Mock sample for your project: OpenAPI space

Integrate with "OpenAPI space" from openapi.space in no time with Mockoon's ready to use mock sample

OpenAPI space

openapi.space

Version: 1.0.0


Use this API in your project

Speed up your application development by using "OpenAPI space" 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.
It also improves your integration tests' quality and reliability by accounting for random failures, slow response time, etc.

Description

This is the API for OpenAPI space.

Other APIs in the same category

Download OpenAPI specification: openapi.yml
Introduction
Rudder exposes a REST API, enabling the user to interact with Rudder without using the webapp, for example in scripts or cronjobs.
Versioning
Each time the API is extended with new features (new functions, new parameters, new responses, ...), it will be assigned a new version number. This will allow you
to keep your existing scripts (based on previous behavior). Versions will always be integers (no 2.1 or 3.3, just 2, 3, 4, ...) or latest.
You can change the version of the API used by setting it either within the url or in a header:
the URL: each URL is prefixed by its version id, like /api/version/function.
Version 10
curl -X GET -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/10/rules
Latest
curl -X GET -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/latest/rules
Wrong (not an integer) => 404 not found
curl -X GET -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/3.14/rules
the HTTP headers. You can add the X-API-Version header to your request. The value needs to be an integer or latest.
Version 10
curl -X GET -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" -H "X-API-Version: 10" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules
Wrong => Error response indicating which versions are available
curl -X GET -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" -H "X-API-Version: 3.14" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules
In the future, we may declare some versions as deprecated, in order to remove them in a later version of Rudder, but we will never remove any versions without warning, or without a safe
period of time to allow migration from previous versions.
Existing versions
Version
Rudder versions it appeared in
Description
1
Never released (for internal use only)
Experimental version
2 to 10 (deprecated)
4.3 and before
These versions provided the core set of API features for rules, directives, nodes global parameters, change requests and compliance, rudder settings and system API
11
5.0
New system API (replacing old localhost v1 api): status, maintenance operations and server behavior
12
6.0 and 6.1
Node key management
13
6.2
Node status endpoint
System health check
System maintenance job to purge software [that endpoint was back-ported in 6.1]
Response format
All responses from the API are in the JSON format.
{
"action": The name of the called function,
"id": The ID of the element you want, if relevant,
"result": The result of your action: success or error,
"data": Only present if this is a success and depends on the function, it's usually a JSON object,
"errorDetails": Only present if this is an error, it contains the error message
}
Success responses are sent with the 200 HTTP (Success) code
Error responses are sent with a HTTP error code (mostly 5xx...)
HTTP method
Rudder's REST API is based on the usage of HTTP methods. We use them to indicate what action will be done by the request. Currently, we use four of them:
GET: search or retrieve information (get rule details, get a group, ...)
PUT: add new objects (create a directive, clone a Rule, ...)
DELETE: remove objects (delete a node, delete a parameter, ...)
POST: update existing objects (update a directive, reload a group, ...)
Parameters
General parameters
Some parameters are available for almost all API functions. They will be described in this section.
They must be part of the query and can't be submitted in a JSON form.
Available for all requests
Field
Type
Description
prettify
boolean optional
Determine if the answer should be prettified (human friendly) or not. We recommend using this for debugging purposes, but not for general script usage as this does add some unnecessary load on the server side.
Default value: false
Available for modification requests (PUT/POST/DELETE)
Field
Type
Description
reason
string optional or required
Set a message to explain the change. If you set the reason messages to be mandatory in the web interface, failing to supply this value will lead to an error.
Default value:""
changeRequestName
string optional
Set the change request name, is used only if workflows are enabled. The default value depends on the function called
Default value: A default string for each function
changeRequestDescription
string optional
Set the change request description, is used only if workflows are enabled.
Default value:""
Passing parameters
Parameters to the API can be sent:
As part of the URL for resource identification
As data for POST/PUT requests
Directly in JSON format
As request arguments
As part of the URL for resource identification
Parameters in URLs are used to indicate which resource you want to interact with. The function will not work if this resource is missing.
Get the Rule of ID "id"
curl -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/latest/rules/id
Sending data for POST/PUT requests
Directly in JSON format
JSON format is the preferred way to interact with Rudder API for creating or updating resources.
You'll also have to set the Content-Type header to application/json (without it the JSON content would be ignored).
In a curl POST request, that header can be provided with the -H parameter:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" ...
The supplied file must contain a valid JSON: strings need quotes, booleans and integers don't, etc.
The (human readable) format is:
Here is an example with inlined data:
Update the Rule 'id' with a new name, disabled, and setting it one directive
curl -X POST -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" -H "Content-Type: application/json"
https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules/latest/{id}
-d '{ "displayName": "new name", "enabled": false, "directives": "directiveId"}'
You can also pass a supply the JSON in a file:
Update the Rule 'id' with a new name, disabled, and setting it one directive
curl -X POST -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" -H "Content-Type: application/json" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules/latest/{id} -d @jsonParam
Note that the general parameters view in the previous chapter cannot be passed in a JSON, and you will need to pass them a URL parameters if you want them to be taken into account (you can't mix JSON and request parameters):
Update the Rule 'id' with a new name, disabled, and setting it one directive with reason message "Reason used"
curl -X POST -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules/latest/{id}?reason=Reason used" -d @jsonParam -d "reason=Reason ignored"
Request parameters
In some cases, when you have little, simple data to update, JSON can feel bloated. In such cases, you can use
request parameters. You will need to pass one parameter for each data you want to change.
Parameters follow the following schema:
key=value
You can pass parameters by two means:
As query parameters: At the end of your url, put a ? then your first parameter and then a & before next parameters
Update the Rule 'id' with a new name, disabled, and setting it one directive
curl -X POST -H "X-API-Token: yourToken" https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules/latest/{id}?"displayName=my new name"&"enabled=false"&"directives=aDirectiveId"
As request data: You can pass those parameters in the request data, they won't figure in the URL, making it lighter to read, You can pass a file that contains data.
Update the Rule 'id' with a new name, disabled, and setting it one directive (in file directive-info.json)
curl -X POST -H "X-API-Token: yourToken"
https://rudder.example.com/rudder/api/rules/latest/{id} -d "displayName=my new name" -d "enabled=false" -d @directive-info.json

Local Search Client

microsoft.com
The Local Search client lets you send a search query to Bing and get back search results that include local businesses such as restaurants, hotels, retail stores, or other local businesses. The query can specify the name of the local business or it can ask for a list (for example, restaurants near me).

Computer Vision Client

microsoft.com
The Computer Vision API provides state-of-the-art algorithms to process images and return information. For example, it can be used to determine if an image contains mature content, or it can be used to find all the faces in an image. It also has other features like estimating dominant and accent colors, categorizing the content of images, and describing an image with complete English sentences. Additionally, it can also intelligently generate images thumbnails for displaying large images effectively.

Interzoid Get Global Phone Number Information API

This API provides geographic information for a global telephone number, including city and country information, primary languages spoken, and mobile device identification.

JIRA 7.6.1

jira.local

Custom Search Client

microsoft.com
The Bing Custom Search API lets you send a search query to Bing and get back search results customized to meet your custom search definition.

Custom Image Search Client

microsoft.com
The Bing Custom Image Search API lets you send an image search query to Bing and get back image search results customized to meet your custom search definition.

LGTM API specification

lgtm.com
The REST API for LGTM provides data so that you can customize how you integrate LGTM analysis into your workflow. It includes the following resources:
/ (API root)—get version information or download the specification in OpenAPI format.
/projects (Projects)—list projects, get a summary of the current status for a project, or add new projects.
/analyses (Analyses)—get a summary of results, download all the alerts, or trigger analysis for a specific commit.
/codereviews (Code reviews)—trigger code review for a patch, and view the results.
/operations (Operations)—get information about long-running tasks, for example, analyses or code reviews that you've requested.
/snapshots (Snapshots)—download and upload databases representing a snapshot of a codebase.
/queryjobs (Query jobs)—submit queries to evaluate against existing projects, and download their results.
/system (System)—get information on the health or usage of the system.
For an overview and getting started topics, see API for LGTM.

OpenAPI space

This is the API for OpenAPI space.

GeoDB Cities API

mashape.com
The GeoDB API focuses on getting global city and region data. Easily obtain country, region, and city data for use
in your apps!
Filter cities by name prefix, country, location, time-zone, and even minimum population.
Sort cities by name, country code, elevation, and population - or any combination of these.
Get all country regions. Get all cities in a given region.
Display results in multiple languages. RESTful API adheres to industry best-practices, including
HATEOAS-style links to facilitate paging results.
Backed by cloud-based load-balanced infrastructure for resiliency and performance!
Data is periodically refreshed from GeoNames and WikiData.
Notes:
Since the database is periodically updated, this may very rarely result in certain cities
being marked deleted (e.g., duplicates removed). By default, endpoints returning city data will exclude
cities marked deleted. However, in the unlikely event that this occurs while your app is paging through a set
of affected results - and you care about the paged results suddenly changing underneath - specify
includeDeleted=SINCEYESTERDAY (or SINCELAST_WEEK if you're really paranoid!).
Useful Resources
SDKs
Angular,
Sample App
Java
JavaScript
Swagger Docs
Usage License

VictorOps

victorops.com
This API allows you to interact with the VictorOps platform in various ways. Your account may be limited
to a total number of API calls per month. Also, some of these API calls have rate limits.
NOTE: In this documentation when creating a sample curl request (clicking the TRY IT OUT! button), in some API
viewing interfaces, the '@' in an email address may be encoded. Please note that the REST endpoints will not
process the encoded version. Make sure that the encoded character '%40' is changed to its unencoded form before
submitting the curl request.

News Search Client

microsoft.com
The News Search API lets you send a search query to Bing and get back a list of news that are relevant to the search query. This section provides technical details about the query parameters and headers that you use to request news and the JSON response objects that contain them. For examples that show how to make requests, see Searching the web for news.