WebService.pm 9.3 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
# -*- Mode: perl; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
#
# The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public
# License Version 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file
# except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
# the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/
#
# Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS
# IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or
# implied. See the License for the specific language governing
# rights and limitations under the License.
#
# The Original Code is the Bugzilla Bug Tracking System.
#
# Contributor(s): Marc Schumann <wurblzap@gmail.com>
16
#                 Max Kanat-Alexander <mkanat@bugzilla.org>
17

18 19
# This is the base class for $self in WebService method calls. For the 
# actual RPC server, see Bugzilla::WebService::Server and its subclasses.
20 21
package Bugzilla::WebService;
use strict;
22 23
use Bugzilla::WebService::Server;

24
use XMLRPC::Lite;
25

26 27
# Used by the JSON-RPC server to convert incoming date fields apprpriately.
use constant DATE_FIELDS => {};
28

29 30 31 32 33 34
# For some methods, we shouldn't call Bugzilla->login before we call them
use constant LOGIN_EXEMPT => { };

sub login_exempt {
    my ($class, $method) = @_;
    return $class->LOGIN_EXEMPT->{$method};
35 36
}

37 38 39
sub type {
    my ($self, $type, $value) = @_;
    if ($type eq 'dateTime') {
40
        $value = $self->datetime_format_outbound($value);
41 42 43 44
    }
    return XMLRPC::Data->type($type)->value($value);
}

45 46
# This is the XML-RPC implementation, see the README in Bugzilla/WebService/.
# Our "base" implementation is in Bugzilla::WebService::Server.
47
sub datetime_format_outbound {
48 49 50 51 52
    my $self = shift;
    my $value = Bugzilla::WebService::Server->datetime_format_outbound(@_);
    # XML-RPC uses an ISO-8601 format that doesn't have any hyphens.
    $value =~ s/-//g;
    return $value;
53 54
}

55
1;
56

57 58 59 60
__END__

=head1 NAME

61
Bugzilla::WebService - The Web Service interface to Bugzilla
62 63 64 65 66 67

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This is the standard API for external programs that want to interact
with Bugzilla. It provides various methods in various modules.

68 69 70
You can interact with this API via
L<XML-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::XMLRPC> or
L<JSON-RPC|Bugzilla::WebService::Server::JSONRPC>.
71 72 73 74 75

=head1 CALLING METHODS

Methods are grouped into "packages", like C<Bug> for 
L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug>. So, for example,
76
L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug/get>, is called as C<Bug.get>.
77 78 79

=head1 PARAMETERS

80 81 82
The Bugzilla API takes the following various types of parameters:

=over
83

84
=item C<int>
85

86
Integer. May be null.
87

88
=item C<double>
89

90
A floating-point number. May be null.
91

92
=item C<string>
93

94
A string. May be null.
95

96
=item C<dateTime>
97

98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107
A date/time. Represented differently in different interfaces to this API.
May be null.

=item C<boolean>

True or false.

=item C<array>

An array. There may be mixed types in an array.
108 109 110 111

In example code, you will see the characters C<[> and C<]> used to
represent the beginning and end of arrays.

112 113
In our example code in these API docs, an array that contains the numbers
1, 2, and 3 would look like:
114

115
 [1, 2, 3]
116

117
=item C<struct>
118

119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133
A mapping of keys to values. Called a "hash", "dict", or "map" in some
other programming languages. We sometimes call this a "hash" in the API
documentation.

The keys are strings, and the values can be any type.

In example code, you will see the characters C<{> and C<}> used to represent
the beginning and end of structs.

For example, a struct with an "fruit" key whose value is "oranges",
and a "vegetable" key whose value is "lettuce" would look like:

 { fruit => 'oranges', vegetable => 'lettuce' }

=back
134 135 136

=head2 How Bugzilla WebService Methods Take Parameters

137 138 139
B<All> Bugzilla WebService functions use I<named> parameters.
The individual C<Bugzilla::WebService::Server> modules explain
how this is implemented for those frontends.
140 141 142

=head1 LOGGING IN

143 144 145 146 147 148
There are various ways to log in:

=over

=item C<User.login>

149 150
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
151
calls, so your client must be capable of receiving and transmitting
152 153
cookies.

154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187
=item C<Bugzilla_login> and C<Bugzilla_password>

B<Added in Bugzilla 3.6>

You can specify C<Bugzilla_login> and C<Bugzilla_password> as arguments
to any WebService method, and you will be logged in as that user if your
credentials are correct. Here are the arguments you can specify to any
WebService method to perform a login:

=over

=item C<Bugzilla_login> (string) - A user's login name.

=item C<Bugzilla_password> (string) - That user's password.

=item C<Bugzilla_restrictlogin> (boolean) - Optional. If true,
then your login will only be valid for your IP address.

=item C<Bugzilla_rememberlogin> (boolean) - Optional. If true,
then the cookie sent back to you with the method response will
not expire.

=back

The C<Bugzilla_restrictlogin> and C<Bugzilla_rememberlogin> options
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).

=back

188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205
=head1 STABLE, EXPERIMENTAL, and UNSTABLE

Methods are marked B<STABLE> if you can expect their parameters and
return values not to change between versions of Bugzilla. You are 
best off always using methods marked B<STABLE>. We may add parameters
and additional items to the return values, but your old code will
always continue to work with any new changes we make. If we ever break
a B<STABLE> interface, we'll post a big notice in the Release Notes,
and it will only happen during a major new release.

Methods (or parts of methods) are marked B<EXPERIMENTAL> if 
we I<believe> they will be stable, but there's a slight chance that 
small parts will change in the future.

Certain parts of a method's description may be marked as B<UNSTABLE>,
in which case those parts are not guaranteed to stay the same between
Bugzilla versions.

206 207
=head1 ERRORS

208 209 210
If a particular webservice call fails, it will throw an error in the
appropriate format for the frontend that you are using. For all frontends,
there is at least a numeric error code and descriptive text for the error.
211 212 213 214

The various errors that functions can throw are specified by the
documentation of those functions.

215 216 217 218
Each error that Bugzilla can throw has a specific numeric code that will
not change between versions of Bugzilla. If your code needs to know what
error Bugzilla threw, use the numeric code. Don't try to parse the
description, because that may change from version to version of Bugzilla.
219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240

Note that if you display the error to the user in an HTML program, make
sure that you properly escape the error, as it will not be HTML-escaped.

=head2 Transient vs. Fatal Errors

If the error code is a number greater than 0, the error is considered
"transient," which means that it was an error made by the user, not
some problem with Bugzilla itself.

If the error code is a number less than 0, the error is "fatal," which
means that it's some error in Bugzilla itself that probably requires
administrative attention.

Negative numbers and positive numbers don't overlap. That is, if there's
an error 302, there won't be an error -302.

=head2 Unknown Errors

Sometimes a function will throw an error that doesn't have a specific
error code. In this case, the code will be C<-32000> if it's a "fatal"
error, and C<32000> if it's a "transient" error.
241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301

=head1 COMMON PARAMETERS

Many Webservice methods take similar arguments. Instead of re-writing
the documentation for each method, we document the parameters here, once,
and then refer back to this documentation from the individual methods
where these parameters are used.

=head2 Limiting What Fields Are Returned

Many WebService methods return an array of structs with various
fields in the structs. (For example, L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug/get>
returns a list of C<bugs> that have fields like C<id>, C<summary>, 
C<creation_time>, etc.)

These parameters allow you to limit what fields are present in
the structs, to possibly improve performance or save some bandwidth.

=over

=item C<include_fields> (array)

An array of strings, representing the (case-sensitive) names of fields.
Only the fields specified in this hash will be returned, the rest will
not be included.

If you specify an empty array, then this function will return empty
hashes.

Invalid field names are ignored.

Example:

  User.get( ids => [1], include_fields => ['id', 'name'] )

would return something like:

  { users => [{ id => 1, name => 'user@domain.com' }] }

=item C<exclude_fields> (array)

An array of strings, representing the (case-sensitive) names of fields.
The fields specified will not be included in the returned hashes.

If you specify all the fields, then this function will return empty
hashes.

Invalid field names are ignored.

Specifying fields here overrides C<include_fields>, so if you specify a
field in both, it will be excluded, not included.

Example:

  User.get( ids => [1], exclude_fields => ['name'] )

would return something like:

  { users => [{ id => 1, real_name => 'John Smith' }] }

=back
302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327

=head1 SEE ALSO

=head2 Server Types

=over

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::Server::XMLRPC>

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::Server::JSONRPC>

=back

=head2 WebService Methods

=over

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bug>

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::Bugzilla>

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::Product>

=item L<Bugzilla::WebService::User>

=back