table of contents
PONAPI::Client(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | PONAPI::Client(3pm) |
NAME¶
PONAPI::Client - Client to a {JSON:API} service (http://jsonapi.org/) v1.0
VERSION¶
version 0.002012
SYNOPSIS¶
use PONAPI::Client; my $client = PONAPI::Client->new( host => $host, port => $port, ); $client->retrieve_all( type => $type ); $client->retrieve( type => $type, id => $id, ); $client->retrieve_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, ); $client->retrieve_by_relationship( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, ); $client->create( type => $type, data => { attributes => { ... }, relationships => { ... }, }, ); $client->delete( type => $type, id => $id, ); $client->update( type => $type, id => $id, data => { type => $type, id => $id, attributes => { ... }, relationships => { ... }, } ); $client->delete_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, data => [ { type => $rel_type, id => $rel_id }, ... ], ); $client->create_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, data => [ { type => $rel_type, id => $rel_id }, ... ], ); $client->update_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, # for a one-to-one: data => { type => $rel_type, id => $rel_id }, # or for a one-to-many: data => [ { type => $rel_type, id => $rel_id }, ... ], ); # If the endpoint uses an uncommon url format: $client->retrieve( type => 'foo', id => 43, # Will generate a request to # host:port/type_foo_id_43 uri_template => "type_{type}_id_{id}", );
DESCRIPTION¶
"PONAPI::Client" is a {JSON:API} <http://jsonapi.org/> compliant client; it should be able to communicate with any API-compliant service.
The client does a handful of checks required by the spec, then uses Hijk to communicate with the service.
In most cases, all API methods return a response document:
my $response = $client->retrieve(...);
In list context however, all api methods will return the request status and the document:
my ($status, $response) = $client->retrieve(...)
Response documents will look something like these:
# Successful retrieve(type => 'articles', id => 2) { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, links => { self => "/articles/2" }, data => { ... }, meta => { ... }, # May not be there included => [ ... ], # May not be there, see C<include> } # Successful retrieve_all( type => 'articles' ) { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, links => { self => "/articles" }, # May include pagination links data => [ { ... }, { ... }, ... ], meta => { ... }, # May not be there included => [ ... ], # May not be there, see C<include> } # Successful create(type => 'foo', data => { ... }) { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, links => { self => "/foo/$created_id" }, data => { type => 'foo', id => $created_id }, } # Successful update(type => 'foo', id => 2, data => { ... }) { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, links => { self => "/foo/2" }, # may not be there meta => { ... }, # may not be there } # Error, see http://jsonapi.org/format/#error-objects { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, errors => [ { ... }, # error 1 ... # potentially others ], }
However, there are situations where the server may respond with a "204 No Content" and no response document; depending on the situation, it might be worth checking the status.
METHODS¶
new¶
Creates a new "PONAPI::Client" object. Takes a couple of attributes:
- host
- The hostname (or IP address) of the service. Defaults to localhost.
- port
- Port of the service. Defaults to 5000.
- send_version_header
- Sends a "X-PONAPI-Client-Version" header set to the {JSON:API} version the client supports. Defaults to true.
retrieve_all¶
retrieve_all( type => $type, %optional_arguments )
Retrieves all resources of the given type. In SQL, this is similar to "SELECT * FROM $type".
This handles several arguments:
- fields
- Spec <http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-sparse-fieldsets>.
Instead of returning every attribute and relationship from a given resource, "fields" can be used to specify exactly what is returned.
This excepts a hashref of arrayrefs, where the keys are types, and the values are either attribute names, or relationship names.
$client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', fields => { people => [ 'name', 'age' ] } )
Note that an attribute not being in fields means the opposite to an attribute having empty fields:
# No attributes or relationships for both people and comments $client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', fields => { people => [], comments => [] }, ); # No attributes or relationships for comments, but # ALL attributes and relationships for people $client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', fields => { comments => [] }, );
- include
- Spec <http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-includes>.
"include" can be used to fetch related resources. The example below is fetching both all the people, and all comments made by those people:
my $response = $client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', include => ['comments'] );
"include" expects an arrayref of relationship names. In the response, the resources fetched will be in an arrayref under the top-level "included" key:
say $_->{attributes}{body} for @{ $response->{included} }
- page
- Spec <http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-pagination>.
Requests that the server paginate the results. Each endpoint may have different pagination rules.
- sort
- Spec <http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-sorting>.
Requests that the server sort the results in a given way:
$client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', sort => [qw/ age /], # sort by age, ascending ); $client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', sort => [qw/ -age /], # sort by age, descending );
Although not all endpoints will support this, it may be possible to sort by a relationship's attribute:
$client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', sort => [qw/ -comments.created_date /], );
- filter
- Spec <http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-filtering>.
This one is entirely dependent on the endpoint. It's usually employed to act as a "WHERE" clause:
$client->retrieve_all( type => 'people', filter => { id => [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 ], # IN ( 1, 2, ... ) age => 34, # age = 34 }, );
Sadly, more complex filters are currently not available.
retrieve¶
retrieve( type => $type, id => $id, %optional_arguments )
Similar to "retrieve_all", but retrieves a single resource.
retrieve_relationships¶
retrieve_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, %optional_arguments )
Retrieves all of $id's relationships to $rel_type as resource identifiers; that is, as hashrefs that contain only "type" and "id":
# retrieve_relationships(type=>'people', id=>2, rel_type=>'comments') { jsonapi => { version => "1.0" }, data => [ { type => 'comments', id => 4 }, { type => 'comments', id => 9 }, { type => 'comments', id => 14 }, ] }
These two do roughly the same thing:
my $response = $client->retrieve( type => $type, id => $id ); my $relationships = $response->{data}{relationships}{$rel_type}; say join ", ", map $_->{id}, @$relationships; my $response = $client->retrieve_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, ); my $relationships = $response->{data}; say join ", ", map $_->{id}, @$relationships;
However, "retrieve_relationships" also allows you to page those relationships, which may be quite useful.
Keep in mind that "retrieve_relationships" will return an arrayref for one-to-many relationships, and a hashref for one-to-ones.
retrieve_by_relationship¶
retrieve_by_relationship( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, %optional_arguments )
"retrieve_relationships" on steroids. It behaves the same way, but will retrieve full resources, not just resource identifiers; because of this, you can also potentially apply more complex filters and sorts.
create¶
create( type => $type, data => { ... }, id => $optional )
Create a resource of type $type using $data to populate it. Data must include the type, and may include two other keys: "attributes" and "relationships":
$client->create( type => 'comments', data => { type => 'comments', attributes => { body => 'abc' }, relationships => { author => { type => 'people', id => 55 }, liked_by => [ { type => 'people', id => 55 }, { type => 'people', id => 577 }, ], } } }
An optional "id" may be provided, in which case the server may choose to use it when creating the new resource.
update¶
update( type => $type, id => $id, data => { ... } )
Can be used to update the resource. Data must have "type" and "id" keys:
$client->create( type => 'comments', id => 5, data => { type => 'comments', id => 5, attributes => { body => 'new body!' }, relationships => { author => undef, # no author liked_by => [ { type => 'people', id => 79 }, ], } } }
An empty arrayref ("[]") can be used to clear one-to-many relationships, and "undef" to clear one-to-one relationships.
A successful "update" will always return a response document; see the spec for more details.
delete¶
delete( type => $type, id => $id )
Deletes the resource.
update_relationships¶
update_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, data => $data )
Update a resource's relationships. Basically a shortcut to using "update".
For one-to-one relationships, "data" can be either a single hashref, or undef. For one-to-many relationships, "data" can be an arrayref; an empty arrayref means 'clear the relationship'.
create_relationships¶
create_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, data => [{ ... }] )
Adds to the specified one-to-many relationship.
delete_relationships¶
delete_relationships( type => $type, id => $id, rel_type => $rel_type, data => [{ ... }] )
Deletes from the specified one-to-many relationship.
Endpoint URI format¶
By default, "PONAPI::Client" assumes urls on the endpoint are in this format:
retrieve_all: /$type retrieve: /$type/$id retrieve_by_relationships: /$type/$id/$rel_type retrieve_relationships: /$type/$id/relationships/$rel_type create: /$type or /$type/$id delete: /$type/$id update: /$type/$id update_relationships: /$type/$id/relationships/$rel_type create_relationships: /$type/$id/relationships/$rel_type delete_relationships: /$type/$id/relationships/$rel_type # Will generate a request to /foo/99 $client->retrieve( type => 'foo', id => 99, );
However, if another format is needed, two approaches are possible:
URI paths have a common prefix¶
If all the endpoint urls have a common prefix, ala "/v1/articles" instead of simply "/articles", then you can just set "uri_base" as needed:
$client->retrieve( type => 'foo', id => 99, uri_base => '/v1' );
We can also set this when creating the client; if done this way, all requests generated from this client will include the base:
my $new_client = PONAPI::Client->new( uri_base => '/v1', ... ); # This will generate a request to /v1/foo/99 $new_client->retrieve( type => 'foo', id => 99, );
Completely different uris¶
If the endpoint's expected formats are wildly different, you can specify "uri_template" with your request:
# Will generate a request to id_here_99_and_type_there/foo $client->retrieve( type => 'foo', id => 99, uri_template => 'id_here_{id}_and_type_there/{type}' );
These placeholders are recognized:
- type
- id
- rel_type
This can only be done on a per-request basis.
AUTHORS¶
- Mickey Nasriachi <mickey@cpan.org>
- Stevan Little <stevan@cpan.org>
- Brian Fraser <hugmeir@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2019 by Mickey Nasriachi, Stevan Little, Brian Fraser.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
2019-12-09 | perl v5.30.0 |