velopayments 2.35.58 → 2.37.150.beta1

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (336) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/Gemfile.lock +3 -3
  3. data/README.md +50 -11
  4. data/docs/{PayorAddress.md → AddressV4.md} +3 -3
  5. data/docs/CommonLinkObject.md +20 -0
  6. data/docs/CommonPageObject.md +26 -0
  7. data/docs/CreateFundingAccountRequestV2.md +2 -2
  8. data/docs/CreatePaymentChannelRequestV4.md +30 -0
  9. data/docs/CreateTransactionRequest.md +24 -0
  10. data/docs/CreateTransactionResponse.md +20 -0
  11. data/docs/FundingAccountResponseV2.md +3 -3
  12. data/docs/FundingApi.md +2 -2
  13. data/docs/FundingAudit.md +8 -2
  14. data/docs/FundingEvent.md +6 -8
  15. data/docs/FundingEvent2.md +24 -0
  16. data/docs/FundingManagerPrivateApi.md +1 -1
  17. data/docs/FundingResponse.md +7 -3
  18. data/docs/GetPayeeListResponseV4.md +2 -0
  19. data/docs/InstructPayoutRequestV3.md +4 -2
  20. data/docs/ListFundingAccountsResponseV2.md +1 -1
  21. data/docs/NotificationSource.md +3 -0
  22. data/docs/PageResourceTransactions.md +22 -0
  23. data/docs/PayeeDetailResponseV4.md +4 -0
  24. data/docs/PayeePaymentChannelsApi.md +522 -0
  25. data/docs/PayeesApi.md +2 -2
  26. data/docs/PaymentAuditServiceApi.md +7 -1
  27. data/docs/PaymentChannelOrderRequestV4.md +18 -0
  28. data/docs/PaymentChannelResponseV4.md +56 -0
  29. data/docs/PaymentChannelSummaryV4.md +32 -0
  30. data/docs/PaymentChannelsResponseV4.md +20 -0
  31. data/docs/PaymentInstructionV3.md +4 -2
  32. data/docs/PaymentResponseV4.md +10 -0
  33. data/docs/PaymentV3.md +4 -2
  34. data/docs/PayorCreateApiKeyRequest.md +3 -3
  35. data/docs/PayorFundingDetected.md +46 -0
  36. data/docs/PayorFundingDetectedAllOf.md +40 -0
  37. data/docs/PayorToPaymentChannelMappingV4.md +20 -0
  38. data/docs/PayorV2.md +19 -19
  39. data/docs/PayorsApi.md +14 -84
  40. data/docs/PayoutsApi.md +2 -2
  41. data/docs/SourceAccountResponseV3.md +3 -1
  42. data/docs/TransactionResponse.md +36 -0
  43. data/docs/TransactionsApi.md +229 -0
  44. data/docs/UpdatePayeeDetailsRequestV3.md +3 -1
  45. data/docs/UpdatePaymentChannelRequestV4.md +30 -0
  46. data/docs/WebhooksResponse.md +2 -2
  47. data/lib/velopayments/api/countries_api.rb +2 -2
  48. data/lib/velopayments/api/currencies_api.rb +2 -2
  49. data/lib/velopayments/api/funding_api.rb +5 -5
  50. data/lib/velopayments/api/funding_manager_private_api.rb +2 -2
  51. data/lib/velopayments/api/login_api.rb +2 -2
  52. data/lib/velopayments/api/payee_invitation_api.rb +2 -2
  53. data/lib/velopayments/api/payee_payment_channels_api.rb +538 -0
  54. data/lib/velopayments/api/payees_api.rb +6 -2
  55. data/lib/velopayments/api/payment_audit_service_api.rb +12 -3
  56. data/lib/velopayments/api/payment_audit_service_deprecated_api.rb +2 -2
  57. data/lib/velopayments/api/payor_hierarchy_api.rb +2 -2
  58. data/lib/velopayments/api/payors_api.rb +16 -79
  59. data/lib/velopayments/api/payors_private_api.rb +2 -2
  60. data/lib/velopayments/api/payouts_api.rb +2 -6
  61. data/lib/velopayments/api/source_accounts_api.rb +2 -2
  62. data/lib/velopayments/api/tokens_api.rb +2 -2
  63. data/lib/velopayments/api/transactions_api.rb +229 -0
  64. data/lib/velopayments/api/users_api.rb +2 -2
  65. data/lib/velopayments/api/webhooks_api.rb +2 -2
  66. data/lib/velopayments/api_client.rb +2 -2
  67. data/lib/velopayments/api_error.rb +2 -2
  68. data/lib/velopayments/configuration.rb +2 -2
  69. data/lib/velopayments/models/accepted_payment_v3.rb +2 -2
  70. data/lib/velopayments/models/access_token_response.rb +2 -2
  71. data/lib/velopayments/models/access_token_validation_request.rb +2 -2
  72. data/lib/velopayments/models/{payor_address.rb → address_v4.rb} +92 -80
  73. data/lib/velopayments/models/auth_response.rb +2 -2
  74. data/lib/velopayments/models/auto_top_up_config_v2.rb +2 -2
  75. data/lib/velopayments/models/auto_top_up_config_v3.rb +2 -2
  76. data/lib/velopayments/models/category.rb +4 -3
  77. data/lib/velopayments/models/challenge_v3.rb +2 -2
  78. data/lib/velopayments/models/challenge_v4.rb +2 -2
  79. data/lib/velopayments/models/{list_funding_accounts_response_v2_links.rb → common_link_object.rb} +7 -5
  80. data/lib/velopayments/models/common_page_object.rb +250 -0
  81. data/lib/velopayments/models/company_v3.rb +2 -2
  82. data/lib/velopayments/models/company_v4.rb +2 -2
  83. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_funding_account_request_v2.rb +34 -27
  84. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_individual_v3.rb +2 -2
  85. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_individual_v3_name.rb +2 -2
  86. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_individual_v4.rb +2 -2
  87. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payee_address_v3.rb +2 -2
  88. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payee_address_v4.rb +2 -2
  89. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payee_v3.rb +2 -2
  90. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payee_v4.rb +2 -2
  91. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_csv_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  92. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_csv_request_v4.rb +2 -2
  93. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_csv_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  94. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_csv_response_v3_rejected_csv_rows.rb +2 -2
  95. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_csv_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  96. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  97. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payees_request_v4.rb +2 -2
  98. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payment_channel_request_v4.rb +472 -0
  99. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payment_channel_v3.rb +2 -2
  100. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payment_channel_v4.rb +2 -2
  101. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payor_link_request.rb +2 -2
  102. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_payout_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  103. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_transaction_request.rb +324 -0
  104. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_transaction_response.rb +239 -0
  105. data/lib/velopayments/models/create_webhook_request.rb +2 -2
  106. data/lib/velopayments/models/debit_event.rb +2 -2
  107. data/lib/velopayments/models/debit_event_all_of.rb +2 -2
  108. data/lib/velopayments/models/debit_status_changed.rb +2 -2
  109. data/lib/velopayments/models/debit_status_changed_all_of.rb +2 -2
  110. data/lib/velopayments/models/error.rb +2 -2
  111. data/lib/velopayments/models/error_data.rb +2 -2
  112. data/lib/velopayments/models/error_response.rb +2 -2
  113. data/lib/velopayments/models/failed_payee_v3.rb +2 -2
  114. data/lib/velopayments/models/failed_payee_v4.rb +2 -2
  115. data/lib/velopayments/models/failed_submission_v3.rb +2 -2
  116. data/lib/velopayments/models/failed_submission_v4.rb +2 -2
  117. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_account_response_v2.rb +25 -25
  118. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_audit.rb +37 -7
  119. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_event.rb +50 -28
  120. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_event2.rb +242 -0
  121. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_payor_status_audit_response.rb +2 -2
  122. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_request_v2.rb +2 -2
  123. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  124. data/lib/velopayments/models/funding_response.rb +35 -14
  125. data/lib/velopayments/models/fx_summary.rb +2 -2
  126. data/lib/velopayments/models/fx_summary_v3.rb +2 -2
  127. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_fundings_response.rb +2 -2
  128. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_fundings_response_links.rb +2 -2
  129. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_company_v3.rb +2 -2
  130. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_company_v4.rb +2 -2
  131. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_individual_v3.rb +2 -2
  132. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_individual_v4.rb +2 -2
  133. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  134. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payee_list_response_v4.rb +13 -3
  135. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payments_for_payout_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  136. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payments_for_payout_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  137. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payments_for_payout_response_v3_summary.rb +2 -2
  138. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payments_for_payout_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  139. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payments_for_payout_response_v4_summary.rb +2 -2
  140. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payout_statistics.rb +2 -2
  141. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payouts_response.rb +2 -2
  142. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payouts_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  143. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payouts_response_v3_links.rb +2 -2
  144. data/lib/velopayments/models/get_payouts_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  145. data/lib/velopayments/models/individual_v3.rb +2 -2
  146. data/lib/velopayments/models/individual_v3_name.rb +2 -2
  147. data/lib/velopayments/models/individual_v4.rb +2 -2
  148. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response400.rb +2 -2
  149. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response401.rb +2 -2
  150. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response403.rb +2 -2
  151. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response404.rb +2 -2
  152. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response409.rb +2 -2
  153. data/lib/velopayments/models/inline_response412.rb +2 -2
  154. data/lib/velopayments/models/instruct_payout_request_v3.rb +19 -7
  155. data/lib/velopayments/models/invite_payee_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  156. data/lib/velopayments/models/invite_payee_request_v4.rb +2 -2
  157. data/lib/velopayments/models/invite_user_request.rb +2 -2
  158. data/lib/velopayments/models/link_for_response.rb +2 -2
  159. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_funding_accounts_response_v2.rb +3 -3
  160. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_funding_accounts_response_v2_page.rb +2 -2
  161. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_payments_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  162. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_payments_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  163. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_payments_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  164. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_source_account_response_v2.rb +2 -2
  165. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_source_account_response_v2_links.rb +2 -2
  166. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_source_account_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  167. data/lib/velopayments/models/list_source_account_response_v3_links.rb +2 -2
  168. data/lib/velopayments/models/localisation_details.rb +2 -2
  169. data/lib/velopayments/models/mfa_details.rb +2 -2
  170. data/lib/velopayments/models/mfa_type.rb +2 -2
  171. data/lib/velopayments/models/name_v3.rb +2 -2
  172. data/lib/velopayments/models/name_v4.rb +2 -2
  173. data/lib/velopayments/models/notification.rb +2 -2
  174. data/lib/velopayments/models/notification_source.rb +4 -2
  175. data/lib/velopayments/models/notifications_v2.rb +2 -2
  176. data/lib/velopayments/models/notifications_v3.rb +2 -2
  177. data/lib/velopayments/models/onboarding_status_changed.rb +2 -2
  178. data/lib/velopayments/models/page_for_response.rb +2 -2
  179. data/lib/velopayments/models/page_resource_funding_payor_status_audit_response_funding_payor_status_audit_response.rb +2 -2
  180. data/lib/velopayments/models/page_resource_transactions.rb +236 -0
  181. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_invitation_status_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  182. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_invitation_status_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  183. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_invitation_status_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  184. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  185. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_response_v3_links.rb +2 -2
  186. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  187. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_response_v3_summary.rb +2 -2
  188. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payee_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  189. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_payments_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  190. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_user_response.rb +2 -2
  191. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_user_response_links.rb +2 -2
  192. data/lib/velopayments/models/paged_user_response_page.rb +2 -2
  193. data/lib/velopayments/models/password_request.rb +12 -12
  194. data/lib/velopayments/models/payable_issue_v3.rb +2 -2
  195. data/lib/velopayments/models/payable_issue_v4.rb +2 -2
  196. data/lib/velopayments/models/payable_status_changed.rb +2 -2
  197. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_address_v3.rb +2 -2
  198. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_address_v4.rb +2 -2
  199. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  200. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_response_v3_links.rb +2 -2
  201. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_response_v3_page.rb +2 -2
  202. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  203. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_response_v4_links.rb +2 -2
  204. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_v3.rb +2 -2
  205. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_delta_v4.rb +2 -2
  206. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_detail_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  207. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_detail_response_v4.rb +26 -3
  208. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_details_changed.rb +2 -2
  209. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_event.rb +2 -2
  210. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_event_all_of.rb +2 -2
  211. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_event_all_of_reasons.rb +2 -2
  212. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_invitation_status_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  213. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_invitation_status_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  214. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_payor_ref_v3.rb +2 -2
  215. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_payor_ref_v4.rb +2 -2
  216. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_type.rb +2 -2
  217. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_type_enum.rb +2 -2
  218. data/lib/velopayments/models/payee_user_self_update_request.rb +2 -2
  219. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channel_country.rb +2 -2
  220. data/lib/velopayments/models/{transmission_types.rb → payment_channel_order_request_v4.rb} +19 -51
  221. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channel_response_v4.rb +607 -0
  222. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channel_rule.rb +2 -2
  223. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channel_rules_response.rb +2 -2
  224. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channel_summary_v4.rb +396 -0
  225. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_channels_response_v4.rb +227 -0
  226. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_delta.rb +2 -2
  227. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_delta_response.rb +2 -2
  228. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_delta_response_v1.rb +2 -2
  229. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_delta_v1.rb +2 -2
  230. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_event.rb +2 -2
  231. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_event_all_of.rb +2 -2
  232. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_event_response.rb +2 -2
  233. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_event_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  234. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_instruction_v3.rb +19 -50
  235. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_rejected_or_returned.rb +2 -2
  236. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_rejected_or_returned_all_of.rb +2 -2
  237. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  238. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_response_v4.rb +50 -3
  239. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_response_v4_payout.rb +2 -2
  240. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_status_changed.rb +2 -2
  241. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_status_changed_all_of.rb +2 -2
  242. data/lib/velopayments/models/payment_v3.rb +17 -7
  243. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_address_v2.rb +32 -17
  244. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_aml_transaction.rb +2 -2
  245. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_aml_transaction_v3.rb +2 -2
  246. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_branding_response.rb +2 -5
  247. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_create_api_key_request.rb +2 -2
  248. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_create_api_key_response.rb +2 -2
  249. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_create_application_request.rb +2 -2
  250. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_email_opt_out_request.rb +2 -2
  251. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_funding_detected.rb +399 -0
  252. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_funding_detected_all_of.rb +339 -0
  253. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_links_response.rb +2 -2
  254. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_links_response_links.rb +2 -2
  255. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_links_response_payors.rb +2 -2
  256. data/lib/velopayments/models/{transmission_types2.rb → payor_to_payment_channel_mapping_v4.rb} +18 -51
  257. data/lib/velopayments/models/payor_v2.rb +26 -20
  258. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_company_v3.rb +2 -2
  259. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_individual_v3.rb +2 -2
  260. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_name_v3.rb +2 -2
  261. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_payee_v3.rb +2 -2
  262. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_payor.rb +2 -2
  263. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_payor_ids.rb +2 -2
  264. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_principal.rb +2 -2
  265. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_schedule.rb +2 -2
  266. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_schedule_v3.rb +2 -2
  267. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_summary_audit.rb +2 -2
  268. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_summary_audit_v3.rb +2 -2
  269. data/lib/velopayments/models/payout_summary_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  270. data/lib/velopayments/models/ping.rb +2 -2
  271. data/lib/velopayments/models/ping_response.rb +2 -2
  272. data/lib/velopayments/models/post_instruct_fx_info.rb +2 -2
  273. data/lib/velopayments/models/query_batch_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  274. data/lib/velopayments/models/query_batch_response_v4.rb +2 -2
  275. data/lib/velopayments/models/quote_fx_summary_v3.rb +2 -2
  276. data/lib/velopayments/models/quote_response_v3.rb +2 -2
  277. data/lib/velopayments/models/region_v2.rb +2 -2
  278. data/lib/velopayments/models/register_sms_request.rb +2 -2
  279. data/lib/velopayments/models/rejected_payment_v3.rb +2 -2
  280. data/lib/velopayments/models/resend_token_request.rb +2 -2
  281. data/lib/velopayments/models/reset_password_request.rb +2 -2
  282. data/lib/velopayments/models/role.rb +2 -2
  283. data/lib/velopayments/models/role_update_request.rb +2 -2
  284. data/lib/velopayments/models/schedule_payout_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  285. data/lib/velopayments/models/self_mfa_type_unregister_request.rb +2 -2
  286. data/lib/velopayments/models/self_update_password_request.rb +22 -22
  287. data/lib/velopayments/models/set_notifications_request.rb +2 -2
  288. data/lib/velopayments/models/set_notifications_request2.rb +2 -2
  289. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_account_response_v2.rb +2 -2
  290. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_account_response_v3.rb +18 -6
  291. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_account_summary.rb +2 -2
  292. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_account_summary_v3.rb +2 -2
  293. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_account_v3.rb +2 -2
  294. data/lib/velopayments/models/source_event.rb +2 -2
  295. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_countries_response.rb +2 -2
  296. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_countries_response_v2.rb +2 -2
  297. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_country.rb +2 -2
  298. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_country_v2.rb +2 -2
  299. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_currency_response_v2.rb +2 -2
  300. data/lib/velopayments/models/supported_currency_v2.rb +2 -2
  301. data/lib/velopayments/models/{payor_v1.rb → transaction_response.rb} +143 -181
  302. data/lib/velopayments/models/transfer_request_v2.rb +2 -2
  303. data/lib/velopayments/models/transfer_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  304. data/lib/velopayments/models/unregister_mfa_request.rb +2 -2
  305. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_payee_details_request_v3.rb +38 -7
  306. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_payee_details_request_v4.rb +2 -2
  307. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_payment_channel_request_v4.rb +472 -0
  308. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_remote_id_request_v3.rb +2 -2
  309. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_remote_id_request_v4.rb +2 -2
  310. data/lib/velopayments/models/update_webhook_request.rb +2 -2
  311. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_details_update_request.rb +2 -2
  312. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_info.rb +2 -2
  313. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_response.rb +4 -4
  314. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_status.rb +2 -2
  315. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_type.rb +2 -2
  316. data/lib/velopayments/models/user_type2.rb +2 -2
  317. data/lib/velopayments/models/validate_password_response.rb +2 -2
  318. data/lib/velopayments/models/webhook_response.rb +2 -2
  319. data/lib/velopayments/models/webhooks_response.rb +4 -4
  320. data/lib/velopayments/models/withdraw_payment_request.rb +2 -2
  321. data/lib/velopayments/version.rb +3 -3
  322. data/lib/velopayments.rb +21 -7
  323. data/oa3-config.json +1 -1
  324. data/spec/api/payee_payment_channels_api_spec.rb +132 -0
  325. data/spec/api/transactions_api_spec.rb +75 -0
  326. data/spec/api_client_spec.rb +2 -2
  327. data/spec/configuration_spec.rb +2 -2
  328. data/spec/spec_helper.rb +2 -2
  329. data/specs/api/payee_payment_channels_api_spec.rb +132 -0
  330. data/specs/api/transactions_api_spec.rb +75 -0
  331. data/velopayments.gemspec +2 -2
  332. metadata +48 -14
  333. data/docs/ListFundingAccountsResponseV2Links.md +0 -20
  334. data/docs/PayorV1.md +0 -60
  335. data/docs/TransmissionTypes.md +0 -22
  336. data/docs/TransmissionTypes2.md +0 -22
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
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  #Velo Payments APIs
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
5
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+ The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.37.150
7
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@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
1
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  =begin
2
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  #Velo Payments APIs
3
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4
- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
4
+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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+ The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.37.150
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  OpenAPI Generator version: 7.1.0-SNAPSHOT
@@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ module VeloPayments
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20
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  attr_accessor :payor_refs
21
21
 
22
+ # A list of the Payee's payment channels in their preferred order
23
+ attr_accessor :payment_channels
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+
22
25
  attr_accessor :email
23
26
 
24
27
  # Payee onboarded status. One of the following values: CREATED, INVITED, REGISTERED, ONBOARDED
@@ -57,6 +60,9 @@ module VeloPayments
57
60
 
58
61
  attr_accessor :cellphone_number
59
62
 
63
+ # The id of the payor if the payee is managed
64
+ attr_accessor :managed_by_payor_id
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+
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66
  attr_accessor :watchlist_status_updated_timestamp
61
67
 
62
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  attr_accessor :grace_period_end_date
@@ -83,6 +89,7 @@ module VeloPayments
83
89
  {
84
90
  :'payee_id' => :'payeeId',
85
91
  :'payor_refs' => :'payorRefs',
92
+ :'payment_channels' => :'paymentChannels',
86
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  :'email' => :'email',
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  :'onboarded_status' => :'onboardedStatus',
88
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  :'watchlist_status' => :'watchlistStatus',
@@ -100,6 +107,7 @@ module VeloPayments
100
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  :'individual' => :'individual',
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  :'company' => :'company',
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  :'cellphone_number' => :'cellphoneNumber',
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+ :'managed_by_payor_id' => :'managedByPayorId',
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  :'watchlist_status_updated_timestamp' => :'watchlistStatusUpdatedTimestamp',
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  :'grace_period_end_date' => :'gracePeriodEndDate',
105
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  :'enhanced_kyc_completed' => :'enhancedKycCompleted',
@@ -123,6 +131,7 @@ module VeloPayments
123
131
  {
124
132
  :'payee_id' => :'String',
125
133
  :'payor_refs' => :'Array<PayeePayorRefV4>',
134
+ :'payment_channels' => :'Array<PaymentChannelSummaryV4>',
126
135
  :'email' => :'String',
127
136
  :'onboarded_status' => :'String',
128
137
  :'watchlist_status' => :'String',
@@ -140,6 +149,7 @@ module VeloPayments
140
149
  :'individual' => :'IndividualV4',
141
150
  :'company' => :'CompanyV4',
142
151
  :'cellphone_number' => :'String',
152
+ :'managed_by_payor_id' => :'String',
143
153
  :'watchlist_status_updated_timestamp' => :'String',
144
154
  :'grace_period_end_date' => :'Date',
145
155
  :'enhanced_kyc_completed' => :'Boolean',
@@ -157,6 +167,7 @@ module VeloPayments
157
167
  def self.openapi_nullable
158
168
  Set.new([
159
169
  :'payor_refs',
170
+ :'payment_channels',
160
171
  :'email',
161
172
  :'watchlist_override_expires_at_timestamp',
162
173
  :'company',
@@ -194,6 +205,12 @@ module VeloPayments
194
205
  end
195
206
  end
196
207
 
208
+ if attributes.key?(:'payment_channels')
209
+ if (value = attributes[:'payment_channels']).is_a?(Array)
210
+ self.payment_channels = value
211
+ end
212
+ end
213
+
197
214
  if attributes.key?(:'email')
198
215
  self.email = attributes[:'email']
199
216
  end
@@ -262,6 +279,10 @@ module VeloPayments
262
279
  self.cellphone_number = attributes[:'cellphone_number']
263
280
  end
264
281
 
282
+ if attributes.key?(:'managed_by_payor_id')
283
+ self.managed_by_payor_id = attributes[:'managed_by_payor_id']
284
+ end
285
+
265
286
  if attributes.key?(:'watchlist_status_updated_timestamp')
266
287
  self.watchlist_status_updated_timestamp = attributes[:'watchlist_status_updated_timestamp']
267
288
  end
@@ -325,6 +346,7 @@ module VeloPayments
325
346
  self.class == o.class &&
326
347
  payee_id == o.payee_id &&
327
348
  payor_refs == o.payor_refs &&
349
+ payment_channels == o.payment_channels &&
328
350
  email == o.email &&
329
351
  onboarded_status == o.onboarded_status &&
330
352
  watchlist_status == o.watchlist_status &&
@@ -342,6 +364,7 @@ module VeloPayments
342
364
  individual == o.individual &&
343
365
  company == o.company &&
344
366
  cellphone_number == o.cellphone_number &&
367
+ managed_by_payor_id == o.managed_by_payor_id &&
345
368
  watchlist_status_updated_timestamp == o.watchlist_status_updated_timestamp &&
346
369
  grace_period_end_date == o.grace_period_end_date &&
347
370
  enhanced_kyc_completed == o.enhanced_kyc_completed &&
@@ -363,7 +386,7 @@ module VeloPayments
363
386
  # Calculates hash code according to all attributes.
364
387
  # @return [Integer] Hash code
365
388
  def hash
366
- [payee_id, payor_refs, email, onboarded_status, watchlist_status, watchlist_override_expires_at_timestamp, watchlist_override_comment, language, created, country, display_name, payee_type, disabled, disabled_comment, disabled_updated_timestamp, address, individual, company, cellphone_number, watchlist_status_updated_timestamp, grace_period_end_date, enhanced_kyc_completed, kyc_completed_timestamp, pause_payment, pause_payment_timestamp, marketing_opt_in_decision, marketing_opt_in_timestamp, accept_terms_and_conditions_timestamp, challenge].hash
389
+ [payee_id, payor_refs, payment_channels, email, onboarded_status, watchlist_status, watchlist_override_expires_at_timestamp, watchlist_override_comment, language, created, country, display_name, payee_type, disabled, disabled_comment, disabled_updated_timestamp, address, individual, company, cellphone_number, managed_by_payor_id, watchlist_status_updated_timestamp, grace_period_end_date, enhanced_kyc_completed, kyc_completed_timestamp, pause_payment, pause_payment_timestamp, marketing_opt_in_decision, marketing_opt_in_timestamp, accept_terms_and_conditions_timestamp, challenge].hash
367
390
  end
368
391
 
369
392
  # Builds the object from hash
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
1
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  =begin
2
2
  #Velo Payments APIs
3
3
 
4
- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
4
+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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+ The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.37.150
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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  #Velo Payments APIs
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- ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response.
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+ ### Terms and Definitions Throughout this document and the Velo platform the following terms are used: * **Payor.** An entity (typically a corporation) which wishes to pay funds to one or more payees via a payout. * **Payee.** The recipient of funds paid out by a payor. * **Payment.** A single transfer of funds from a payor to a payee. * **Payout.** A batch of Payments, typically used by a payor to logically group payments (e.g. by business day). Technically there need be no relationship between the payments in a payout - a single payout can contain payments to multiple payees and/or multiple payments to a single payee. * **Sandbox.** An integration environment provided by Velo Payments which offers a similar API experience to the production environment, but all funding and payment events are simulated, along with many other services such as OFAC sanctions list checking. ## Overview The Velo Payments API allows a payor to perform a number of operations. The following is a list of the main capabilities in a natural order of execution: * Authenticate with the Velo platform * Maintain a collection of payees * Query the payor’s current balance of funds within the platform and perform additional funding * Issue payments to payees * Query the platform for a history of those payments This document describes the main concepts and APIs required to get up and running with the Velo Payments platform. It is not an exhaustive API reference. For that, please see the separate Velo Payments API Reference. ## API Considerations The Velo Payments API is REST based and uses the JSON format for requests and responses. Most calls are secured using OAuth 2 security and require a valid authentication access token for successful operation. See the Authentication section for details. Where a dynamic value is required in the examples below, the {token} format is used, suggesting that the caller needs to supply the appropriate value of the token in question (without including the { or } characters). Where curl examples are given, the –d @filename.json approach is used, indicating that the request body should be placed into a file named filename.json in the current directory. Each of the curl examples in this document should be considered a single line on the command-line, regardless of how they appear in print. ## Authenticating with the Velo Platform Once Velo backoffice staff have added your organization as a payor within the Velo platform sandbox, they will create you a payor Id, an API key and an API secret and share these with you in a secure manner. You will need to use these values to authenticate with the Velo platform in order to gain access to the APIs. The steps to take are explained in the following: create a string comprising the API key (e.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8) and API secret (e.g. c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529) with a colon between them. E.g. 44a9537d-d55d-4b47-8082-14061c2bcdd8:c396b26b-137a-44fd-87f5-34631f8fd529 base64 encode this string. E.g.: NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== create an HTTP **Authorization** header with the value set to e.g. Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ== perform the Velo authentication REST call using the HTTP header created above e.g. via curl: ``` curl -X POST \\ -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\ -H \"Authorization: Basic NDRhOTUzN2QtZDU1ZC00YjQ3LTgwODItMTQwNjFjMmJjZGQ4OmMzOTZiMjZiLTEzN2EtNDRmZC04N2Y1LTM0NjMxZjhmZDUyOQ==\" \\ 'https://api.sandbox.velopayments.com/v1/authenticate?grant_type=client_credentials' ``` If successful, this call will result in a **200** HTTP status code and a response body such as: ``` { \"access_token\":\"19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f\", \"token_type\":\"bearer\", \"expires_in\":1799, \"scope\":\"...\" } ``` ## API access following authentication Following successful authentication, the value of the access_token field in the response (indicated in green above) should then be presented with all subsequent API calls to allow the Velo platform to validate that the caller is authenticated. This is achieved by setting the HTTP Authorization header with the value set to e.g. Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f such as the curl example below: ``` -H \"Authorization: Bearer 19f6bafd-93fd-4747-b229-00507bbc991f \" ``` If you make other Velo API calls which require authorization but the Authorization header is missing or invalid then you will get a **401** HTTP status response. ## Http Status Codes Following is a list of Http Status codes that could be returned by the platform | Status Code | Description | | -----------------------| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 200 OK | The request was successfully processed and usually returns a json response | | 201 Created | A resource was created and a Location header is returned linking to the new resource | | 202 Accepted | The request has been accepted for processing | | 204 No Content | The request has been processed and there is no response (usually deletes and updates)| | 400 Bad Request | The request is invalid and should be fixed before retrying | | 401 Unauthorized | Authentication has failed, usually means the token has expired | | 403 Forbidden | The user does not have permissions for the request | | 404 Not Found | The resource was not found | | 409 Conflict | The resource already exists and there is a conflict | | 429 Too Many Requests | The user has submitted too many requests in a given amount of time | | 5xx Server Error | Platform internal error (should rarely happen) |
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+ The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.37.150
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  OpenAPI Generator version: 7.1.0-SNAPSHOT