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326 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
326 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# API Clients
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An API client handles the underlying details of how network requests are made
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and how responses are decoded. They present the developer with an application
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interface to work against, rather than working directly with the network interface.
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The API clients documented here are not restricted to APIs built with Django REST framework.
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They can be used with any API that exposes a supported schema format.
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For example, [the Heroku platform API][heroku-api] exposes a schema in the JSON
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Hyperschema format. As a result, the Core API command line client and Python
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client library can be [used to interact with the Heroku API][heroku-example].
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## Client-side Core API
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[Core API][core-api] is a document specification that can be used to describe APIs. It can
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be used either server-side, as is done with REST framework's [schema generation][schema-generation],
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or used client-side, as described here.
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When used client-side, Core API allows for *dynamically driven client libraries*
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that can interact with any API that exposes a supported schema or hypermedia
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format.
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Using a dynamically driven client has a number of advantages over interacting
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with an API by building HTTP requests directly.
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#### More meaningful interaction
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API interactions are presented in a more meaningful way. You're working at
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the application interface layer, rather than the network interface layer.
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#### Resilience & evolvability
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The client determines what endpoints are available, what parameters exist
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against each particular endpoint, and how HTTP requests are formed.
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This also allows for a degree of API evolvability. URLs can be modified
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without breaking existing clients, or more efficient encodings can be used
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on-the-wire, with clients transparently upgrading.
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#### Self-descriptive APIs
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A dynamically driven client is able to present documentation on the API to the
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end user. This documentation allows the user to discover the available endpoints
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and parameters, and better understand the API they are working with.
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Because this documentation is driven by the API schema it will always be fully
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up to date with the most recently deployed version of the service.
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---
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# Command line client
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The command line client allows you to inspect and interact with any API that
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exposes a supported schema format.
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## Getting started
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To install the Core API command line client, use `pip`.
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Note that the command-line client is a separate package to the
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python client library. Make sure to install `coreapi-cli`.
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$ pip install coreapi-cli
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To start inspecting and interacting with an API the schema must first be loaded
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from the network.
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$ coreapi get http://api.example.org/
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<Pastebin API "http://127.0.0.1:8000/">
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snippets: {
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create(code, [title], [linenos], [language], [style])
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destroy(pk)
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highlight(pk)
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list([page])
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partial_update(pk, [title], [code], [linenos], [language], [style])
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retrieve(pk)
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update(pk, code, [title], [linenos], [language], [style])
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}
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users: {
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list([page])
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retrieve(pk)
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}
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This will then load the schema, displaying the resulting `Document`. This
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`Document` includes all the available interactions that may be made against the API.
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To interact with the API, use the `action` command. This command requires a list
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of keys that are used to index into the link.
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$ coreapi action users list
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[
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{
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"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8000/users/2/",
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"id": 2,
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"username": "aziz",
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"snippets": []
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},
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...
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]
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To inspect the underlying HTTP request and response, use the `--debug` flag.
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$ coreapi action users list --debug
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> GET /users/ HTTP/1.1
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> Accept: application/vnd.coreapi+json, */*
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> Authorization: Basic bWF4Om1heA==
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> Host: 127.0.0.1
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> User-Agent: coreapi
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< 200 OK
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< Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
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< Content-Type: application/json
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< Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2016 10:51:46 GMT
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< Server: WSGIServer/0.1 Python/2.7.10
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< Vary: Accept, Cookie
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<
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< [{"url":"http://127.0.0.1/users/2/","id":2,"username":"aziz","snippets":[]},{"url":"http://127.0.0.1/users/3/","id":3,"username":"amy","snippets":["http://127.0.0.1/snippets/3/"]},{"url":"http://127.0.0.1/users/4/","id":4,"username":"max","snippets":["http://127.0.0.1/snippets/4/","http://127.0.0.1/snippets/5/","http://127.0.0.1/snippets/6/","http://127.0.0.1/snippets/7/"]},{"url":"http://127.0.0.1/users/5/","id":5,"username":"jose","snippets":[]},{"url":"http://127.0.0.1/users/6/","id":6,"username":"admin","snippets":["http://127.0.0.1/snippets/1/","http://127.0.0.1/snippets/2/"]}]
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[
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...
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]
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Some actions may include optional or required parameters.
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$ coreapi action users create --param username=example
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When using `--param`, the type of the input will be determined automatically.
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If you want to be more explicit about the parameter type then use `--data` for
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any null, numeric, boolean, list, or object inputs, and use `--string` for string inputs.
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$ coreapi action users edit --string username=tomchristie --data is_admin=true
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## Authentication & headers
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The `credentials` command is used to manage the request `Authentication:` header.
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Any credentials added are always linked to a particular domain, so as to ensure
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that credentials are not leaked across differing APIs.
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The format for adding a new credential is:
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$ coreapi credentials add <domain> <credentials string>
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For instance:
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$ coreapi credentials add api.example.org "Token 9944b09199c62bcf9418ad846dd0e4bbdfc6ee4b"
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The optional `--auth` flag also allows you to add specific types of authentication,
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handling the encoding for you. Currently only `"basic"` is supported as an option here.
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For example:
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$ coreapi credentials add api.example.org tomchristie:foobar --auth basic
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You can also add specific request headers, using the `headers` command:
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$ coreapi headers add api.example.org x-api-version 2
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For more information and a listing of the available subcommands use `coreapi
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credentials --help` or `coreapi headers --help`.
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## Codecs
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By default the command line client only includes support for reading Core JSON
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schemas, however it includes a plugin system for installing additional codecs.
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$ pip install openapi-codec jsonhyperschema-codec hal-codec
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$ coreapi codecs show
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Codecs
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corejson application/vnd.coreapi+json encoding, decoding
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hal application/hal+json encoding, decoding
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openapi application/openapi+json encoding, decoding
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jsonhyperschema application/schema+json decoding
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json application/json data
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text text/* data
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## Utilities
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The command line client includes functionality for bookmarking API URLs
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under a memorable name. For example, you can add a bookmark for the
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existing API, like so...
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$ coreapi bookmarks add accountmanagement
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There is also functionality for navigating forward or backward through the
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history of which API URLs have been accessed.
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$ coreapi history show
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$ coreapi history back
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For more information and a listing of the available subcommands use
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`coreapi bookmarks --help` or `coreapi history --help`.
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## Other commands
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To display the current `Document`:
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$ coreapi show
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To reload the current `Document` from the network:
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$ coreapi reload
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To load a schema file from disk:
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$ coreapi load my-api-schema.json --format corejson
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To dump the current document to console in a given format:
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$ coreapi dump --format openapi
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To remove the current document, along with all currently saved history,
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credentials, headers and bookmarks:
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$ coreapi clear
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---
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# Python client library
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The `coreapi` Python package allows you to programatically interact with any
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API that exposes a supported schema format.
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## Getting started
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You'll need to install the `coreapi` package using `pip` before you can get
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started.
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$ pip install coreapi
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In order to start working with an API, we first need a `Client` instance. The
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client holds any configuration around which codecs and transports are supported
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when interacting with an API, which allows you to provide for more advanced
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kinds of behaviour.
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import coreapi
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client = coreapi.Client()
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Once we have a `Client` instance, we can fetch an API schema from the network.
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schema = client.get('https://api.example.org/')
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The object returned from this call will be a `Document` instance, which is
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the internal representation of the interface that we are interacting with.
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Now that we have our schema `Document`, we can now start to interact with the API:
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users = client.action(schema, ['users', 'list'])
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Some endpoints may include named parameters, which might be either optional or required:
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new_user = client.action(schema, ['users', 'create'], params={"username": "max"})
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## Codecs
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Codecs are responsible for encoding or decoding Documents.
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The decoding process is used by a client to take a bytestring of an API schema
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definition, and returning the Core API `Document` that represents that interface.
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A codec should be associated with a particular media type, such as `'application/coreapi+json'`.
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This media type is used by the server in the response `Content-Type` header,
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in order to indicate what kind of data is being returned in the response.
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#### Configuring codecs
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The codecs that are available can be configured when instantiating a client.
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The keyword argument used here is `decoders`, because in the context of a
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client the codecs are only for *decoding* responses.
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In the following example we'll configure a client to only accept `Core JSON`
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and `JSON` responses. This will allow us to receive and decode a Core JSON schema,
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and subsequently to receive JSON responses made against the API.
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from coreapi import codecs, Client
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decoders = [codecs.CoreJSONCodec(), codecs.JSONCodec()]
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client = Client(decoders=decoders)
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#### Loading and saving schemas
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You can use a codec directly, in order to load an existing schema definition,
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and return the resulting `Document`.
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input_file = open('my-api-schema.json', 'rb')
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schema_definition = input_file.read()
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codec = codecs.CoreJSONCodec()
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schema = codec.load(schema_definition)
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You can also use a codec directly to generate a schema definition given a `Document` instance:
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schema_definition = codec.dump(schema)
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output_file = open('my-api-schema.json', 'rb')
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output_file.write(schema_definition)
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## Transports
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Transports are responsible for making network requests. The set of transports
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that a client has installed determines which network protocols it is able to
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support.
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Currently the `coreapi` library only includes an HTTP/HTTPS transport, but
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other protocols can also be supported.
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#### Configuring transports
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The behaviour of the network layer can be customized by configuring the
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transports that the client is instantiated with.
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import requests
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from coreapi import transports, Client
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credentials = {'api.example.org': 'Token 3bd44a009d16ff'}
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transports = transports.HTTPTransport(credentials=credentials)
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client = Client(transports=transports)
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More complex customizations can also be achieved, for example modifying the
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underlying `requests.Session` instance to [attach transport adaptors][transport-adaptors]
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that modify the outgoing requests.
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[heroku-api]: https://devcenter.heroku.com/categories/platform-api
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[heroku-example]: http://www.coreapi.org/tools-and-resources/example-services/#heroku-json-hyper-schema
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[core-api]: http://www.coreapi.org/
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[schema-generation]: ../api-guide/schemas.md
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[transport-adaptors]: http://docs.python-requests.org/en/master/user/advanced/#transport-adapters
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