© 2015 X2Engine Inc.
Difference between revisions of "REST API Reference"
(→Example 1: hello, world) |
|||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
Try visiting the following URI within X2Engine: | Try visiting the following URI within X2Engine: | ||
index.php/api2/appInfo.json | index.php/api2/appInfo.json | ||
− | Initially you will be prompted to enter the username and password to complete authentication; enter the API key corresponding to the user in the password field. The above URL should respond with a JSON containing some basic info about the X2Engine | + | Initially you will be prompted to enter the username and password to complete authentication; enter the API key corresponding to the user in the password field. The above URL should respond with a JSON string containing some basic info about the X2Engine application. |
=== Example 2: direct access === | === Example 2: direct access === |
Revision as of 01:57, 2 May 2014
X2Engine's second-generation API, available as of version 4.1, is (for the most part) REST-ful, and includes many improvements over the original API.
This article is currently a work in progress.
Introduction
This API within X2Engine, can be accessed via the URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root
index.php/api2
It also:
- Exclusively uses JSON for data input and output
- Operates via HTTP/S requests
- Tends to use similar URIs for both input and output (distinguishing operations via the request method)
- Uses a variety of server response codes to distinguish error scenarios in the case of an unsuccessful transaction
- Uses the "HTTP Basic Auth" method for authentication
For example, to create a contact, one would send a POST request with its body a JSON-encoded attributes list to the URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root
index.php/api2/Contacts
with the Content-Type header set to application/json, and the request body as (for example):
{"firstName":"John","lastName":"Smith","visibility":1,"email":"johnsmith@example.com"}
If creation of the contact is successful, the server should respond with status code 201, and the response should contain a Location header with the full URL (including protocol) of the newly created contact (in addition to all the attributes of the new contact). If for example the new contact's ID is 123, that URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root would be index.php/api2/Contacts/123.json, and a GET request to that URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root would elicit a response from the server whose body contains a JSON-encoded list of attributes.
Getting Started
To use the API, you will need to obtain X2Engine API credentials, which include a username and an API key. An X2Engine user with administrative privileges can get or set API keys in the Users module administrator. Any user can authenticate via the API by visiting the Update page for any given user.
Explore the API In Your Browser
Once you have API credentials, you can examine the web API using your web browser by making GET requests to locations within index.php/api2 (simply by typing them into your browser's location bar). You can get a nicer view of the data returned by the server by installing a JSON viewing plugin in your web browser. A recommended plugin for this purpose is JSONView, which is available for Firefox and for Google Chrome (it's an unofficial port, but the developer of the API and author of this article uses it).
Example 1: hello, world
Try visiting the following URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root within X2Engine:
index.php/api2/appInfo.json
Initially you will be prompted to enter the username and password to complete authentication; enter the API key corresponding to the user in the password field. The above URL should respond with a JSON string containing some basic info about the X2Engine application.
Example 2: direct access
You can get the ID of any given account record by going to it inside X2Engine as you normally would and examining the URI[[wikipedia:Uniform Resource Identifier]]: The part of a URL that identifies the resource on the server to be accessed. In the context of the API, this refers to the relative path within the web server based in the web root of X2Engine, i.e. ''index.php/api2/Contacts/324.json'' as opposed to the full URL, which begins with the protocol (i.e. "http") and might also contain a path relative to the web site's document root. It should generally look somethin like this:
index.php/api2/accounts/32
or:
index.php/api2/accounts/id/32
In both of the above examples, the primary key value (id) of the record in question is 32. To view it in the API:
index.php/api2/Accounts/32.json
Note how in the API, the first letter of "Accounts" is capitalized. This is because active record data in the API is accessed not via specifying the module containing the active record class, or to which the class corresponds, but by specifying the actual class name to use when accessing (or querying) data.
Example 3: querying
index.php/api2/Actions?_order=-id&_limit=3
This will show you the last 3 action records (i.e. emails, call logs, to-do's) created in the system (which the current acting API user has permission to view), in descending order of their primary key values (column "id"). If you have no action records in your system, you should receive an empty array.
Prerequisites
When utilizing the API it is required or highly recommended that your language/coding environment of choice:
- Have a JSON parsing and encoding library available
- Have a library for making HTTP requests which can:
- Set request headers
- Parse response headers and read the response status code
- Natively support requests using HTTP Basic Auth for access
- Read responses even when the response code is not in the "success" category (2xx)
- Make POST, PATCH/PUT and DELETE requests
- Can access the network
Many high-level languages, such as Perl, PHP, Python and Ruby, meet these requirements. The specific usage of these languages is beyond the scope of this article; you will need to refer to the documentation of the library/libraries used in writing applications with the X2Engine API.
Querying
The first thing you can try