APIs developed on digit follow certain conventions and principles. The aim of this document is to provide some do’s and don’ts while following those principles
Always define the Yaml for your APIs as the first thing using Open API 3 Standard (https://swagger.io/specification/)
APIs path should be standardised as follows:
/{service}/{entity}/{version}/_create: This endpoint should be used to create the entity
/{service}/{entity}/{version}/_update: This endpoint should be used to edit an entity which is already existing
/{service}/{entity}/{version}/_search: This endpoint should be used to provide search on the entity based on certain criteria
/{service}/{entity}/{version}/_count: This endpoint should be provided to give a count of entities that match a given search criteria
Always use POST for each of the endpoints
Take most search parameters in the POST body only
If query params for search need to be supported then make sure to have the same parameters in POST body also and POST body should take priority over query params
Provide additional Details objects for _create and _update APIs so that custom requirements use these fields
Each API should have a RequestInfo object in request body at the top level
Each API should have a ResponseInfo object in response body at the top level
Mandatory fields should be minimum for the APIs.
minLength and maxLength should be defined for each attribute
Read-only fields should be called out
Use common models already available in the platform in your APIs. Ex -
For receiving files in an API, don’t use binary file data. Instead, accept the file store ids
If there is only one file to be uploaded and no persistence is needed, and no additional json data is to be posted, you can consider using direct file upload instead of using filestore id