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 @@
1
1
  =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) |
5
5
 
6
- The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.35.58
6
+ The version of the OpenAPI document: 2.37.150
7
7
 
8
8
  Generated by: https://openapi-generator.tech
9
9
  OpenAPI Generator version: 7.1.0-SNAPSHOT
@@ -15,9 +15,10 @@ require 'time'
15
15
 
16
16
  module VeloPayments
17
17
  class PayorV2
18
+ # The Payor Id
18
19
  attr_accessor :payor_id
19
20
 
20
- # The name of the payor.
21
+ # The name of the payor
21
22
  attr_accessor :payor_name
22
23
 
23
24
  # A unique identifier that an external system uses to reference the payor in their system
@@ -49,7 +50,7 @@ module VeloPayments
49
50
  # Whether grace period processing is enabled.
50
51
  attr_accessor :payee_grace_period_processing_enabled
51
52
 
52
- # The grace period for paying payees in days.
53
+ # The grace period for paying payees in days before the payee must be onboarded.
53
54
  attr_accessor :payee_grace_period_days
54
55
 
55
56
  # How the payor has chosen to refer to payees.
@@ -70,25 +71,30 @@ module VeloPayments
70
71
  # The payor’s language preference. Must be one of [EN, FR]
71
72
  attr_accessor :language
72
73
 
74
+ # For internal use only (will be removed in a later version)
73
75
  attr_accessor :includes_reports
74
76
 
77
+ # For internal use only (will be removed in a later version)
75
78
  attr_accessor :wu_customer_id
76
79
 
80
+ # The maximum number of payor users with the master admin role
77
81
  attr_accessor :max_master_payor_admins
78
82
 
79
- # The id of the payment rails
83
+ # For internal use only (will be removed in a later version)
80
84
  attr_accessor :payment_rails
81
85
 
82
- attr_accessor :transmission_types
83
-
84
- # The payor’s supported remote systems by id
86
+ # For internal use only (will be removed in a later version)
85
87
  attr_accessor :remote_system_ids
86
88
 
87
- # USD in minor units
89
+ # USD in minor units. For internal use only (will be removed in a later version)
88
90
  attr_accessor :usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold
89
91
 
92
+ # Does this payor manage their own payees (payees are not invited but managed by the payor)
90
93
  attr_accessor :managing_payees
91
94
 
95
+ # The date of creation of the payor
96
+ attr_accessor :created_at
97
+
92
98
  # Attribute mapping from ruby-style variable name to JSON key.
93
99
  def self.attribute_map
94
100
  {
@@ -115,10 +121,10 @@ module VeloPayments
115
121
  :'wu_customer_id' => :'wuCustomerId',
116
122
  :'max_master_payor_admins' => :'maxMasterPayorAdmins',
117
123
  :'payment_rails' => :'paymentRails',
118
- :'transmission_types' => :'transmissionTypes',
119
124
  :'remote_system_ids' => :'remoteSystemIds',
120
125
  :'usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold' => :'usdTxnValueReportingThreshold',
121
- :'managing_payees' => :'managingPayees'
126
+ :'managing_payees' => :'managingPayees',
127
+ :'created_at' => :'createdAt'
122
128
  }
123
129
  end
124
130
 
@@ -153,10 +159,10 @@ module VeloPayments
153
159
  :'wu_customer_id' => :'String',
154
160
  :'max_master_payor_admins' => :'Integer',
155
161
  :'payment_rails' => :'String',
156
- :'transmission_types' => :'TransmissionTypes2',
157
162
  :'remote_system_ids' => :'Array<String>',
158
163
  :'usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold' => :'Integer',
159
- :'managing_payees' => :'Boolean'
164
+ :'managing_payees' => :'Boolean',
165
+ :'created_at' => :'Time'
160
166
  }
161
167
  end
162
168
 
@@ -277,10 +283,6 @@ module VeloPayments
277
283
  self.payment_rails = attributes[:'payment_rails']
278
284
  end
279
285
 
280
- if attributes.key?(:'transmission_types')
281
- self.transmission_types = attributes[:'transmission_types']
282
- end
283
-
284
286
  if attributes.key?(:'remote_system_ids')
285
287
  if (value = attributes[:'remote_system_ids']).is_a?(Array)
286
288
  self.remote_system_ids = value
@@ -294,6 +296,10 @@ module VeloPayments
294
296
  if attributes.key?(:'managing_payees')
295
297
  self.managing_payees = attributes[:'managing_payees']
296
298
  end
299
+
300
+ if attributes.key?(:'created_at')
301
+ self.created_at = attributes[:'created_at']
302
+ end
297
303
  end
298
304
 
299
305
  # Show invalid properties with the reasons. Usually used together with valid?
@@ -349,10 +355,10 @@ module VeloPayments
349
355
  wu_customer_id == o.wu_customer_id &&
350
356
  max_master_payor_admins == o.max_master_payor_admins &&
351
357
  payment_rails == o.payment_rails &&
352
- transmission_types == o.transmission_types &&
353
358
  remote_system_ids == o.remote_system_ids &&
354
359
  usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold == o.usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold &&
355
- managing_payees == o.managing_payees
360
+ managing_payees == o.managing_payees &&
361
+ created_at == o.created_at
356
362
  end
357
363
 
358
364
  # @see the `==` method
@@ -364,7 +370,7 @@ module VeloPayments
364
370
  # Calculates hash code according to all attributes.
365
371
  # @return [Integer] Hash code
366
372
  def hash
367
- [payor_id, payor_name, payor_xid, provider, address, primary_contact_name, primary_contact_phone, primary_contact_email, kyc_state, manual_lockout, open_banking_enabled, payee_grace_period_processing_enabled, payee_grace_period_days, collective_alias, support_contact, dba_name, allows_language_choice, reminder_emails_opt_out, language, includes_reports, wu_customer_id, max_master_payor_admins, payment_rails, transmission_types, remote_system_ids, usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold, managing_payees].hash
373
+ [payor_id, payor_name, payor_xid, provider, address, primary_contact_name, primary_contact_phone, primary_contact_email, kyc_state, manual_lockout, open_banking_enabled, payee_grace_period_processing_enabled, payee_grace_period_days, collective_alias, support_contact, dba_name, allows_language_choice, reminder_emails_opt_out, language, includes_reports, wu_customer_id, max_master_payor_admins, payment_rails, remote_system_ids, usd_txn_value_reporting_threshold, managing_payees, created_at].hash
368
374
  end
369
375
 
370
376
  # Builds the object from hash
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
1
1
  =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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- ### 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