Libraries tagged by batch request

catch/zoho-mapper

0 Favers
20 Downloads

A simple ZOHO CRM API wrapper to easily handle requests and translate responses

Go to Download


hassankerdash/laravel-api-form-data-support

1 Favers
23 Downloads

Provides support for handling and parsing form data in PUT and PATCH requests.

Go to Download


tdw/routing

0 Favers
3 Downloads

Simple router to GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE requests.

Go to Download


oneplace/oneplace-articlerequest-matching

0 Favers
6 Downloads

Matching Plugin for onePlace Articles. Match Articles with Requests

Go to Download


level42/gitlabhook-bundle

2 Favers
27 Downloads

Bundle to catch GitLab hook request

Go to Download


hilalahmad/http-client

1 Favers
2 Downloads

The HttpClient PHP package is a package designed for making HTTP requests using cURL. This package simplifies the process of sending GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE requests, along with the ability to set custom headers, to external APIs or web services.

Go to Download


fitbug/guzzle-swagger-validation-middleware

1 Favers
22 Downloads

A guzzle middleware that can be used to validate if requests and responses match what is defined in the schema

Go to Download


fembri/lspcs

1 Favers
125 Downloads

Laravel Session patch to support concurrent request.

Go to Download


lucasvscn/laravel-force-https

0 Favers
89 Downloads

Patch to force every request to be made with https.

Go to Download


jnvsor/composite-matcher

0 Favers
37 Downloads

A composite matcher that runs RequestMatchers in sequence to find a match

Go to Download


nodeum-io/nodeum-sdk-php

0 Favers
0 Downloads

The Nodeum API makes it easy to tap into the digital data mesh that runs across your organisation. Make requests to our API endpoints and we’ll give you everything you need to interconnect your business workflows with your storage. All production API requests are made to: http://nodeumhostname/api/ The current production version of the API is v1. **REST** The Nodeum API is a RESTful API. This means that the API is designed to allow you to get, create, update, & delete objects with the HTTP verbs GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, & DELETE. **JSON** The Nodeum API speaks exclusively in JSON. This means that you should always set the Content-Type header to application/json to ensure that your requests are properly accepted and processed by the API. **Authentication** All API calls require user-password authentication. **Cross-Origin Resource Sharing** The Nodeum API supports CORS for communicating from Javascript for these endpoints. You will need to specify an Origin URI when creating your application to allow for CORS to be whitelisted for your domain. **Pagination** Some endpoints such as File Listing return a potentially lengthy array of objects. In order to keep the response sizes manageable the API will take advantage of pagination. Pagination is a mechanism for returning a subset of the results for a request and allowing for subsequent requests to “page” through the rest of the results until the end is reached. Paginated endpoints follow a standard interface that accepts two query parameters, limit and offset, and return a payload that follows a standard form. These parameters names and their behavior are borrowed from SQL LIMIT and OFFSET keywords. **Versioning** The Nodeum API is constantly being worked on to add features, make improvements, and fix bugs. This means that you should expect changes to be introduced and documented. However, there are some changes or additions that are considered backwards-compatible and your applications should be flexible enough to handle them. These include: - Adding new endpoints to the API - Adding new attributes to the response of an existing endpoint - Changing the order of attributes of responses (JSON by definition is an object of unordered key/value pairs) **Filter parameters** When browsing a list of items, multiple filter parameters may be applied. Some operators can be added to the value as a prefix: - `=` value is equal. Default operator, may be omitted - `!=` value is different - `>` greater than - `>=` greater than or equal - `=` lower than or equal - `>

Go to Download


mzb/php-router-matcher

0 Favers
9 Downloads

The router component allows you to define routes that correspond to controllers or managers that should receive the request. A router parses the URI to extract this information. The router has two modes: MVC, and match-only. The first mode is ideal for working on MVC applications.

Go to Download


brunodebarros/standalone-error-catcher

0 Favers
14 Downloads

A simple catch-all for PHP errors that makes an HTTP request on every error.

Go to Download


alissonlinneker/statuspage-php-sdk

0 Favers
1 Downloads

# Code of Conduct Please don't abuse the API, and please report all feature requests and issues to https://support.atlassian.com/contact # Rate Limiting Each API token is limited to 1 request / second as measured on a 60 second rolling window. To get this limit increased, please contact us at https://support.atlassian.com/contact Error codes 420 or 429 indicate that you have exceeded the rate limit and the request has been rejected. # Basics ## HTTPS It's required ## URL Prefix In order to maintain version integrity into the future, the API is versioned. All calls currently begin with the following prefix: https://api.statuspage.io/v1/ ## RESTful Interface Wherever possible, the API seeks to implement repeatable patterns with logical, representative URLs and descriptive HTTP verbs. Below are some examples and conventions you will see throughout the documentation. * Collections are buckets: https://api.statuspage.io/v1/pages/asdf123/incidents.json * Elements have unique IDs: https://api.statuspage.io/v1/pages/asdf123/incidents/jklm456.json * GET will retrieve information about a collection/element * POST will create an element in a collection * PATCH will update a single element * PUT will replace a single element in a collection (rarely used) * DELETE will destroy a single element ## Sending Data Information can be sent in the body as form urlencoded or JSON, but make sure the Content-Type header matches the body structure or the server gremlins will be angry. All examples are provided in JSON format, however they can easily be converted to form encoding if required. Some examples of how to convert things are below: // JSON { "incident": { "name": "test incident", "components": ["8kbf7d35c070", "vtnh60py4yd7"] } } // Form Encoded (using curl as an example): curl -X POST https://api.statuspage.io/v1/example \ -d "incident[name]=test incident" \ -d "incident[components][]=8kbf7d35c070" \ -d "incident[components][]=vtnh60py4yd7" # Authentication

Go to Download


<< Previous