GET,POST | /authorizetoken/{Service}/{TokenString} |
---|
export class Setting
{
public name: string;
public stringValue: string;
public booleanValue: boolean;
public dataType: string;
public constructor(init?: Partial<Setting>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class AuthorizeBaseResponse
{
public isAuthorized: boolean;
public settings: Setting[];
public suggestedStatusCode: number;
public suggestedResponseMessage: string;
public reason: string;
public customerId?: string;
public constructor(init?: Partial<AuthorizeBaseResponse>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class AuthorizeTokenResponse extends AuthorizeBaseResponse
{
public constructor(init?: Partial<AuthorizeTokenResponse>) { super(init); (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
export class AuthorizeToken implements IAuthorizeToken
{
// @ApiMember(IsRequired=true, ParameterType="path")
public tokenString: string;
// @ApiMember(IsRequired=true, ParameterType="path")
public service: string;
public constructor(init?: Partial<AuthorizeToken>) { (Object as any).assign(this, init); }
}
TypeScript AuthorizeToken DTOs
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .jsv suffix or ?format=jsv
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
POST /authorizetoken/{Service}/{TokenString} HTTP/1.1
Host: nkapi-sgepz3-auth-r1.azurewebsites.net
Accept: text/jsv
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
tokenString: String,
service: String
}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: text/jsv Content-Length: length { isAuthorized: False, settings: [ { name: String, stringValue: String, booleanValue: False, dataType: String } ], suggestedStatusCode: 0, suggestedResponseMessage: String, reason: String }