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Inferno Program Edition

⚠️ The Inferno (g)(10) certification tests are moving to a new repository! See #441 for details.

ONC 21st Century Cures Open API Certification Testing

Inferno Program Edition is a streamlined testing tool for Health Level 7 (HL7®) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR®) services seeking to meet the requirements of the Standardized API for Patient and Population Services criterion § 170.315(g)(10) in the 2015 Edition Cures Update.

Inferno Program Edition behaves like an API consumer, making a series of HTTP requests that mimic a real world client to ensure that the API supports all required standards, including:

  • FHIR Release 4.0.1
  • FHIR US Core Implementation Guide (IG) STU 3.1.1
  • SMART Application Launch Framework Implementation Guide Release 1.0.0
  • HL7 FHIR Bulk Data Access (Flat FHIR) (v1.0.0: STU 1)

Inferno Program Edition is open source and freely available for use or adoption by the health IT community including EHR vendors, health app developers, and testing labs. It can be used as a testing tool for the EHR Certification program supported by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC).

Inferno Program Edition is a pre-configured and customized version of the open source Inferno FHIR testing tool, and only contains tests and functionality relevant to the ONC Certification Program. Users interested in extending or reusing this open testing capability to meet their own needs are encouraged to visit the Inferno GitHub repository.

Installation and Deployment

Inferno Program Edition is designed to be run using Docker to ensure consistency of execution across a wide range of host environments, including Windows, Linux and MacOS.

  1. Install Docker for the host platform as well as the docker-compose tool, if necessary. Docker-compose may be included in the Docker distribution, as is the case for Windows and MacOS.
  2. Download the latest release of the Inferno Program Edition project to your local computer in a directory of your choice.
  3. Open a terminal in the directory where the project was downloaded (above).
  4. Run the command docker-compose up --build to start the server. This will automatically build the Docker image and launch Inferno, the HL7 FHIR Validator, and an NGINX web server, suitable for use in a single user environment. For information about running Inferno in a multi-user server environment, please refer to the Deploying Inferno in a Server Environment section below.
  5. Navigate to http://localhost:4567 to find the running application.

If the docker image gets out of sync with the underlying system, such as when new dependencies are added to the application, you need to run docker-compose up --build to rebuild the containers.

Check out the Troubleshooting Documentation for help.

Terminology Support

Terminology prerequisites

In order to validate terminologies, Inferno must be loaded with files generated from the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS). The UMLS is distributed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and requires an account to access.

Inferno provides some rake tasks which may make this process easier, as well as a Dockerfile and docker-compose file that will create the validators in a self-contained environment.

Prerequisites:

  • A UMLS account
  • A working Docker toolchain, which has been assigned at least 10GB of RAM (The Metathesaurus step requires 8GB of RAM for the Java process)
    • Note: the Docker terminology process will not run unless Docker has access to at least 10GB of RAM.
  • At least 90 GB of free disk space on the Host OS, for downloading/unzipping/processing the terminology files.
    • Note: this space needs to be allocated on the host because Docker maps these files through to the Host, to allow for building in the dedicated terminology container.
    • Note: see the .env file section below for a way to reduce this space requirement to around 40 GB.
  • A copy of the Inferno repository, which contains the required Docker and Ruby files

You can prebuild the terminology docker container by running the following command:

docker-compose -f terminology_compose.yml build

Once the container is built, you will have to add your UMLS API key to a file named .env at the root of the inferno project. This API key is used to authenticate the user to download the UMLS zip files. To find your UMLS API key, sign into the UTS homepage, click on My Profile in the top right, and copy the API KEY value from the UMLS Licensee Profile.

The .env file should look like this (replacing your_api_key with your UMLS API key):

UMLS_API_KEY=your_api_key
# optional
CLEANUP=true

Note that anything after the equals sign in .env will be considered part of the variable, so don't wrap your API key in quotation marks.

Optionally: you can add a second environment variable, named CLEANUP and set to true, to that same file. This tells the build system to delete the "build files"--everything except for the finished databases--between each version build. This caps the space requirement at ~40 GB, rather than 90 GB.

We've included a template .env file in .env.example, with these values commented out. To create your .env file, you can copy the contents of that file into .env, and update the contents with your API key/uncomment the CLEANUP as desired.

Once that file exists, you can run the terminology creation task by using the following command:

docker-compose -f terminology_compose.yml up

This will run the terminology creation steps in order. These tasks may take several hours. If the creation task is cancelled in progress and restarted, it will restart after the last completed step. Intermediate files are saved to tmp/terminology in the Inferno repository that the Docker Compose job is run from, and the validators are saved to resources/terminology/validators/bloom, where Inferno can use them for validation.

Cleanup

Once the terminology building is done, the .env file should be deleted to remove your UMLS API key from the system.

Optionally, the files and folders in tmp/terminology/ can be deleted after terminology building to free up space, as they are several GB in size. If you intend to re-run the terminology builder, these files can be left to speed up building in the future, since the builder will be able to skip the initial download/preprocessing steps.

Verifying a Successful Terminology Build

The following rake task will check that the built terminology contains the expected number of codes for each system:

bundle exec rake terminology:check_built_terminology

Spot Checking the Terminology Files

You can use the following rake command to spot check the validators to make sure they are installed correctly:

bundle exec rake "terminology:check_code[91935009,http://snomed.info/sct, http://hl7.org/fhir/us/core/ValueSet/us-core-allergy-substance]"

Should return:

X http://snomed.info/sct|91935009  is not in http://hl7.org/fhir/us/core/ValueSet/us-core-allergy-substance

And

bundle exec rake "terminology:check_code[91935009,http://snomed.info/sct]"

Should return:

✓ http://snomed.info/sct|91935009  is in http://snomed.info/sct

Restricting access to CodeSystems based on licensing terms

Running instances of Inferno can be configured to exclude terminology validation for codes based on applicable categories of additional restrictions, as defined by the UMLS license agreement.

By default, Inferno will not restrict validation of codes. To configure an instance of Inferno to exclude certain CodeSystems for validation, rename the resources/terminology/terminology_config.yml.example to terminology_config.yml, and update the file based on the example content. Inferno will provide an informational message on the landing page that describes which CodeSystems will not be validated in this running instance based on this configuration file. If Inferno tests receive a code from an excluded CodeSystem, a warning indicating that Inferno cannot validate the code will be provided along with the test result.

Manual build instructions

If this Docker-based method does not work based on your architecture, manual setup and creation of the terminology validators is documented on this wiki page

UMLS Data Sources

Some material in the UMLS Metathesaurus is from copyrighted sources of the respective copyright holders. Users of the UMLS Metathesaurus are solely responsible for compliance with any copyright, patent or trademark restrictions and are referred to the copyright, patent or trademark notices appearing in the original sources, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.

  Bodenreider O. The Unified Medical Language System (UMLS): integrating biomedical terminology.
  Nucleic Acids Res. 2004 Jan 1;32(Database issue):D267-70. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkh061.
  PubMed PMID: 14681409; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC308795.

Validator Service

Inferno Program Edition uses an external validator service that is run in a separate process to validate FHIR resources received from the system under test. When running Inferno in Docker using the docker-compose.yml file from this repository, the validator service is run as a separate Docker container and is available to Inferno via a RESTful API. If Inferno is not run using Docker and the docker-compose.yml file, then the validator service must be run separately and Inferno's config.yml must be updated to point to this service.

Updating the Validator Service in Docker

When Inferno is updated to a new version, it will occasionally require a new version of the validator service. If Inferno is being run using the docker-compose.yml file in this repository, the new validator version will be specified as part of the validator_service image declaration following an update through Git.

To download the Docker files associated with the new version, run docker-compose pull in the Inferno directory. Once the new files are downloaded, you can update the version by running docker-compose down, followed by docker-compose up --force-recreate. This will restart Inferno and the validator service with the new service version.

Updating the Validator Service outside of Docker

If Inferno isn't running in Docker, the validator service will have to be updated manually. See the FHIR Validator Wrapper repository for more information on how to run the validator service outside of docker.

Deploying Inferno in a Server Environment

Inferno's default configuration is designed to be lightweight and run on the users host machine. If you would like to run a shared instance of Inferno, you can use the docker-compose configuration provided in docker-compose.postgres.yml, which attaches Inferno to a Postgres database to provide more stability when multiple tests are run simultaniously. This requires higher resource utilization on the host machine than the default configuration, which uses SQLite for storage.

To run this configuration, you use docker-compose.postgres.yml file:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.postgres.yml up --build -d

To stop the service and destroy the containers, run:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.postgres.yml down

This configuration will persist data if the container is stopped or destroyed. If you would like to clear the data in the database, and have it recreated from scratch the next time the application is started, you can run the following commands:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.postgres.yml down
docker volume ls | grep inferno-pgdata # Lists active volumes
docker volume rm inferno-program_inferno-pgdata # Volume name will end in inferno-pgdata

For another example of deploying Inferno in a production environment, review the docker-compose file used to deploy Inferno Program Edition, Inferno Community Edition, and a number of services on https://inferno.healthit.gov/inferno.

Reference Implementation

While it is recommended that users install Inferno locally, a reference implementation of Inferno is hosted at https://inferno.healthit.gov/inferno

Users that would like to try out Inferno before installing locally can use that reference implementation, but should be forewarned that the database will be periodically refreshed and there is no guarantee that previous test runs will be available in perpetuity.

To see an example of using the reference implementation, see the walkthrough on the wiki.

Supported Browsers

Inferno has been tested on the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge. Internet Explorer is not supported at this time.

Unit Tests

Inferno contains a robust set of self-tests to ensure that the test clients conform to the specification and performs as intended. To run these tests, execute the following command:

bin/run_tests.sh

Inspecting and Exporting Tests

Tests are written to be easily understood, even by those who aren't familiar with Ruby. They can be viewed directly in this repository.

Tests contain metadata that provide additional details and traceability to standards. The active tests and related metadata can be exported into CSV format and saved to a file named testlist.csv with the following command:

bundle exec rake inferno:tests_to_csv

Arguments can be provided to the task in order to export a specific set of tests or to specify the output file.

bundle exec rake inferno:tests_to_csv[onc_program,all_tests.csv]

To just choose the module and use the default groups and filename:

bundle exec rake inferno:tests_to_csv[onc_program]

Running Tests from the Command Line

Inferno provides two methods of running tests via the command line: by directly providing the sequences or running automated scripts. You can either run these commands within docker containers through docker-compose, or directly in your own environment using ruby natively. We recommend using the docker-compose approach because it ensures that the appropriate validation services are in place.

Note: This feature is still in development and we are looking for feedback on features and improvements in ways it can be used

Running Tests Directly

Testing sequences can be run from the command line via a rake task which takes the sequence (or sequences) to be run and server url as arguments:

docker-compose run inferno bundle exec rake db:create db:migrate inferno:execute[https://inferno.healthit.gov/reference-server/r4,onc_program,UsCoreR4CapabilityStatement,USCore311Patient]

Running Automated Command Line Interface Scripts

For more complicated testing where passing arguments is unwieldy, Inferno provides the ability to use a script containing parameters to drive test execution. The provided ./batch/inferno.healthit.gov.json shows an example of this script and how it can be used. The execute_batch task runs the script:

docker-compose run inferno bundle exec rake db:create db:migrate inferno:execute_batch[./batch/inferno.healthit.gov.json]

Inferno also provides a generate_script rake task which prompts the user for a series of inputs which are then used to generate a script. The user is expected to provide a url for the FHIR Server to be tested and the module name from which sequences will be pulled.

bundle exec rake db:create db:migrate inferno:generate_script[https://my-server.org/data,onc_program]

Using with Continuous Integration Systems

Instructions and examples are available in the Continuous Integration Section of the Wiki.

Contact Us

The Inferno development team can be reached by email at [email protected]. Inferno also has a dedicated HL7 FHIR chat channel.

License

Copyright 2022 The MITRE Corporation

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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