LinkedIn API reference - linkedin-api

I'm trying to pull all the data associated with my companies LinkedIn page, but I can't figure out how to navigate the API... (I already have a bearer token).
I've looked at these reference fields, but the only GET request that gives me anything back is https://api.linkedin.com/v1/people/~?format=json and that gives me my personal profile info, which is not what I want.
If I change "people" to "visitors" for example, I get back:
"Unknown field {visitors} in resource {Root}"
Is there any documentation on what resources are available in {Root} or is there a GET request I can send that will show me the available resources?
Note: the only reason I'm using v1 here is because that's the only request I can get to work...

well, the V1 you are using is outdated. it will actually be terminated in March 2019. The reason why V2 is not working. is because V2 requires a LinkedIn partnership. you can request one here.
there are multiple ways you can request company data. for V1 it is called:
the manage company pages API, click here for more information
for V2 you should look at organization API, click here for more information
PS: im not sure if there is a way to get the root information. but hopefully this helps.

Related

How to get github users from city using Github REST API?

Background
I am working on an app and I need to get all the projects of all github users that live in a given city using the GitHub Rest API v3: https://developer.github.com/v3/
Research
Now I know I can get all the users with the following url:
https://api.github.com/users
And once I have a user, I can get all his repos and info from there.
Problem
The problem is that I don't know how to filter those users by city!
I have tried adding a paramter location=London but it always returns the same, probably because this is not the real parameter...
Another option would be to get all the github users from the world, and then filter them by city .... which would be totally insane.
The best option I found so far was to use this link:
https://github.com/search?q=language:javascript+location:Barcelona&type=Users
However, this link is the web version, which does not use the REST API.
Question
How do I get all the users from a given city using the Github REST API?
You are using the /users endpoint. You need to use the /search/users endpoint:
https://api.github.com/search/users?q=location%3Aiceland
Will search for users located in Iceland
Using that gets me a response with a bunch of users and after cross checking the first 3, they all have their location set to "Iceland" in their profiles.

How to list Azure VMs using the REST API with Oauth2?

The Problem
MS Azure provides an extensive REST API. However, there is a significant amount of complexity when trying to get that API to work. From outdated and incomplete documentation to simple examples not working, performing what should be an easy task is instead nightmarish.
The Task
What are the exact, precise, detailed steps necessary to list the available VMs for someone who has logged in using Oauth2? For instance, this can be done using the azure-cli.
azure vm list
What are the steps to accomplish the same thing using REST and Oauth2?
The Requirements
The answer must not use Visual Studio, PowerShell, C#, an SDK, or any other such tool to accomplish this task. Only the portal is allowed for setup, and only Oauth2 is allowed for authorization, and only the REST API is allowed for actual information retrieval.
The answer must not simply link to external sources, although external references are encouraged for completeness.
The answer may assume the user has an Azure account. It must include information about creating the Oauth2 client, credentials, and any step necessary to get the appropriate token.
The answer must be detailed.
The answer must provide examples. Images, too are strongly encouraged.
The answer should include information about possible errors, their meanings, and what too look for to fix them.
First, we can find this rest API in azure resource portal. It is the same with Azure CLI command azure vm list.
I have tested it on my local with http request. here is my tested screenshot:
Request URL: https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/<subscription ID>/providers/Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines?api-version=2016-03-30
Header:Authorization: bearer eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJSUzI.....
So It is very import if we get the access token. The following demonstrate us how to get the access token.
Get Token(POST):
Request URL: https://login.microsoftonline.com/<tenant id>/oauth2/token
Body: grant_type=client_credentials&client_id=<client id>&resource=https%3A%2F%2Fmanagement.core.windows.net%2F&client_secret=<client secret>
Here is my screenshot in fildder:
We need to get client id and client secret in azure ad application. For how to regist an application in Azure AD. Please have a look at this article: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-resource-manager/resource-group-create-service-principal-portal.
Please note:
1) we need to add "Windows Azure Service Management API" in portal "Required permissions" like the following screenshot:
2) We need assign "Contributor" for this service principal. click subscription-> Access Control-> click Add -> click "Select a Role" -> click Contributor->click Add User-> Find the application you created above-> click OK.
Overview
Making requests against the Azure Rest API is a bit more complicated than perhaps you would think at first glance. In particular, there are a number of esoteric and not-so-helpful error messages you may run into while getting the nobs tweaked just right.
Introduction and Terms
Setting up The Application
Getting the access_token
Making the API request
Common errors thus far
Introduction and Terms
One of the pieces of this process that can make it so confusing and difficult is the terminology. Until you understand that, knowing how to deal with errors is very difficult. We'll go over some of the more common ones here.
Subscription - This is basically what you'd expect. It refers to the Microsoft Azure Services subscription. It basically acts as the top-level umbrella for the organization.
Tenant - This is like a sub-organization, maybe a department or group. There can be multiple tenants under a single subscription.
User - As expected, a user is a single individual. Users are scoped to tenants.
Application - The Application is the software program trying to use the API. It must be registered and configured to do so.
Service Principal - This is essentially The Application. It is the entity making API Service requests.
Setting Up the Application
Although you might not guess it, this is probably the most complicated part of the process. Let's start by creating The Application in the portal.
Create The Application
Follow this click path: Azure Active Directory -> App Registrations -> New
There should be a form for application creation, with the following fields:
Name
This is simple the name of The Application. When authenticating, it will be shown to users. For the purposes of this "tutorial", we'll call it API Tutorial. This can be edited after creation.
Application Type
The type of The Application. For our purposes, we should choose "Web app/API". This cannot be edited after creation.
Sign-on URL
The is the redirect that will be used if we go the "authorization_code" route for sign on. This can be useful as the response will include an "id_token". We'll get into that a bit later. For now, let's make this http://123AzureApiTutorial.com/code. This can be edited after creation.
Once the Application has been created, you should see a property, Application ID. This is the client_id used in the OAuth2 flow. Take a note of its value.
Create the Client Secret
The OAuth2 flow requires a client secret value for authentication.
To generate it, follow this click path: Azure Active Directory -> App Registrations -> API Tutorial -> All Settings -> Keys
Enter the key description: API Tutorial Key, and the Duration: In 1 year.
Click Save. This will generate the Key Value. You must copy the value here and save it somewhere. You will not have another opportunity to do so.
This value is the client_secret in the OAuth2 flow.
Add the correct permissions
To get to the permissions, follow this click path: Azure Active Directory -> App Registrations -> API Tutorial -> All Settings -> Required Permissions -> Add
Here you will see the list of possible APIs. The one we care about for Azure is Windows Azure Service Management API. There is currently only one permission: Access Azure Service Management as organization users (preview). Select it, click Select, and then Done.
Getting the access_token
The access_token is what allows us to make requests against the API. There are two primary ways to do this. I suggest reading about both before trying to implement them.
Authorization Code
The authorization code is a two-step process. First we obtain the authorization code, and then we use that to get the access_token. A benefit of this route is that we get back an id_token as well, with a variety of useful claims like the user's name, email address, etc.
The request format is as follows: (GET) https://login.microsoftonline.com/<tenant-id>/oauth2/authorize?client_id=<client-id>&scope=api&redirect_uri=<redirect-uri>&response_type=code&prompt=consent. Let's go over the parameters here really quick.
Tenant ID
This can be obtained be using the click path Azure Active Directory -> Properties and copy the Directory ID. This is, in fact the Tenant ID value. It just has a different name to help with the overall confusion.
Client ID
This is the Application ID we retrieved previously.
Scope
This is the scope of the code. We just want to use the API.
Redirect URI
This is the sign-on URL you specified when creating API Tutorial. After the user logs in, they will be redirected to this URL with a "code" parameter in the query string.
Response Type
This is what we want the response to be. We want an authorization code, so we just use the value code.
Prompt
This specifies whether or not to prompt the user to consent to the permissions. If we did not have this, and changed permissions, the request would just unexpectedly fail. Very frustrating. But it can be removed once permission has been granted as long as you don't change the permissions. If the application is accessing an API that requires admin permission, this value should be admin_consent.
Alright, so once we shoot off this request we will be redirected to the login page. We login, accept the permissions, and then we should be redirected to here: http://123AzureApiTutorial.com/code?code=SOME_REALLY_LONG_STRING_OF_CHARACTERS. That string of characters is the code.
Getting the Access Token
Next, we take the code and use it to get the access_token. To do so, we need to make another request.
(POST) https://login.microsoftonline.com/<tenant-id>/oauth2/token
In addition to the url, we need to add parameters. These should be consistent with the content type application/x-www-form-urlencoded. This means they are submitted as form parameters. They are as follows:
client_id
This is again the client id (Application ID) we already have.
client_secret
This is the Application Key we generated earlier. I hope you saved it! If not, go back to that step and generate another one.
code
This is the value of the code we just received: SOME_REALLY_LONG_STRING_OF_CHARACTERS.
`grant_type
Because we're going the authorization code route, this value should be authorization_code
redirect_uri
This is the redirect uri we specified for the API Tutorial. The value from our example should be http://123AzureApiTutorial.com/code.
resource
This is very important. It is the resource API we want to access. For the Azure API, this value is https://management.azure.com.
Our response will be a json object with a variety of fields. Of these, the one we care about is access_token. Yay!
Client Credentials
This methodology skips getting the code (and thus needing the redirect_uri) at the expense of not getting an id_token.
The request is the same as in the Getting the Access Token section, with a few small differences.
We do not need to specify redirect_uri.
The value of grant_type should change to client_credentials.
Alright, we have an access_token! Now we're cooking!
Making the API request
With all the prep work thus far, this is the easiest part of the process.
The API URL we are requesting against is:
https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/<subscription-id>/providers/Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines?api-version=2016-03-30
Add the following header to the request:
Authorization: Bearer <access-token>. Yes, the access_token value must be prefaced with the word "Bearer" in the header value.
"But wait!" You exclaim. "How do I get the subscription id?"
Excellent question! To find it through the portal, click Subscriptions -> -> Overview and copy the Subscription Id value.
Use that value, and run the request. You should see all the vms listed!
Common errors thus far
InvalidAuthenticationToken
When making the API request, you get an error response that says something like this: InvalidAuthenticationToken: The access token is invalid. This means you haven't added the API permissions to the API Tutorial. Go back to the Add the correct permissions step and double-check you have the right permissions. Also, when requesting the token make sure you use the prompt=consent, otherwise the you will not be prompted with the new permissions and the token will fail.
InvalidAuthenticationTokenTenant
Make sure that the tenant-id used when requesting the token belongs to the subscriber used when making the API call.

Facebook API Lead Ad webhook lead retrieval

I have setup a webhook for Facebook Lead Ads
It is receiving data like this:
{"object":"page","entry":[{"id":"718196074978224","time":1453818316,"changes":[{"field":"leadgen","value":{"ad_id":"399579767903","adgroup_id":"971076277715","created_time":1453789516,"form_id":"930912320812","leadgen_id":"151977133461","page_id":"718196074978224"}}]}]}
The next step is to retrieve the details.
The docs say
https://graph.facebook.com/v2.5/
but if I use the leadgen_id (151977133461) this returns
"singular published story API is deprecated for versions v2.4 and higher"
I've also read that _ might work, but that returns a different error.
Answered my own question: subscribed_apps wasn't set up correctly
You just need page access token to retrive the values from the lead. You need to make a GET call on
https://graph.facebook.com/v2.11/<leadgen_id>?access_token=<page_access_token>
For more info go through this link it will help you: http://tanmayverma.com/reactjs/storing-facebook-lead-data-in-our-database-in-real-time-using-reactjs-meteorjs-and-fbs-javascript-sdk/

How to retrieve multiple user account details through their Facebook IDs in graph API?

This could be a duplicate of here and here, but can some one provide a complete working example for following.
I have set of different Facebook account Ids, and i need to get the respective account details(user name etc) from these account ids. I need to send a Batch Request for Graph API. Something as follows,
(https://graph.facebook.com?ids=user1, user2, user3,...)
Is this possible as pure HTTP GET request ?
I am using Facebook SDK with Android for the moment. I have gone through the API doc but unable to build the required query yet. Please help.
Maybe post a snippet of your code so we can try to solve your problem better. With the info you provided, the URL https://graph.facebook.com/?ids=user1,user2,user3 works just fine and returns 3 users.
The URL format looks correct. Keep in mind the total character limit, but otherwise I suspect you are stuck in a different place (e.g. sending the query or saving the result).

Foursquare API nearByVenue service changed

There was direct api calls to retrieve all list of nearByVenues
https://api.foursquare.com/v1/venues.json?geolat=40.562362&geolong=-111.938689&l=10
But now its no longer accessible.
I think Foursquare team has removed direct calls or may be changed something else.
I was able to acces s above url long time back.
Please suggest how to retrieve venue details ?
Thanks
Foursquare discontinued the v1 api recently, you'll need to make a call to this endpoint instead:
https://developer.foursquare.com/docs/venues/search.html
It should be pretty simple to port your code, here's is your query in the new structure:
https://api.foursquare.com/v2/venues/search?ll=40.562362,-111.938689&limit=10
(you'll need to add your oauth credentials to the end for it to work though)