diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Bugzilla/WebService.pm')
-rw-r--r-- | Bugzilla/WebService.pm | 37 |
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/Bugzilla/WebService.pm b/Bugzilla/WebService.pm index 166707626..8f97a3a2f 100644 --- a/Bugzilla/WebService.pm +++ b/Bugzilla/WebService.pm @@ -52,15 +52,20 @@ This is the standard API for external programs that want to interact with Bugzilla. It provides various methods in various modules. You can interact with this API via -L<XML-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::XMLRPC> or -L<JSON-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::JSONRPC>. +L<XML-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::XMLRPC>, +L<JSON-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::JSONRPC> or +L<REST|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::REST>. =head1 CALLING METHODS -Methods are grouped into "packages", like C<Bug> for +Methods are grouped into "packages", like C<Bug> for L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug>. So, for example, L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug/get>, is called as C<Bug.get>. +For REST, the "package" is more determined by the path +used to access the resource. See each relevant method +for specific details on how to access via REST. + =head1 PARAMETERS The Bugzilla API takes the following various types of parameters: @@ -79,6 +84,11 @@ A floating-point number. May be null. A string. May be null. +=item C<email> + +A string representing an email address. This value, when returned, +may be filtered based on if the user is logged in or not. May be null. + =item C<dateTime> A date/time. Represented differently in different interfaces to this API. @@ -137,7 +147,7 @@ There are various ways to log in: =item C<User.login> -You can use L<Bugzilla::WebService::User/login> to log in as a Bugzilla +You can use L<Bugzilla::WebService::User/login> to log in as a Bugzilla user. This issues standard HTTP cookies that you must then use in future calls, so your client must be capable of receiving and transmitting cookies. @@ -167,13 +177,17 @@ not expire. =back The C<Bugzilla_restrictlogin> and C<Bugzilla_rememberlogin> options -are only used when you have also specified C<Bugzilla_login> and +are only used when you have also specified C<Bugzilla_login> and C<Bugzilla_password>. Note that Bugzilla will return HTTP cookies along with the method response when you use these arguments (just like the C<User.login> method above). +For REST, you may also use the C<username> and C<password> variable +names instead of C<Bugzilla_login> and C<Bugzilla_password> as a +convenience. + =back =head1 STABLE, EXPERIMENTAL, and UNSTABLE @@ -268,6 +282,9 @@ would return something like: { users => [{ id => 1, name => 'user@domain.com' }] } +Note for REST, C<include_fields> may instead be a comma delimited string +for GET type requests. + =item C<exclude_fields> C<array> An array of strings, representing the (case-sensitive) names of @@ -277,6 +294,13 @@ the returned hashes. If you specify all the fields, then this function will return empty hashes. +Some RPC calls support specifying sub fields. If an RPC call states that +it support sub field restrictions, you can restrict what information is +returned within the first field. For example, if you call Products.get +with an include_fields of components.name, then only the component name +would be returned (and nothing else). You can include the main field, +and exclude a sub field. + Invalid field names are ignored. Specifying fields here overrides C<include_fields>, so if you specify a @@ -290,6 +314,9 @@ would return something like: { users => [{ id => 1, real_name => 'John Smith' }] } +Note for REST, C<exclude_fields> may instead be a comma delimited string +for GET type requests. + =back =head1 SEE ALSO |