@Rukmini Thank you! I will also do the same if you have anything to test and confirm for updating those attributes using some sort of logic as I posted in stackoverflow.com/questions/78036590/…. No rush and no big deal if you cannot, you are the only person to reply to anything related to this thus far on SO. Figured I'd throw that out there since you've been so helpful here.
Thank you for all your help and assistance, if you want to post an answer, I will upvote it if you think it's worthy. I will also accept it once I get clarification from MS and add a self-answer with that detail, but I will still accept yours then too since what I asked was indeed needed for the scoped permissions you listed regardless of the corrupt MS Team group.
Luckily, only one Team-Enabled group out of 30 or so setup this way has this issue. I guess I'm hosed until MS can advise. I'm not sure what else on this side we can do to even troubleshoot or find verbose logs, etc. I'm done ranting now, what a pain, what a pain!
We got these departments transitioning to their workflows in the cloud groups for Teams, SharePoint, etc. and when one of those has issues which requires MS to troubleshoot or give a workaround, it throws in a big wrench.
I was hoping I could clone it, do some testing, have the manager/owner of the problem group do some testing, and then do some renames after hours and get their problem Team back up and running as a workaround.
@Rukmini Yep, it works perfect for a different Team which was created the exact same way as the Team with the error and on the other post related to the MS ticket. What a pain!! I'm at the mercy of Microsoft for any workaround now.
I'm getting ready to try, sorry, got pulled into something urgent that needed my attention. Wrapping this last thing up and then will find a good Team I can test the clone. @Rukmini
Yeah, let me try that real quick. Perhaps the specific Team is just corrupt on the backend somewhere only Microsoft can fix, and they are seemingly having a hard time tracking it down. I will give you an update here soon when I kick off the logic with another team.
Hi @Rukmini .... Yes, I meant my personal work or school Global Admin account tied to the tenant where I work. This is not my personal home account, but my personal company account rather tied to the same tenant.
@Rukmini I tried again and get the same exact error result adding in the new Directory.ReadWrite.All permissions disconnecting and reconnecting trying twice. I am using my personal Global Administrator account to do this. I wonder if it's corrupt and will just not work for cloning too with the other post that I'm waiting on MS support to give advice or guidance.
@Rukmini Unfortunately, I get the same error and I tried after disconnecting and reconnecting twice with both Connect-MgGraph -Scopes Team.Create and then Connect-MgGraph -Scopes Group.Read.All, Team.ReadBasic.All, TeamSettings.Read.All, TeamSettings.ReadWrite.All,Team.Create and both give the same error result. Please let me know if you have any other ideas and thank you!
Not knowing 100% for certain what IDs are sensitive or not, I have masked out the $teamId, request-id, and client-request-id characters out with mostly "x" and "8" characters from a privacy perspective if that's even applicable.
I did a Google search "GoogleFu" like Kong Fu but for Google slang I suppose and it told me markdown so I wanted to confirm that was indeed what you were seeking. It sounds like you confirmed that and Google steered me right. I don't use markdown much either but on SE too.
@RandomPerson Hi, thanks for the chat. I guess I meant I was not 100% that a .md file extension was truly for a markdown file type. But I guess if the .md file extension is associated with some app that opens it for Markdown then it does not matter.
I've been working on a solution to grab data from a PLC sensor with Python and I was able to work out the syntax and such using cpppo and that is working just fine as far as getting the data from the tag in a loop in a presumed serialized manner.
To test this new Python cpppo solution I've conne...
The logic is much more complex than this here but this question and answer helped me... yes it seems easy to get help with Python... Thank you StackExchange... Oh thank you... LOL
I made the Python logic poll sensors quicker than the network device currently capturing data using Java back-end logic (8 times per 1 second or something like that) and that's going over a VPN tunnel rather than the networked capturing devices sitting there collecting on the same local network.
One link dead BTW... I'm a sys admin / DBA taking on more stuff I suppose but Python seems promising and very cool. I recently found CPPPO module and got some cool stuff going with some PLC data processing... lol
Right on, reading over the links... yeah, I use that approach I guess for what I do with the programming languages, etc. I know for the processes I maintain utilizing either, MySQL stored procs, PowerShell, Python, batch CLI, external .Net apps, etc. In mainly Windows environments processing data exchanges, reporting, etc.
So is Python as robust as Java though minus the "current" and typical data type limits? Is it like "Anything Python can do, Java can do better!", or what?
@Cosmo I'm asking where you say they are consistently trying to improve these limitations. You mean with the latest releases or some package or how exactly? You know... "New Changes", "Recent Additions", etc.?
Good feedback!! I'm still a newb but somewhat advanced logic and scripting writer so Python so far seems pretty easy for me to learn and understand the concepts I've learned and written with thus far.
But I hear this notion often still so just curious if anyone can clarify why there's this perception unless maybe I just heard a few bad apples and most people don't think or say this?
Is it TRUE what the notion is about Python that I hear (or read) stated often with regard to it being better suited for scripting and not true programming and object oriented, etc.? Just curious if others here know if Python is just as robust or Java, C#, etc. or if it's really just more for scripting than programming? It has class, method, function, great with iterating, etc.
I don't need it to return my anything to the script that called it via subprocess.Popen(), I just need it to keep running once called regardless if the calling script gets killed or not
So if I call a batch script with subprocess.Popen() as soon as the Python shell window is killed, that batch quits running and I want it to keep running
Is there a function that one could use in Python 3.6 that's like subprocess.Popen(Cmd, shell=True) but when you run it from a script and kill that script's cmd windows that the process called by the subprocess.Popen() keeps running?