We are very happy to announce that after seemingly endless development, we have finalized the simultaneous releases of HAPI FHIR 3.0.0 and Smile CDR 2017.09.R01.
This release contains a number of enhancements, several performance enhancements, as well as some bugfixes.
The complete list of changes is available in the product Changelog.
Key improvements include:
EventDefinition
mechanism that is proposed for FHIR R4.This is a massive release, and includes a huge number of enhancements, fixes, and new features. Unfotunately it also brings a few breaking API changes so we are calling it version 3.0.0 (we are also moving to SemVer versioning).
As always, the changelog has the full list of changes in this release. I am outlining a few of the important ones here:
Support for FHIR R4 (current working draft) has been added (in a new module called hapi-fhir-structures-r4
) and support for FHIR DSTU1 (hapi-fhir-structures-dstu
) has been removed. Removing support for the legacy DSTU1 FHIR version was a difficult decision, but it allows us the opportunitity to clean up the codebase quite a bit, and remove some confusing legacy parts of the API (such as the legacy Atom Bundle class).
A new redesigned table of HAPI FHIR versions to FHIR version support has been added to the Download Page
HAPI FHIR’s modules have been restructured for more consistency and less coupling between unrelated parts of the API.
A new complete list of HAPI FHIR modules has been added to the Download Page. Key changes include:
hapi-fhir-base
and in to a new module called hapi-fhir-client
. Client users now need to explicitly add this JAR to their project (and non-client users now no longer need to depend on it)hapi-fhir-base
and in to a new module called hapi-fhir-server
. Server users now need to explicitly add this JAR to their project (and non-server users now no longer need to depend on it)hapi-fhir-android
which is added to your Android Gradle file along with whatever structures JARs you wish to add. See the Android Integration Test to see a sample project using HAPI FHIR 3.0.0. Note that this has been reported to work by some people but others are having issues with it! In order to avoid delaying this release any further we are releasing now despite these issues. If you are an Android guru and want to help iron things out please get in touch. If not, it might be a good idea to stay on HAPI FHIR 2.5 until the next point release of the 3.x series.hapi-fhir-utilities
has been added. This JAR reflects the ongoing harmonization between HAPI FHIR and the FHIR RI codebases and is generally required in order to use HAPI at this point (if you are using a dependency manager such as Maven or Gradle it will be brought in to your project automatically as a dependency)In order to allow the reoganizations and decoupling above to happen, a number of important classes and interfaces have been moved to new packages. A sample list of these changes is listed below. When upgrading to 3.0.0 your project may well show a number of compile errors related to missing classes. In most cases this can be resolved by simply removing the HAPI imports from your classes and asking your IDE to “Organize Imports” once again. This is an annoying change we do realize, but it is neccesary in order to allow the project to continue to grow.
Because the Atom-based DSTU1 Bundle class has been removed from the library, users of the
HAPI FHIR client must now always include a Bundle return type in search calls. For example,
the following call would have worked previously:
Bundle bundle = client.search().forResource(Patient.class)
.where(new TokenClientParam("gender").exactly().code("unknown"))
.prettyPrint()
.execute();
This now needs an explicit returnBundle statement, as follows:
Bundle bundle = client.search().forResource(Patient.class)
.where(new TokenClientParam("gender").exactly().code("unknown"))
.prettyPrint()
.returnBundle(Bundle.class)
.execute();
Thanks to everyone who contributed to this release, either by submitting pull requests, suggesting new features, or filing bug requests!