Mock sample for your project: Security Center API

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

Security Center

azure.com

Version: 2015-06-01-preview


Use this API in your project

Integrate third-party APIs faster by using "Security Center API" ready-to-use mock sample. Mocking this API will help you accelerate your development lifecycles and improves your integration tests' quality and reliability by accounting for random failures, slow response time, etc.
It also helps reduce your dependency on third-party APIs: no more accounts to create, API keys to provision, accesses to configure, unplanned downtime, etc.

Description

API spec for Microsoft.Security (Azure Security Center) resource provider

Other APIs by azure.com

SqlManagementClient

azure.com
The Azure SQL Database management API provides a RESTful set of web APIs that interact with Azure SQL Database services to manage your databases. The API enables users to create, retrieve, update, and delete databases, servers, and other entities.

SubscriptionsManagementClient

azure.com
The Admin Subscriptions Management Client.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Application Insights client for Annotations for a component.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Azure Application Insights client for Components.

DataBoxEdgeManagementClient

azure.com

SubscriptionsManagementClient

azure.com
The Admin Subscriptions Management Client.

Application Insights Data Plane

This API exposes AI metric & event information and associated metadata

AuthorizationManagementClient

azure.com
Role based access control provides you a way to apply granular level policy administration down to individual resources or resource groups. These operations enable you to manage role assignments. A role assignment grants access to Azure Active Directory users.

DataLakeAnalyticsAccountManagementClient

azure.com
Creates an Azure Data Lake Analytics account management client.

MariaDBManagementClient

azure.com
The Microsoft Azure management API provides create, read, update, and delete functionality for Azure MariaDB resources including servers, databases, firewall rules, VNET rules, security alert policies, log files and configurations with new business model.

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

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

ApplicationInsightsManagementClient

azure.com
Apis for customer in enterprise agreement migrate to new pricing model or rollback to legacy pricing model.

Other APIs in the same category

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations on tenant entity associated with your Azure API Management deployment. Using this entity you can manage properties and configuration that apply to the entire API Management service instance.

AWS Secrets Manager

Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager provides a service to enable you to store, manage, and retrieve, secrets. This guide provides descriptions of the Secrets Manager API. For more information about using this service, see the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager User Guide. API Version This version of the Secrets Manager API Reference documents the Secrets Manager API version 2017-10-17. As an alternative to using 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 such as Java, Ruby, .NET, iOS, and Android. The SDKs provide a convenient way to create programmatic access to Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager. For example, the SDKs provide cryptographically signing requests, managing errors, and retrying requests automatically. For more information about the Amazon Web Services SDKs, including downloading and installing them, see Tools for Amazon Web Services. We recommend you use the Amazon Web Services SDKs to make programmatic API calls to Secrets Manager. However, you also can use the Secrets Manager HTTP Query API to make direct calls to the Secrets Manager web service. To learn more about the Secrets Manager HTTP Query API, see Making Query Requests in the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager User Guide. Secrets Manager API supports GET and POST requests for all actions, and doesn't require you to use GET for some actions and POST for others. However, GET requests are subject to the limitation size of a URL. Therefore, for operations that require larger sizes, use a POST request. Support and Feedback for Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager We welcome your feedback. Send your comments to [email protected], or post your feedback and questions in the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager Discussion Forum. For more information about the Amazon Web Services Discussion Forums, see Forums Help. How examples are presented The JSON that Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager expects as your request parameters and the service returns as a response to HTTP query requests contain single, long strings without line breaks or white space formatting. The JSON shown in the examples displays the code formatted with both line breaks and white space to improve readability. When example input parameters can also cause long strings extending beyond the screen, you can insert line breaks to enhance readability. You should always submit the input as a single JSON text string. Logging API Requests Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager supports Amazon Web Services CloudTrail, a service that records Amazon Web Services API calls for your Amazon Web Services account and delivers log files to an Amazon S3 bucket. By using information that's collected by Amazon Web Services CloudTrail, you can determine the requests successfully made to Secrets Manager, who made the request, when it was made, and so on. For more about Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager and support for Amazon Web Services CloudTrail, see Logging Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager Events with Amazon Web Services CloudTrail in the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager User Guide. To learn more about CloudTrail, including enabling it and find your log files, see the Amazon Web Services CloudTrail User Guide.

AWS Identity and Access Management

Identity and Access Management Identity and Access Management (IAM) is a web service for securely controlling access to Amazon Web Services services. With IAM, you can centrally manage users, security credentials such as access keys, and permissions that control which Amazon Web Services resources users and applications can access. For more information about IAM, see Identity and Access Management (IAM) and the Identity and Access Management User Guide.

Service Quotas

With Service Quotas, you can view and manage your quotas easily as your AWS workloads grow. Quotas, also referred to as limits, are the maximum number of resources that you can create in your AWS account. For more information, see the Service Quotas User Guide.

AWS License Manager

AWS License Manager AWS License Manager makes it easier to manage licenses from software vendors across multiple AWS accounts and on-premises servers.

Amazon Elastic File System

Amazon Elastic File System Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) provides simple, scalable file storage for use with Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon Web Services Cloud. With Amazon EFS, storage capacity is elastic, growing and shrinking automatically as you add and remove files, so your applications have the storage they need, when they need it. For more information, see the Amazon Elastic File System API Reference and the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide.

RecoveryServicesBackupClient

azure.com

Amazon Personalize

Amazon Personalize is a machine learning service that makes it easy to add individualized recommendations to customers.

AWS Mobile

AWS Mobile Service provides mobile app and website developers with capabilities required to configure AWS resources and bootstrap their developer desktop projects with the necessary SDKs, constants, tools and samples to make use of those resources.

CdnManagementClient

azure.com
Use these APIs to manage Azure CDN resources through the Azure Resource Manager. You must make sure that requests made to these resources are secure.

Amazon CloudWatch

Amazon CloudWatch monitors your Amazon Web Services (Amazon Web Services) resources and the applications you run on Amazon Web Services in real time. You can use CloudWatch to collect and track metrics, which are the variables you want to measure for your resources and applications. CloudWatch alarms send notifications or automatically change the resources you are monitoring based on rules that you define. For example, you can monitor the CPU usage and disk reads and writes of your Amazon EC2 instances. Then, use this data to determine whether you should launch additional instances to handle increased load. You can also use this data to stop under-used instances to save money. In addition to monitoring the built-in metrics that come with Amazon Web Services, you can monitor your own custom metrics. With CloudWatch, you gain system-wide visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and operational health.

Amazon SageMaker Service

Provides APIs for creating and managing Amazon SageMaker resources. Other Resources: Amazon SageMaker Developer Guide Amazon Augmented AI Runtime API Reference