OpenAPIClient::Role - a Moose role for the MailBaby Email Delivery and Management Service API
Send emails fast and with confidence through our easy to use REST API interface.
This is the API interface to the Mail Baby Mail services provided by InterServer. To use this service you must have an account with us at my.interserver.net.
In order to use most of the API calls you must pass credentials from the my.interserver.net site. We support several different authentication methods but the preferred method is to use the API Key which you can get from the Account Security page.
Automatically generated by the OpenAPI Generator project:
- API version: 1.1.0
- Package version: 1.0.0
- Build package: org.openapitools.codegen.languages.PerlClientCodegen For more information, please visit https://www.mail.baby/contact/
This role is the only component of the library that uses Moose. See OpenAPIClient::ApiFactory for non-Moosey usage.
The Perl Generator in the OpenAPI Generator project builds a library of Perl modules to interact with a web service defined by a OpenAPI Specification. See below for how to build the library.
This module provides an interface to the generated library. All the classes, objects, and methods (well, not quite *all*, see below) are flattened into this role.
package MyApp;
use Moose;
with 'OpenAPIClient::Role';
package main;
my $api = MyApp->new({ tokens => $tokens });
my $pet = $api->get_pet_by_id(pet_id => $pet_id);
The library consists of a set of API classes, one for each endpoint. These APIs implement the method calls available on each endpoint.
Additionally, there is a set of "object" classes, which represent the objects returned by and sent to the methods on the endpoints.
An API factory class is provided, which builds instances of each endpoint API.
This Moose role flattens all the methods from the endpoint APIs onto the consuming class. It also provides methods to retrieve the endpoint API objects, and the API factory object, should you need it.
For documentation of all these methods, see AUTOMATIC DOCUMENTATION below.
In the normal case, the OpenAPI Spec will describe what parameters are required and where to put them. You just need to supply the tokens.
my $tokens = {
# basic
username => $username,
password => $password,
# oauth
access_token => $oauth_token,
# keys
$some_key => { token => $token,
prefix => $prefix,
in => $in, # 'head||query',
},
$another => { token => $token,
prefix => $prefix,
in => $in, # 'head||query',
},
...,
};
my $api = MyApp->new({ tokens => $tokens });
Note these are all optional, as are prefix
and in
, and depend on the API
you are accessing. Usually prefix
and in
will be determined by the code generator from
the spec and you will not need to set them at run time. If not, in
will
default to 'head' and prefix
to the empty string.
The tokens will be placed in a LOpenAPIClient::Configuration instance as follows, but you don't need to know about this.
-
$cfg->{username}
String. The username for basic auth.
-
$cfg->{password}
String. The password for basic auth.
-
$cfg->{api_key}
Hashref. Keyed on the name of each key (there can be multiple tokens).
$cfg->{api_key} = { secretKey => 'aaaabbbbccccdddd', anotherKey => '1111222233334444', };
-
$cfg->{api_key_prefix}
Hashref. Keyed on the name of each key (there can be multiple tokens). Note not all api keys require a prefix.
$cfg->{api_key_prefix} = { secretKey => 'string', anotherKey => 'same or some other string', };
-
$cfg->{access_token}
String. The OAuth access token.
The generated code has the base_url
already set as a default value. This method
returns the current value of base_url
.
Returns an API factory object. You probably won't need to call this directly.
$self->api_factory('Pet'); # returns a OpenAPIClient::PetApi instance
$self->pet_api; # the same
Most of the methods on the API are delegated to individual endpoint API objects
(e.g. Pet API, Store API, User API etc). Where different endpoint APIs use the
same method name (e.g. new()
), these methods can't be delegated. So you need
to call $api->pet_api->new()
.
In principle, every API is susceptible to the presence of a few, random, undelegatable method names. In practice, because of the way method names are constructed, it's unlikely in general that any methods will be undelegatable, except for:
new()
class_documentation()
method_documentation()
To call these methods, you need to get a handle on the relevant object, either
by calling $api->foo_api
or by retrieving an object, e.g.
$api->get_pet_by_id(pet_id => $pet_id)
. They are class methods, so
you could also call them on class names.
See the homepage https://openapi-generator.tech
for full details.
But briefly, clone the git repository, build the codegen codebase, set up your build
config file, then run the API build script. You will need git, Java 7 or 8 and Apache
maven 3.0.3 or better already installed.
The config file should specify the project name for the generated library:
{"moduleName":"WWW::MyProjectName"}
Your library files will be built under WWW::MyProjectName
.
$ git clone https://github.com/openapitools/openapi-generator
$ cd openapi-generator
$ mvn package
$ java -jar modules/openapi-generator-cli/target/openapi-generator-cli.jar generate \
-i [URL or file path to JSON OpenAPI API spec] \
-g perl \
-c /path/to/config/file.json \
-o /path/to/output/folder
Bang, all done. Run the autodoc
script in the bin
directory to see the API
you just built.
You can print out a summary of the generated API by running the included
autodoc
script in the bin
directory of your generated library. A few
output formats are supported:
Usage: autodoc [OPTION]
-w wide format (default)
-n narrow format
-p POD format
-H HTML format
-m Markdown format
-h print this help message
-c your application class
The -c
option allows you to load and inspect your own application. A dummy
namespace is used if you don't supply your own class.
Additional documentation for each class and method may be provided by the OpenAPI
spec. If so, this is available via the class_documentation()
and
method_documentation()
methods on each generated object class, and the
method_documentation()
method on the endpoint API classes:
my $cmdoc = $api->pet_api->method_documentation->{$method_name};
my $odoc = $api->get_pet_by_id->(pet_id => $pet_id)->class_documentation;
my $omdoc = $api->get_pet_by_id->(pet_id => $pet_id)->method_documentation->{method_name};
Each of these calls returns a hashref with various useful pieces of information.
Use cpanm to install the module dependencies:
cpanm --local-lib=~/perl5 local::lib && eval $(perl -I ~/perl5/lib/perl5/ -Mlocal::lib)
cpanm --quiet --no-interactive Class::Accessor Test::Exception Test::More Log::Any LWP::UserAgent URI::Query Module::Runtime DateTime Module::Find Moose::Role JSON
To load the API packages:
use OpenAPIClient::BlockingApi;
use OpenAPIClient::HistoryApi;
use OpenAPIClient::SendingApi;
use OpenAPIClient::ServicesApi;
use OpenAPIClient::StatusApi;
To load the models:
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleNew;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecord;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecordAllOf;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::EmailAddress;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GenericResponse;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GetMailOrders401Response;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GetStats200ResponseInner;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockClickHouse;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockRspamd;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlocks;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLog;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLogEntry;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailOrder;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMail;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMailAdv;
Put the Perl SDK under the 'lib' folder in your project directory, then run the following
#!/usr/bin/perl
use lib 'lib';
use strict;
use warnings;
# load the API package
use OpenAPIClient::BlockingApi;
use OpenAPIClient::HistoryApi;
use OpenAPIClient::SendingApi;
use OpenAPIClient::ServicesApi;
use OpenAPIClient::StatusApi;
# load the models
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleNew;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecord;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecordAllOf;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::EmailAddress;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GenericResponse;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GetMailOrders401Response;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::GetStats200ResponseInner;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockClickHouse;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockRspamd;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlocks;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLog;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLogEntry;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::MailOrder;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMail;
use OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMailAdv;
# for displaying the API response data
use Data::Dumper;
my $api_instance = OpenAPIClient::BlockingApi->new(
# Configure API key authorization: apiKeyAuth
api_key => {'X-API-KEY' => 'YOUR_API_KEY'},
# uncomment below to setup prefix (e.g. Bearer) for API key, if needed
#api_key_prefix => {'X-API-KEY' => 'Bearer'},
);
my $type = "type_example"; # string | The type of deny rule.
my $data = "data_example"; # string | The content of the rule. If a domain type rule then an example would be google.com. For a begins with type an example would be msgid-. For the email typer an example would be [email protected].
my $user = "user_example"; # string | Mail account username that will be tied to this rule. If not specified the first active mail order will be used.
eval {
my $result = $api_instance->add_rule(type => $type, data => $data, user => $user);
print Dumper($result);
};
if ($@) {
warn "Exception when calling BlockingApi->add_rule: $@\n";
}
All URIs are relative to https://api.mailbaby.net
Class | Method | HTTP request | Description |
---|---|---|---|
BlockingApi | add_rule | POST /mail/rules | Creates a new email deny rule. |
BlockingApi | delete_rule | DELETE /mail/rules/{ruleId} | Removes an deny mail rule. |
BlockingApi | delist_block | POST /mail/blocks/delete | Removes an email address from the blocked list |
BlockingApi | get_mail_blocks | GET /mail/blocks | displays a list of blocked email addresses |
BlockingApi | get_rules | GET /mail/rules | Displays a listing of deny email rules. |
HistoryApi | get_stats | GET /mail/stats | displays a list of blocked email addresses |
HistoryApi | view_mail_log | GET /mail/log | displays the mail log |
SendingApi | send_adv_mail | POST /mail/advsend | Sends an Email with Advanced Options |
SendingApi | send_mail | POST /mail/send | Sends an Email |
ServicesApi | get_mail_orders | GET /mail | displays a list of mail service orders |
StatusApi | ping_server | GET /ping | Checks if the server is running |
- OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleNew
- OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecord
- OpenAPIClient::Object::DenyRuleRecordAllOf
- OpenAPIClient::Object::EmailAddress
- OpenAPIClient::Object::GenericResponse
- OpenAPIClient::Object::GetMailOrders401Response
- OpenAPIClient::Object::GetStats200ResponseInner
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockClickHouse
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlockRspamd
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailBlocks
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLog
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailLogEntry
- OpenAPIClient::Object::MailOrder
- OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMail
- OpenAPIClient::Object::SendMailAdv
Authentication schemes defined for the API:
- Type: API key
- API key parameter name: X-API-KEY
- Location: HTTP header