newer image for containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/arbiter:2021.1.0.215.0 containers.intersystems.com/intersystems/arbiter:2021.1.0.215.0 @Luca.Ravazzolo? It's still there, docker-ls just needs the auth. docker-ls repositories --registry https://containers.intersystems.com --user "********" --password "****************" requesting list . done repositories: - intersystems/arbiter - intersystems/arbiter-arm64 ....... I'm authorized in containers.intersystems.com in docker. Is that not enough? Interesting. I see both of them { "RepositoryName": "intersystems/arbiter", "Tags": [ "2019.1.1.615.1", "2020.1.0.215.0", "2020.1.1.408.0", "2020.2.0.211.0", "2020.3.0.221.0", "2020.4.0.547.0", "2021.1.0.215.0" ] }, { "RepositoryName": "intersystems/arbiter-arm64", "Tags": [ "2020.4.0.547.0" ] }, -- Command used docker run --rm carinadigital/docker-ls \ docker-ls \ -u luxabc \ -p abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvxyz0987654321 \ --registry https://containers.intersystems.com \ repositories \ --level 2 \ --json -- Here are the updated images with ZPM and license prolonged: intersystemsdc/iris-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm And to launch IRIS do: docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/iris-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm docker run --rm --name my-iris -d --publish 9091:1972 --publish 9092:52773 intersystemsdc/irishealth-ml-community:2021.1.0.215.3-zpm And for terminal do: docker exec -it my-iris iris session IRIS and to start the control panel: http://localhost:9092/csp/sys/UtilHome.csp To stop and destroy container do: docker stop my-iris
Announcement
Fabiano Sanches · Jan 18, 2023

InterSystems announces availability of InterSystems IRIS, IRIS for Health, & HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1.2

InterSystems is pleased to announce that the extended maintenance releases of InterSystems IRIS, InterSystems IRIS for Health, and HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1.2 are now available. These releases provide a few selected features and bug fixes for the 2022.1.0 and 2022.1.1 releases. You can find additional information about what has changed on these pages: InterSystems IRIS InterSystems IRIS for Health HealthShare Health Connect Please share your feedback through the Developer Community so we can build a better product together. How to get the software The software is available as both classic installation packages and container images. For the complete list of available installers and container images, please refer to the Supported Platforms webpage. Full installation packages for each product are available from the WRC's Software Distribution page. Installation packages and preview keys are available from the WRC's preview download site or through the evaluation services website. Container images for the Enterprise and Community Editions of InterSystems IRIS and IRIS for Health and all corresponding components are available from the InterSystems Container Registry. The number of all kits & containers in this release is 2022.1.2.574.0.
Announcement
Fabiano Sanches · Feb 28, 2023

InterSystems announces availability of InterSystems IRIS, IRIS for Health, & HealthShare Health Connect 2021.1.3

InterSystems is pleased to announce that the extended maintenance release of InterSystems IRIS, InterSystems IRIS for Health, and HealthShare Health Connect 2021.1.3 is now available. This release provides a few selected features and bug fixes for the previous 2021.1.x releases. You can find additional information about what has changed on these pages: InterSystems IRIS InterSystems IRIS for Health HealthShare Health Connect Please share your feedback through the Developer Community so we can build a better product together. How to get the software The software is available as both classic installation packages and container images. For the complete list of available installers and container images, please refer to the Supported Platforms webpage. Full installation packages for each product are available from the WRC's Software Distribution page. Container images are available from the InterSystems Container Registry. There are no Community Edition kits or containers available for this release. The number of all kits & containers in this release is 2021.1.3.389.0. 2021.1.3? yes - this is a maintenance (bug fix) release of our InterSystems IRIS 2021.1 Extended Maintenance software. The 3rd maintenance release to be precise. Does that help?
Announcement
Fabiano Sanches · Oct 24, 2022

InterSystems announces availability of InterSystems IRIS, IRIS for Health, & HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1.1

InterSystems is pleased to announce that the extended maintenance releases of InterSystems IRIS, InterSystems IRIS for Health, and HealthShare Health Connect 2022.1.1 are now available. These releases provide a few selected features and bug fixes for the 2022.1.0 releases. You can find additional information about what has changed on these pages: InterSystems IRIS: https://docs.intersystems.com/irislatest/csp/docbook/changes/index.html InterSystems IRIS for Health: https://docs.intersystems.com/irisforhealthlatest/csp/docbook/changes/index.html HealthShare Health Connect: https://docs.intersystems.com/healthconnectlatest/csp/docbook/changes/index.html Please share your feedback through the Developer Community so we can build a better product together. How to get the software The software is available as both classic installation packages and container images. For the complete list of available installers and container images, please refer to the Supported Platforms webpage. Full installation packages for each product are available from the WRC's Software Distribution page. Installation packages and preview keys are available from the WRC's preview download site or through the evaluation services website (use the flag "Show Preview Software"to get access to the 2022.2). Container images for the Enterprise and Community Editions of InterSystems IRIS and IRIS for Health and all corresponding components are available from the InterSystems Container Registry. The number of all kits & containers in this release is 2022.1.1.374.0, except macOS Community Edition which is 2022.1.1.375.0.
Announcement
Jeff Fried · Sep 10, 2019

2019.1.1 preview is available for InterSystems IRIS, InterSystems IRIS for Health, and HealthShare Health Connect

Preview kits are now published via the WRC's preview download site for: InterSystems IRIS 2019.1.1 InterSystems IRIS for Health 2019.1.1 HealthShare Health Connect 2019.1.1 The build number for these releases is 2019.1.1.608.0. This is a maintenance release and includes changes in a number of areas, as described in the online documentation here. It also includes three new features, described in the online documentation here: Support for the InterSystems API Manager, In-place conversion from Caché and Ensemble to InterSystems IRIS X12 element validation. This release also adds support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, in addition to the previously supported platforms detailed in the Supported Platforms document. Preview releases allow our customers to get an early start working with new features and functionality. They are supported for development and test purposes, but not for production.