Libraries tagged by dscribe
kruegge82/dhl-authentication-oauth-api
19 Downloads
This API describes how API client can obtain a token which is used to access various Parcel Germany APIs. Using this API is often the first step in making your API call. Preconditions You will need: * client ID (aka "API Key", obtained when you create an app in developer.dhl.com) * client secret (obtained when you create an app in developer.dhl.com) * GKP user name (obtained when setting up your business account with Parcel Germany) * GKP password (obtained when setting up your business account with Parcel Germany) Technical Information This uses an implementation of OAuth2 Password Grant (RFC 6749). After successfull usage you will: * have an opaque access token to be used for API calls afterwards * this token will have an expiration time
john-peterson-g17/oauth-token-management
4 Downloads
A framework agnostic abstraction for managing tokens/grants in the OAuth 2.0 flow as described in RFC 6749. This package would be a module inside of your Authorization Server used to manage tokens
jnjxp/form
247 Downloads
Describe collections of HTML form inputs
jjanvier/broken-oop
4 Downloads
A set of annotations to help describe common OOP problems met during code reads or code reviews.
jasny/http-digest
240 Downloads
PSR-7 client and server middleware for HTTP Digest header creation and validation as described in RFC 3230
gfaust-qb/skeleton-module-zf1-app
8 Downloads
Skeleton to setup zendframework 1 modules like described in zend framework 1 reference.
fwrepae/fwrepae
0 Downloads
The Inter TT REST API is described using OpenAPI 3.0. The descriptor for the api can be downloaded in both [YAML](http://localhost:8080/cyclos/api/openapi.yaml) or [JSON](http://localhost:8080/cyclos/api/openapi.json) formats. These files can be used in tools that support the OpenAPI specification, such as the [OpenAPI Generator](https://openapi-generator.tech). In the API, whenever some data is referenced, for example, a group, or payment type, either id or internal name can be used. When an user is to be referenced, the special word 'self' (sans quotes) always refers to the currently authenticated user, and any identification method (login name, e-mail, mobile phone, account number or custom field) that can be used on keywords search (as configured in the products) can also be used to identify users. Some specific data types have other identification fields, like accounts can have a number and payments can have a transaction number. This all depends on the current configuration. ----------- Most of the operations that return data allow selecting which fields to include in the response. This is useful to avoid calculating data that finally won't be needed and also for reducing the transfer over the network. If nothing is set, all object fields are returned. Fields are handled in 3 modes. Given an example object `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}, "b": 0}`, the modes are: - **Include**: the field is unprefixed or prefixed with `+`. All fields which are not explicitly included are excluded from the result. Examples: - `["a"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}}` - `["+b"]` results in `{"b": 0}` - `["a.x"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1}}`. This is a nested include. At root level, includes only `a` then, on `a`'s level, includes only `x`. - **Exclude**: the field is prefixed by `-` (or, for compatibility purposes, `!`). Only explicitly excluded fields are excluded from the result. Examples: - `["-a"]` results in `{"b": 0}` - `["-b"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}}` - `["a.-x"]` results in `{"a": {"y": 2, "z": 3}}`. In this example, `a` is actually an include at the root level, hence, excludes `b`. - **Nested only**: when a field is prefixed by `*` and has a nested path, it only affects includes / excludes for the nested fields, without affecting the current level. Only nested fields are configured. Examples: - `["*a.x"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1}, "b": 0}`. In this example, `a` is configured to include only `x`. `b` is also included because, there is no explicit includes at root level. - `["*a.-x"]` results in `{"a": {"y": 2, "z": 3}, "b": 0}`. In this example, `a` is configured to exclude only `x`. `b` is also included because there is no explicit includes at the root level. For backwards compatibility, this can also be expressed in a special syntax `-a.x`. Also, keep in mind that `-x.y.z` is equivalent to `*x.*y.-z`. You cannot have the same field included and excluded at the same time - a HTTP `422` status will be returned. Also, when mixing nested excludes with explicit includes or excludes, the nested exclude will be ignored. For example, using `["*a.x", "a.y"]` will ignore the `*a.x` definition, resulting in `{"a": {"y": 2}}`. ----------- For details of the deprecated elements (operations and model) please visit the [deprecation notes page](https://documentation.cyclos.org/4.16.3/api-deprecation.html) for this version.
fresh-advance/regex-dependency
32 Downloads
Small, configurable service locator/DI container with possibility to describe keys as regular expressions. The component can be used as a Router too.
flux-eco/aggregate-root
33 Downloads
Manage aggregate roots described as json schema
fillup/guzzle-services
8295 Downloads
Provides an implementation of the Guzzle Command library that uses Guzzle service descriptions to describe web services, serialize requests, and parse responses into easy to use model structures.
ekimik/apidesc
130 Downloads
Simple lib for describe some API
difra/lib-unify
9 Downloads
Class-self-described ORM library
degami/sql-schema
281 Downloads
Library for describe of the database schema.
cfxmarkets/php-jsonapi-objects
887 Downloads
A class that provides a PHP implementation of JSON API objects. Note, this is not a protocol implementation, it is simply an implementation of classes as described by the [json-api spec](http://jsonapi.org/format/).
bronek/code-complexity
19 Downloads
Simple tool to measure code cyclomatic complexity as described on https://phpmd.org/rules/codesize.html