Mock sample for your project: RecoveryServicesBackupClient API

Integrate with "RecoveryServicesBackupClient API" from azure.com in no time with Mockoon's ready to use mock sample

RecoveryServicesBackupClient

azure.com

Version: 2016-06-01


Use this API in your project

Integrate third-party APIs faster by using "RecoveryServicesBackupClient API" ready-to-use mock sample. Mocking this API will allow you to start working in no time. No more accounts to create, API keys to provision, accesses to configure, unplanned downtime, just work.
Improve your integration tests by mocking third-party APIs and cover more edge cases: slow response time, random failures, etc.

Description

Other APIs by azure.com

Azure SQL Database

azure.com
Provides create, read, update and delete functionality for Azure SQL Database resources including servers, databases, elastic pools, recommendations, and operations.

ContainerServiceClient

azure.com
The Container Service Client.

Azure Enterprise Knowledge Graph Service

azure.com
Azure Enterprise Knowledge Graph Service is a platform for creating knowledge graphs at scale.

AzureDigitalTwinsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Digital Twins Client for managing DigitalTwinsInstance

SubscriptionsManagementClient

azure.com
The Admin Subscriptions Management Client.

Azure Maps Resource Provider

azure.com
Resource Provider

SubscriptionClient

azure.com
The User Subscription Management Client.

Machine Learning Workspaces Management Client

azure.com
These APIs allow end users to operate on Azure Machine Learning Workspace resources. They support CRUD operations for Azure Machine Learning Workspaces.

CommerceManagementClient

azure.com
The Admin Commerce Management Client.

AzureBridgeAdminClient

azure.com
AzureBridge Admin Client.

HDInsightManagementClient

azure.com
The HDInsight Management Client.

BillingManagementClient

azure.com
Billing client provides access to billing resources for Azure subscriptions.

Other APIs in the same category

NetworkManagementClient

azure.com
The Microsoft Azure Network management API provides a RESTful set of web services that interact with Microsoft Azure Networks service to manage your network resources. The API has entities that capture the relationship between an end user and the Microsoft Azure Networks service.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Application Insights client for web test based alerting.

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations to retrieve Products by Tags in Azure API Management deployment.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Application Insights client for API keys of a component.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Application Insights client for web test based alerting.

AutomationManagement

azure.com

AWS CloudTrail

CloudTrail This is the CloudTrail API Reference. It provides descriptions of actions, data types, common parameters, and common errors for CloudTrail. CloudTrail is a web service that records Amazon Web Services API calls for your Amazon Web Services account and delivers log files to an Amazon S3 bucket. The recorded information includes the identity of the user, the start time of the Amazon Web Services API call, the source IP address, the request parameters, and the response elements returned by the service. As an alternative to the API, you can use one of the Amazon Web Services SDKs, which consist of libraries and sample code for various programming languages and platforms (Java, Ruby, .NET, iOS, Android, etc.). The SDKs provide programmatic access to CloudTrail. For example, the SDKs handle cryptographically signing requests, managing errors, and retrying requests automatically. For more information about the Amazon Web Services SDKs, including how to download and install them, see Tools to Build on Amazon Web Services. See the CloudTrail User Guide for information about the data that is included with each Amazon Web Services API call listed in the log files.

AWS Systems Manager Incident Manager Contacts

Systems Manager Incident Manager is an incident management console designed to help users mitigate and recover from incidents affecting their Amazon Web Services-hosted applications. An incident is any unplanned interruption or reduction in quality of services. Incident Manager increases incident resolution by notifying responders of impact, highlighting relevant troubleshooting data, and providing collaboration tools to get services back up and running. To achieve the primary goal of reducing the time-to-resolution of critical incidents, Incident Manager automates response plans and enables responder team escalation.

Azure SQL Database Datamasking Policies and Rules

azure.com
Provides create, read, update and delete functionality for Azure SQL Database datamasking policies and rules.

Azure Media Services

azure.com
This Swagger was generated by the API Framework.

MonitorManagementClient

azure.com

Amazon Route 53 Resolver

When you create a VPC using Amazon VPC, you automatically get DNS resolution within the VPC from Route 53 Resolver. By default, Resolver answers DNS queries for VPC domain names such as domain names for EC2 instances or Elastic Load Balancing load balancers. Resolver performs recursive lookups against public name servers for all other domain names. You can also configure DNS resolution between your VPC and your network over a Direct Connect or VPN connection: Forward DNS queries from resolvers on your network to Route 53 Resolver DNS resolvers on your network can forward DNS queries to Resolver in a specified VPC. This allows your DNS resolvers to easily resolve domain names for Amazon Web Services resources such as EC2 instances or records in a Route 53 private hosted zone. For more information, see How DNS Resolvers on Your Network Forward DNS Queries to Route 53 Resolver in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. Conditionally forward queries from a VPC to resolvers on your network You can configure Resolver to forward queries that it receives from EC2 instances in your VPCs to DNS resolvers on your network. To forward selected queries, you create Resolver rules that specify the domain names for the DNS queries that you want to forward (such as example.com), and the IP addresses of the DNS resolvers on your network that you want to forward the queries to. If a query matches multiple rules (example.com, acme.example.com), Resolver chooses the rule with the most specific match (acme.example.com) and forwards the query to the IP addresses that you specified in that rule. For more information, see How Route 53 Resolver Forwards DNS Queries from Your VPCs to Your Network in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. Like Amazon VPC, Resolver is Regional. In each Region where you have VPCs, you can choose whether to forward queries from your VPCs to your network (outbound queries), from your network to your VPCs (inbound queries), or both.