svix 0.39.0 → 0.44.0
Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/Gemfile.lock +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/application_api.rb +8 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/authentication_api.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/endpoint_api.rb +22 -18
- data/lib/svix/api/environment_api.rb +152 -0
- data/lib/svix/api/environment_settings_api.rb +79 -0
- data/lib/svix/api/event_type_api.rb +5 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/health_api.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/integration_api.rb +606 -0
- data/lib/svix/api/message_api.rb +10 -3
- data/lib/svix/api/message_attempt_api.rb +17 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/organization_api.rb +152 -0
- data/lib/svix/api/organization_settings_api.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api/statistics_api.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api_client.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/api_error.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/configuration.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/endpoint_api.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/integration_api.rb +38 -0
- data/lib/svix/internal.rb +1 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/application_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/application_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/attempt_statistics_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/attempt_statistics_response.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/border_radius_config.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/border_radius_enum.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/custom_theme_override.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/dashboard_access_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_created_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_created_event_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_deleted_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_deleted_event_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_disabled_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_disabled_event_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_headers_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_headers_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_in.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_message_out.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_out.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_secret_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_secret_rotate_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_stats.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_update.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_updated_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/endpoint_updated_event_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/environment_in.rb +257 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/environment_out.rb +259 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/environment_settings_out.rb +308 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/event_example_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/event_type_example_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/event_type_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/event_type_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/event_type_schema_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/event_type_update.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/export_organization_out.rb +259 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/font_size_config.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/http_error_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/http_validation_error.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/import_organization_in.rb +257 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/integration_in.rb +223 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/{border_radii_config.rb → integration_key_out.rb} +16 -29
- data/lib/svix/models/integration_out.rb +265 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/integration_update.rb +223 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_application_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_endpoint_message_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_endpoint_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_event_type_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/{endpointd_updated_event.rb → list_response_integration_out.rb} +28 -49
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_message_attempt_endpoint_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_message_attempt_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_message_endpoint_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/list_response_message_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_endpoint_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_exhausted_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_exhausted_event_data.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_failed_event.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_out.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_attempt_trigger_type.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/message_endpoint_out.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/message_in.rb +77 -5
- data/lib/svix/models/message_out.rb +38 -2
- data/lib/svix/models/message_status.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/portal_settings_out.rb +16 -5
- data/lib/svix/models/recover_in.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/settings_in.rb +339 -0
- data/lib/svix/models/settings_out.rb +47 -31
- data/lib/svix/models/statistics_period.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/validation_error.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/models/webhook_types.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix/svix.rb +6 -4
- data/lib/svix/version.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/svix.rb +8 -2
- metadata +22 -9
- data/lib/svix/models/radii_enum.rb +0 -39
data/lib/svix/api/message_api.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -20,10 +20,11 @@ module Svix
|
|
20
20
|
@api_client = api_client
|
21
21
|
end
|
22
22
|
# Create Message
|
23
|
-
# Creates a new message and dispatches it to all of the application's endpoints. The `eventId` is an optional custom unique ID. If a message with the same `eventId` already exists for any application in your environment, a 409 conflict error will be returned.
|
23
|
+
# Creates a new message and dispatches it to all of the application's endpoints. The `eventId` is an optional custom unique ID. It's verified to be unique only up to a day, after that no verification will be made. If a message with the same `eventId` already exists for any application in your environment, a 409 conflict error will be returned. The `eventType` indicates the type and schema of the event. All messages of a certain `eventType` are expected to have the same schema. Endpoints can choose to only listen to specific event types. Messages can also have `channels`, which similar to event types let endpoints filter by them. Unlike event types, messages can have multiple channels, and channels don't imply a specific message content or schema.
|
24
24
|
# @param app_id [String]
|
25
25
|
# @param message_in [MessageIn]
|
26
26
|
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
27
|
+
# @option opts [Boolean] :with_content (default to true)
|
27
28
|
# @return [MessageOut]
|
28
29
|
def create_message_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_post(app_id, message_in, opts = {})
|
29
30
|
data, _status_code, _headers = create_message_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_post_with_http_info(app_id, message_in, opts)
|
@@ -31,10 +32,11 @@ module Svix
|
|
31
32
|
end
|
32
33
|
|
33
34
|
# Create Message
|
34
|
-
# Creates a new message and dispatches it to all of the application's endpoints. The `eventId` is an optional custom unique ID. If a message with the same `eventId` already exists for any application in your environment, a 409 conflict error will be returned.
|
35
|
+
# Creates a new message and dispatches it to all of the application's endpoints. The `eventId` is an optional custom unique ID. It's verified to be unique only up to a day, after that no verification will be made. If a message with the same `eventId` already exists for any application in your environment, a 409 conflict error will be returned. The `eventType` indicates the type and schema of the event. All messages of a certain `eventType` are expected to have the same schema. Endpoints can choose to only listen to specific event types. Messages can also have `channels`, which similar to event types let endpoints filter by them. Unlike event types, messages can have multiple channels, and channels don't imply a specific message content or schema.
|
35
36
|
# @param app_id [String]
|
36
37
|
# @param message_in [MessageIn]
|
37
38
|
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
39
|
+
# @option opts [Boolean] :with_content
|
38
40
|
# @return [Array<(MessageOut, Integer, Hash)>] MessageOut data, response status code and response headers
|
39
41
|
def create_message_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_post_with_http_info(app_id, message_in, opts = {})
|
40
42
|
if @api_client.config.debugging
|
@@ -66,6 +68,7 @@ module Svix
|
|
66
68
|
|
67
69
|
# query parameters
|
68
70
|
query_params = opts[:query_params] || {}
|
71
|
+
query_params[:'with_content'] = opts[:'with_content'] if !opts[:'with_content'].nil?
|
69
72
|
|
70
73
|
# header parameters
|
71
74
|
header_params = opts[:header_params] || {}
|
@@ -242,6 +245,10 @@ module Svix
|
|
242
245
|
fail ArgumentError, "invalid value for 'app_id' when calling MessageApi.list_messages_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_get, must conform to the pattern #{pattern}."
|
243
246
|
end
|
244
247
|
|
248
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && !opts[:'limit'].nil? && opts[:'limit'] > 250
|
249
|
+
fail ArgumentError, 'invalid value for "opts[:"limit"]" when calling MessageApi.list_messages_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_get, must be smaller than or equal to 250.'
|
250
|
+
end
|
251
|
+
|
245
252
|
# resource path
|
246
253
|
local_var_path = '/api/v1/app/{app_id}/msg/'.sub('{' + 'app_id' + '}', CGI.escape(app_id.to_s))
|
247
254
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -179,6 +179,10 @@ module Svix
|
|
179
179
|
fail ArgumentError, "invalid value for 'app_id' when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempted_destinations_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_endpoint_get, must conform to the pattern #{pattern}."
|
180
180
|
end
|
181
181
|
|
182
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && !opts[:'limit'].nil? && opts[:'limit'] > 250
|
183
|
+
fail ArgumentError, 'invalid value for "opts[:"limit"]" when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempted_destinations_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_endpoint_get, must be smaller than or equal to 250.'
|
184
|
+
end
|
185
|
+
|
182
186
|
# resource path
|
183
187
|
local_var_path = '/api/v1/app/{app_id}/msg/{msg_id}/endpoint/'.sub('{' + 'msg_id' + '}', CGI.escape(msg_id.to_s)).sub('{' + 'app_id' + '}', CGI.escape(app_id.to_s))
|
184
188
|
|
@@ -284,6 +288,10 @@ module Svix
|
|
284
288
|
fail ArgumentError, "invalid value for 'app_id' when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempted_messages_api_v1_app_app_id_endpoint_endpoint_id_msg_get, must conform to the pattern #{pattern}."
|
285
289
|
end
|
286
290
|
|
291
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && !opts[:'limit'].nil? && opts[:'limit'] > 250
|
292
|
+
fail ArgumentError, 'invalid value for "opts[:"limit"]" when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempted_messages_api_v1_app_app_id_endpoint_endpoint_id_msg_get, must be smaller than or equal to 250.'
|
293
|
+
end
|
294
|
+
|
287
295
|
# resource path
|
288
296
|
local_var_path = '/api/v1/app/{app_id}/endpoint/{endpoint_id}/msg/'.sub('{' + 'endpoint_id' + '}', CGI.escape(endpoint_id.to_s)).sub('{' + 'app_id' + '}', CGI.escape(app_id.to_s))
|
289
297
|
|
@@ -389,6 +397,10 @@ module Svix
|
|
389
397
|
fail ArgumentError, "invalid value for 'msg_id' when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempts_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_attempt_get, must conform to the pattern #{pattern}."
|
390
398
|
end
|
391
399
|
|
400
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && !opts[:'limit'].nil? && opts[:'limit'] > 250
|
401
|
+
fail ArgumentError, 'invalid value for "opts[:"limit"]" when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempts_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_attempt_get, must be smaller than or equal to 250.'
|
402
|
+
end
|
403
|
+
|
392
404
|
# resource path
|
393
405
|
local_var_path = '/api/v1/app/{app_id}/msg/{msg_id}/attempt/'.sub('{' + 'app_id' + '}', CGI.escape(app_id.to_s)).sub('{' + 'msg_id' + '}', CGI.escape(msg_id.to_s))
|
394
406
|
|
@@ -516,6 +528,10 @@ module Svix
|
|
516
528
|
fail ArgumentError, "invalid value for 'endpoint_id' when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempts_for_endpoint_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_endpoint_endpoint_id_attempt_get, must conform to the pattern #{pattern}."
|
517
529
|
end
|
518
530
|
|
531
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && !opts[:'limit'].nil? && opts[:'limit'] > 250
|
532
|
+
fail ArgumentError, 'invalid value for "opts[:"limit"]" when calling MessageAttemptApi.list_attempts_for_endpoint_api_v1_app_app_id_msg_msg_id_endpoint_endpoint_id_attempt_get, must be smaller than or equal to 250.'
|
533
|
+
end
|
534
|
+
|
519
535
|
# resource path
|
520
536
|
local_var_path = '/api/v1/app/{app_id}/msg/{msg_id}/endpoint/{endpoint_id}/attempt/'.sub('{' + 'msg_id' + '}', CGI.escape(msg_id.to_s)).sub('{' + 'app_id' + '}', CGI.escape(app_id.to_s)).sub('{' + 'endpoint_id' + '}', CGI.escape(endpoint_id.to_s))
|
521
537
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,152 @@
|
|
1
|
+
=begin
|
2
|
+
#Svix API
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
|
+
|
6
|
+
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
|
+
|
8
|
+
Generated by: https://openapi-generator.tech
|
9
|
+
OpenAPI Generator version: 5.2.0
|
10
|
+
|
11
|
+
=end
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
require 'cgi'
|
14
|
+
|
15
|
+
module Svix
|
16
|
+
class OrganizationApi
|
17
|
+
attr_accessor :api_client
|
18
|
+
|
19
|
+
def initialize(api_client = ApiClient.default)
|
20
|
+
@api_client = api_client
|
21
|
+
end
|
22
|
+
# Export Organization Configuration
|
23
|
+
# Download a JSON file containing all org-settings and event types
|
24
|
+
# @param body [Object]
|
25
|
+
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
26
|
+
# @return [ExportOrganizationOut]
|
27
|
+
def export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post(body, opts = {})
|
28
|
+
data, _status_code, _headers = export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post_with_http_info(body, opts)
|
29
|
+
data
|
30
|
+
end
|
31
|
+
|
32
|
+
# Export Organization Configuration
|
33
|
+
# Download a JSON file containing all org-settings and event types
|
34
|
+
# @param body [Object]
|
35
|
+
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
36
|
+
# @return [Array<(ExportOrganizationOut, Integer, Hash)>] ExportOrganizationOut data, response status code and response headers
|
37
|
+
def export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post_with_http_info(body, opts = {})
|
38
|
+
if @api_client.config.debugging
|
39
|
+
@api_client.config.logger.debug 'Calling API: OrganizationApi.export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post ...'
|
40
|
+
end
|
41
|
+
# verify the required parameter 'body' is set
|
42
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && body.nil?
|
43
|
+
fail ArgumentError, "Missing the required parameter 'body' when calling OrganizationApi.export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post"
|
44
|
+
end
|
45
|
+
# resource path
|
46
|
+
local_var_path = '/api/v1/org/export/'
|
47
|
+
|
48
|
+
# query parameters
|
49
|
+
query_params = opts[:query_params] || {}
|
50
|
+
|
51
|
+
# header parameters
|
52
|
+
header_params = opts[:header_params] || {}
|
53
|
+
# HTTP header 'Accept' (if needed)
|
54
|
+
header_params['Accept'] = @api_client.select_header_accept(['application/json'])
|
55
|
+
# HTTP header 'Content-Type'
|
56
|
+
header_params['Content-Type'] = @api_client.select_header_content_type(['application/json'])
|
57
|
+
|
58
|
+
# form parameters
|
59
|
+
form_params = opts[:form_params] || {}
|
60
|
+
|
61
|
+
# http body (model)
|
62
|
+
post_body = opts[:debug_body] || @api_client.object_to_http_body(body)
|
63
|
+
|
64
|
+
# return_type
|
65
|
+
return_type = opts[:debug_return_type] || 'ExportOrganizationOut'
|
66
|
+
|
67
|
+
# auth_names
|
68
|
+
auth_names = opts[:debug_auth_names] || ['HTTPBearer']
|
69
|
+
|
70
|
+
new_options = opts.merge(
|
71
|
+
:operation => :"OrganizationApi.export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post",
|
72
|
+
:header_params => header_params,
|
73
|
+
:query_params => query_params,
|
74
|
+
:form_params => form_params,
|
75
|
+
:body => post_body,
|
76
|
+
:auth_names => auth_names,
|
77
|
+
:return_type => return_type
|
78
|
+
)
|
79
|
+
|
80
|
+
data, status_code, headers = @api_client.call_api(:POST, local_var_path, new_options)
|
81
|
+
if @api_client.config.debugging
|
82
|
+
@api_client.config.logger.debug "API called: OrganizationApi#export_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_export_post\nData: #{data.inspect}\nStatus code: #{status_code}\nHeaders: #{headers}"
|
83
|
+
end
|
84
|
+
return data, status_code, headers
|
85
|
+
end
|
86
|
+
|
87
|
+
# Import Organization Configuration
|
88
|
+
# Import a configuration into the active organization. It doesn't delete anything, only adds/updates what was passed to it.
|
89
|
+
# @param import_organization_in [ImportOrganizationIn]
|
90
|
+
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
91
|
+
# @return [nil]
|
92
|
+
def import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post(import_organization_in, opts = {})
|
93
|
+
import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post_with_http_info(import_organization_in, opts)
|
94
|
+
nil
|
95
|
+
end
|
96
|
+
|
97
|
+
# Import Organization Configuration
|
98
|
+
# Import a configuration into the active organization. It doesn't delete anything, only adds/updates what was passed to it.
|
99
|
+
# @param import_organization_in [ImportOrganizationIn]
|
100
|
+
# @param [Hash] opts the optional parameters
|
101
|
+
# @return [Array<(nil, Integer, Hash)>] nil, response status code and response headers
|
102
|
+
def import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post_with_http_info(import_organization_in, opts = {})
|
103
|
+
if @api_client.config.debugging
|
104
|
+
@api_client.config.logger.debug 'Calling API: OrganizationApi.import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post ...'
|
105
|
+
end
|
106
|
+
# verify the required parameter 'import_organization_in' is set
|
107
|
+
if @api_client.config.client_side_validation && import_organization_in.nil?
|
108
|
+
fail ArgumentError, "Missing the required parameter 'import_organization_in' when calling OrganizationApi.import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post"
|
109
|
+
end
|
110
|
+
# resource path
|
111
|
+
local_var_path = '/api/v1/org/import/'
|
112
|
+
|
113
|
+
# query parameters
|
114
|
+
query_params = opts[:query_params] || {}
|
115
|
+
|
116
|
+
# header parameters
|
117
|
+
header_params = opts[:header_params] || {}
|
118
|
+
# HTTP header 'Accept' (if needed)
|
119
|
+
header_params['Accept'] = @api_client.select_header_accept(['application/json'])
|
120
|
+
# HTTP header 'Content-Type'
|
121
|
+
header_params['Content-Type'] = @api_client.select_header_content_type(['application/json'])
|
122
|
+
|
123
|
+
# form parameters
|
124
|
+
form_params = opts[:form_params] || {}
|
125
|
+
|
126
|
+
# http body (model)
|
127
|
+
post_body = opts[:debug_body] || @api_client.object_to_http_body(import_organization_in)
|
128
|
+
|
129
|
+
# return_type
|
130
|
+
return_type = opts[:debug_return_type]
|
131
|
+
|
132
|
+
# auth_names
|
133
|
+
auth_names = opts[:debug_auth_names] || ['HTTPBearer']
|
134
|
+
|
135
|
+
new_options = opts.merge(
|
136
|
+
:operation => :"OrganizationApi.import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post",
|
137
|
+
:header_params => header_params,
|
138
|
+
:query_params => query_params,
|
139
|
+
:form_params => form_params,
|
140
|
+
:body => post_body,
|
141
|
+
:auth_names => auth_names,
|
142
|
+
:return_type => return_type
|
143
|
+
)
|
144
|
+
|
145
|
+
data, status_code, headers = @api_client.call_api(:POST, local_var_path, new_options)
|
146
|
+
if @api_client.config.debugging
|
147
|
+
@api_client.config.logger.debug "API called: OrganizationApi#import_organization_configuration_api_v1_org_import_post\nData: #{data.inspect}\nStatus code: #{status_code}\nHeaders: #{headers}"
|
148
|
+
end
|
149
|
+
return data, status_code, headers
|
150
|
+
end
|
151
|
+
end
|
152
|
+
end
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
data/lib/svix/api_client.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
data/lib/svix/api_error.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
data/lib/svix/configuration.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
data/lib/svix/endpoint_api.rb
CHANGED
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ module Svix
|
|
35
35
|
end
|
36
36
|
|
37
37
|
def recover(app_id, endpoint_id, recover_in)
|
38
|
-
@api.
|
38
|
+
@api.recover_failed_webhooks_api_v1_app_app_id_endpoint_endpoint_id_recover_post(app_id, endpoint_id, recover_in)
|
39
39
|
nil
|
40
40
|
end
|
41
41
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# frozen_string_literal: true
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
module Svix
|
4
|
+
class IntegrationAPI
|
5
|
+
def initialize(api_client)
|
6
|
+
@api = IntegrationApi.new(api_client)
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
def list(app_id, options = {})
|
10
|
+
return @api.list_integrations_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_get(app_id, options)
|
11
|
+
end
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
def create(app_id, integ_in)
|
14
|
+
return @api.create_integration_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_post(app_id, integ_in)
|
15
|
+
end
|
16
|
+
|
17
|
+
def get(app_id, integ_id)
|
18
|
+
return @api.get_integration_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_integ_id_get(integ_id, app_id)
|
19
|
+
end
|
20
|
+
|
21
|
+
def update(app_id, integ_id, integ_update)
|
22
|
+
return @api.update_integration_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_integ_id_put(integ_id, app_id, integ_update)
|
23
|
+
end
|
24
|
+
|
25
|
+
def delete(app_id, integ_id)
|
26
|
+
return @api.delete_integration_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_integ_id_delete(integ_id, app_id)
|
27
|
+
end
|
28
|
+
|
29
|
+
def get_key(app_id, integ_id)
|
30
|
+
return @api.get_integration_key_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_integ_id_key_get(integ_id, app_id)
|
31
|
+
end
|
32
|
+
|
33
|
+
def rotate_key(app_id, integ_id)
|
34
|
+
return @api.rotate_integration_key_api_v1_app_app_id_integration_integ_id_key_rotate_post(integ_id, app_id)
|
35
|
+
end
|
36
|
+
|
37
|
+
end
|
38
|
+
end
|
data/lib/svix/internal.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
=begin
|
2
2
|
#Svix API
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
-
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each
|
4
|
+
#Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:support+docs@svix.com) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. <SecurityDefinitions /> ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
|
5
5
|
|
6
6
|
The version of the OpenAPI document: 1.4
|
7
7
|
|