It appears, as you suggested, that 't1' doesn't really do anything. I am using the meraki.py library and testing calls with t0 at 5am, then testing t1 at both 6 am and 'now' - the values didn't really change. I know there were significantly fewer clients on from 5 - 6 am than 5 am to now. >>> five_am = datetime.datetime.timestamp(datetime.datetime.strptime("2021-02-08 05:00:00", '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')) >>> five_am 1612778400.0 >>> six_am = datetime.datetime.timestamp(datetime.datetime.strptime("2021-02-08 06:00:00", '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')) >>> five_am KeyboardInterrupt >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> now = db.networks.getNetworkClients( \ 'L_1234', \ perPage = 1000, \ total_pages = 'all', \ t0 = f'{five_am}', \ t1 = f'{six_am}', \ ) 2021-02-08 12:54:36 meraki: INFO > GET https://api.meraki.com/api/v1/networks/L_1234/clients 2021-02-08 12:54:43 meraki: INFO > networks, getNetworkClients; page 1 - 200 OK >>> len(now) 994 >>> now = db.networks.getNetworkClients( \ 'L_1234', \ perPage = 1000, \ total_pages = 'all', \ t0 = f'{five_am}', \ t1 = f'{datetime.datetime.timestamp(datetime.datetime.now())}', \ ) 2021-02-08 12:55:26 meraki: INFO > GET https://api.meraki.com/api/v1/networks/L_1234/clients 2021-02-08 12:55:31 meraki: INFO > networks, getNetworkClients; page 1 - 200 OK >>> len(now) 995 >>> So, I'm back to wondering how to get a full client list for a specific period in time.
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