Forum Discussion
Ok, so the account is overwriting the other Authorization header that you added in the Headers section of the snap.
But if one of the components of the Authorization header that you’re adding manually is a client secret that presumably you want to protect, how are you storing that securely? Don’t you have the same issue as with the password?
I have to confess that I am not sure how to handle this type of data my experience with SnapLogic is still in its infancy. Using postman to initially test I just use environment variables. Right now in SnapLogic, I am just handling it directly in a mapper snap. I haven’t really seen any documentation that discusses how to handle the various credentials you may need to store when consuming 3rd party APIs within the SnapLogic platform. I believe that an OAuth2.0 SnapLogic account would store this information, but I don’t think it would work overall because of the delivery expected on the RingCentral side, among other requirements for creating an OAuth2.0 account.
Any guidance you could provide would be much appreciated?