NATS4 REST API Overview
Overview
The NATS Admin API is accessible at http://<domain>/api/<endpoint>/<item>
- Replace <domain> with your NATS install domain name.
- Replace <endpoint> with the resource endpoint that you are trying to access
- Some of the resources do not require <item> in the url and all of the urls will be specified in the documentation
Gaining Access to the Rest API
In order to access NATS API your IP address must be in the ADMIN_API_ALLOWED_IPS list. You can add or remove IP addresses to this list via the Configurations Admin under the "Security" tab.
If you're also using ADMIN_IPS to restrict access to your admin, you must also add the IP to that list, as this is also an admin page.
Allowed HTTP Request Methods
- GET
- POST
- PUT
- PATCH
- For detailed information about these HTTP Request methods, please refer to their official documentation here:
Response Format
- JSON
Authentication
The NATS REST API uses HTTP Header Authentication. Each REST API request requires the Affiliate username and the Affiliate API key to be sent with the HTTP headers of the request. To retrieve your API key simply select it from the login table of your NATS database or put in a support ticket and we can retrieve it for you. If you do not have an API key, you can set one by going to the Affiliates Admin and clicking the icon labeled, "Change API Key". Please note that only full admin accounts are authorized to use the API and set an API key.
Required HTTP Headers
- api_key: Affiliate api key
- api_username: Affiliate user name
Example Authentication
Authentication can be handled in various ways using different programming languages. Below are some complete example calls to the Ping endpoint with HTTP Header authentication.
PHP
<?php $url = 'http://domain/api/ping' $curl = curl_init(); $headers = array( 'api_key: 44b5498dbcb481a0d00b404c0169af62', 'api_username: tmm1phrvezsbu' ); curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, $headers); curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true); curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_URL, $url); $resp = curl_exec($curl); //dumps an associative array representation of the json var_dump(json_decode($resp, true)); // Close request to clear up some resources curl_close($curl); ?>
Python
- This example requires pip and the request library which can be installed via pip by: 'pip install requests'
import requests url = 'http://domain/api/ping' headers = { 'api_key': '44b5498dbcb481a0d00b404c0169af62', 'api_username': 'tmm1phrvezsbu' } params = { 'payvia_type_id': 1, 'rule_type': 'enabled' } res = requests.get(url, params=params, headers=headers) print res.json()
node.js
- This example requires npm and the request module which can be installed via npm by: 'npm install request'
var request = require('request'); var options = { url: 'http://domain/api/ping', method: 'GET', json: true, headers: { 'api_key': '44b5498dbcb481a0d00b404c0169af62', 'api_username': 'tmm1phrvezsbu' } }; function callback(error, response, body) { if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) { console.log(body); } else{ console.log(body); } } request(options, callback);
Curl
curl -X GET 'http://domain/api/ping' -H "api_key: 44b5498dbcb481a0d00b404c0169af62" -H "api_username: tmm1phrvezsbu"
And this is the output:
true