I want to support pagination in my RESTful API.
My API method should return a JSON list of product via /products/index. However, there are potentially thousands of products, and I want to page through them, so my request should look something like this:
/products/index?page_number=5&page_size=20
But what does my JSON response need to look like? Would API consumers typically expect pagination meta data in the response? Or is only an array of products necessary? Why?
It looks like Twitter's API includes meta data: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1/get/lists/members (see Example Request).
With meta data:
{
"page_number": 5,
"page_size": 20,
"total_record_count": 521,
"records": [
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Widget #1"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Widget #2"
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Widget #3"
}
]
}
Just an array of products (no meta data):
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Widget #1"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Widget #2"
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Widget #3"
}
]
ReSTful APIs are consumed primarily by other systems, which is why I put paging data in the response headers. However, some API consumers may not have direct access to the response headers, or may be building a UX over your API, so providing a way to retrieve (on demand) the metadata in the JSON response is a plus.
I believe your implementation should include machine-readable metadata as a default, and human-readable metadata when requested. The human-readable metadata could be returned with every request if you like or, preferably, on-demand via a query parameter, such as include=metadata or include_metadata=true.
In your particular scenario, I would include the URI for each product with the record. This makes it easy for the API consumer to create links to the individual products. I would also set some reasonable expectations as per the limits of my paging requests. Implementing and documenting default settings for page size is an acceptable practice. For example, GitHub's API sets the default page size to 30 records with a maximum of 100, plus sets a rate limit on the number of times you can query the API. If your API has a default page size, then the query string can just specify the page index.
In the human-readable scenario, when navigating to /products?page=5&per_page=20&include=metadata, the response could be:
{
"_metadata":
{
"page": 5,
"per_page": 20,
"page_count": 20,
"total_count": 521,
"Links": [
{"self": "/products?page=5&per_page=20"},
{"first": "/products?page=0&per_page=20"},
{"previous": "/products?page=4&per_page=20"},
{"next": "/products?page=6&per_page=20"},
{"last": "/products?page=26&per_page=20"},
]
},
"records": [
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Widget #1",
"uri": "/products/1"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Widget #2",
"uri": "/products/2"
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Widget #3",
"uri": "/products/3"
}
]
}
For machine-readable metadata, I would add Link headers to the response:
Link: </products?page=5&perPage=20>;rel=self,</products?page=0&perPage=20>;rel=first,</products?page=4&perPage=20>;rel=previous,</products?page=6&perPage=20>;rel=next,</products?page=26&perPage=20>;rel=last
(the Link header value should be urlencoded)
...and possibly a custom total-count response header, if you so choose:
total-count: 521
The other paging data revealed in the human-centric metadata might be superfluous for machine-centric metadata, as the link headers let me know which page I am on and the number per page, and I can quickly retrieve the number of records in the array. Therefore, I would probably only create a header for the total count. You can always change your mind later and add more metadata.
As an aside, you may notice I removed /index from your URI. A generally accepted convention is to have your ReST endpoint expose collections. Having /index at the end muddies that up slightly.
These are just a few things I like to have when consuming/creating an API.
I would recommend adding headers for the same. Moving metadata to headers helps in getting rid of envelops like result , data or records and response body only contains the data we need. You can use Link header if you generate pagination links too.
HTTP/1.1 200
Pagination-Count: 100
Pagination-Page: 5
Pagination-Limit: 20
Content-Type: application/json
[
{
"id": 10,
"name": "shirt",
"color": "red",
"price": "$23"
},
{
"id": 11,
"name": "shirt",
"color": "blue",
"price": "$25"
}
]
For details refer to:
https://github.com/adnan-kamili/rest-api-response-format
For swagger file:
https://github.com/adnan-kamili/swagger-response-template
As someone who has written several libraries for consuming REST services, let me give you the client perspective on why I think wrapping the result in metadata is the way to go:
Without the total count, how can the client know that it has not yet received everything there is and should continue paging through the result set? In a UI that didn't perform look ahead to the next page, in the worst case this might be represented as a Next/More link that didn't actually fetch any more data.
Including metadata in the response allows the client to track less state. Now I don't have to match up my REST request with the response, as the response contains the metadata necessary to reconstruct the request state (in this case the cursor into the dataset).
If the state is part of the response, I can perform multiple requests into the same dataset simultaneously, and I can handle the requests in any order they happen to arrive in which is not necessarily the order I made the requests in.
And a suggestion: Like the Twitter API, you should replace the page_number with a straight index/cursor. The reason is, the API allows the client to set the page size per-request. Is the returned page_number the number of pages the client has requested so far, or the number of the page given the last used page_size (almost certainly the later, but why not avoid such ambiguity altogether)?
just add in your backend API new property's into response body.
from example .net core:
[Authorize]
[HttpGet]
public async Task<IActionResult> GetUsers([FromQuery]UserParams userParams)
{
var users = await _repo.GetUsers(userParams);
var usersToReturn = _mapper.Map<IEnumerable<UserForListDto>>(users);
// create new object and add into it total count param etc
var UsersListResult = new
{
usersToReturn,
currentPage = users.CurrentPage,
pageSize = users.PageSize,
totalCount = users.TotalCount,
totalPages = users.TotalPages
};
return Ok(UsersListResult);
}
In body response it look like this
{
"usersToReturn": [
{
"userId": 1,
"username": "nancycaldwell#conjurica.com",
"firstName": "Joann",
"lastName": "Wilson",
"city": "Armstrong",
"phoneNumber": "+1 (893) 515-2172"
},
{
"userId": 2,
"username": "zelmasheppard#conjurica.com",
"firstName": "Booth",
"lastName": "Drake",
"city": "Franks",
"phoneNumber": "+1 (800) 493-2168"
}
],
// metadata to pars in client side
"currentPage": 1,
"pageSize": 2,
"totalCount": 87,
"totalPages": 44
}
This is an interessting question and may be perceived with different arguments. As per the general standard meta related data should be communicated in the response headers e.g. MIME type and HTTP codes. However, the tendency I seem to have observed is that information related to counts and pagination typically are communicated at the top of the response body. Just to provide an example of this The New York Times REST API communicate the count at the top of the response body (https://developer.nytimes.com/apis).
The question for me is wheter or not to comply with the general norms or adopt and do a response message construction that "fits the purpose" so to speak. You can argue for both and providers do this differently, so I believe it comes down to what makes sense in your particular context.
As a general recommendation ALL meta data should be communicated in the headers. For the same reason I have upvoted the suggested answer from #adnan kamili.
However, it is not "wrong" to included some sort of meta related information such as counts or pagination in the body.
generally, I make by simple way, whatever, I create a restAPI endpoint for example "localhost/api/method/:lastIdObtained/:countDateToReturn"
with theses parameters, you can do it a simple request.
in the service, eg. .net
jsonData function(lastIdObtained,countDatetoReturn){
'... write your code as you wish..'
and into select query make a filter
select top countDatetoreturn tt.id,tt.desc
from tbANyThing tt
where id > lastIdObtained
order by id
}
In Ionic, when I scroll from bottom to top, I pass the zero value, when I get the answer, I set the value of the last id obtained, and when I slide from top to bottom, I pass the last registration id I got
Related
We can see the odata.nextlink standard in the server driven paging for normal queries here. But there is no odata.nextlink standard mentioned in case of 1:N $expand queries in $expand docs.
Can someone please confirm OData standard for 1:N $expand queries please?
Example:
If we have multiple account_tasks for a single account, how the result should look like:
GET [Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/accounts?$top=1&$expand=Account_Tasks($select=subject)
Option-1: Where data is shown in list inline till the page-size, and odata.nextLink is shown if data count exceeds the page-size. So, odata.nextLink will show the next set of results. (Similar to standard pagination here.)
{
"#odata.context": "[Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/$metadata#accounts(name,Account_Tasks(subject,scheduledstart))",
"value": [
{
"#odata.etag": "W/\"37867294\"",
"name": "Contoso, Ltd. (sample)",
"accountid": "7a4814f9-b0b8-ea11-a812-000d3a122b89",
"Account_Tasks": [
{
"#odata.etag": "W/\"28876919\"",
"subject": "Task 1 for Contoso, Ltd.",
},
{
// More account_tasks here. No odata.nextLink if data count < page-size.
]
}
]
}
Option-2: We'll show empty results inline and provide an odata.nextLink to actual data.
{
"#odata.context": "[Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/$metadata#accounts(name,Account_Tasks(subject,scheduledstart))",
"value": [
{
"#odata.etag": "W/\"37867294\"",
"name": "Contoso, Ltd. (sample)",
"accountid": "7a4814f9-b0b8-ea11-a812-000d3a122b89",
"Account_Tasks": [],
// Empty list shown above and URL given below will show the full results.
"Account_Tasks#odata.nextLink": "[Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/accounts(7a4814f9-b0b8-ea11-a812-000d3a122b89)/Account_Tasks?$select=subject,scheduledstart"
}
]
}
Option-3: Where data is shown in list till page-size, and odata.nextLink is shown every time (even if data count is smaller than the page-size). So, the odata.nextLink will show the full expand results including inline results.
{
"#odata.context": "[Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/$metadata#accounts(name,Account_Tasks(subject,scheduledstart))",
"value": [
{
"#odata.etag": "W/\"37867294\"",
"name": "Contoso, Ltd. (sample)",
"accountid": "7a4814f9-b0b8-ea11-a812-000d3a122b89",
"Account_Tasks": [
{
"#odata.etag": "W/\"28876919\"",
"subject": "Task 1 for Contoso, Ltd.",
},
{
// More account tasks here
],
"Account_Tasks#odata.nextLink": "[Organization URI]/api/data/v9.1/accounts(7a4814f9-b0b8-ea11-a812-000d3a122b89)/Account_Tasks?$select=subject,scheduledstart"
}
]
}
Thanks in advance.
Good question -- paging of nested results is often misunderstood.
Nested results are paged individually, so where the nested account_tasks for a particular account exceeds a sever-defined threshold, the account_tasks up to that threshold are included, along with a nextlink to retrieve the additional account_tasks for that account. Which, I believe, is your Option 1.
Note that, since the threshold is server-defined, it is also valid to have a threshold of 0, and only include a nextlink for the nested account_tasks. However, each account will still have a different nextlink, and following that nextlink will return only those account_tasks for the account in which the nextlink was returned.
Does that make sense?
I need to retrieve analytics of my companies posts.
I do have the following rights:
r_1st_connections_size
r_ads_reporting
r_basicprofile
r_emailaddress
r_liteprofile
r_organization_social
rw_ads
rw_organization_adminĀ reporting data"
w_member_social
w_organization_social
for my Bearer token.
But my request:
https://api.linkedin.com/v2/shares?q=owners&owners=urn:li:organization:*myOrganisationId*
does return:
{
"paging": {
"start": 0,
"count": 10,
"links": [
{
"type": "application/json",
"rel": "next",
"href": "/v2/shares?count=10&owners=urn%3Ali%3Aorganization%<myOrganisationId>&q=owners&start=0"
}
],
"total": 568
},
"elements": []
}
What is strange. Because it genuinely succeeds, and even returns a total > 0 but the elements are ALWAYS for ALL pages empty.
How can that be? Any insights?
I would appreciate also any input on which endpoint provied most easily the most metrics like click-rate, impressions, ... , of the posts?
Thanks a lot for your help.
If you need to retrieve the insigths from a share object you need to use the adAnalyticsV2 endpoint (here).
You can than retrieve the data by querying the endpoint in this way:
https://api.linkedin.com/v2/adAnalyticsV2?q=analytics&pivot=SHARE&timeGranularity=DAILY&shares=List(urn:share:XXXX)
to get a list of all shares I use this (replace the 00000 with your company ID):
https://api.linkedin.com/v2/ugcPosts?q=authors&authors=List(urn%3Ali%3Aorganization%3A00000)&sortBy=LAST_MODIFIED
That will actually give you a lot more, than you need but you will have a list of share urns as well as their texts and even authors. I wonder how are you planning to combine the two, cause that's what I am trying to figure out.
Thanks,
Piotrek
New to REST API, and struggling a little.
I learned recently from here and here that I can receive a JSON describing an issue by calling a REST API of the form <JIRA_BASE_URL>/rest/api/2/issue/{issueIdOrKey}, e.g.:
curl -s -X GET -u super_user:super_password https://jira.server.com/rest/api/2/issue/TEST-12
Is there a way I can query many issues at once if I have a list of issue-ids, e.g. ["TEST-12", "TEST-13", "TEST-14"]?
I'm specifically interested in getting the summary field of each issue in my list of issue-ids. I.e. I'm trying to create a map of [issue-id:summary]. I currently do this by invoking the above curl command in a loop for each issue-id in my list. But I observe that this takes a long time, and I wonder if performance might be improved if there's a way to do a "bulk get" -- if such a feature exists.
Give the JQL Search API endpoint a try:
https://jira-url/rest/api/latest/search?fields=summary&jql=key%20in%20(TEST-12,%20TEST-13)
The fields parameter limits the fields returned, and the jql parameter lists out an array of the issue keys you'd like to retrieve.
The response looks like this:
{
...
"startAt": 0,
"maxResults": 50,
"total": 2,
"issues": [
{
...
"key": "TEST-12",
"fields": {
"summary": "TEST-12 Summary"
}
},
{
...
"key": "TEST-13",
"fields": {
"summary": "TEST-13 Summary"
}
}
]
}
In a shopping cart application, suppose I have an endpoint for an endpoint for an /product/ for products that can be bought and a /cartitem/ for items in a shopping cart. Example of GET /product/2 response
{
"sku": "12345"
"name":"mars bar"
}
Example of a GET /cartitem/56
{
"quantity": 4
"sku": "12345"
"name":"mars bar"
}
When adding a cartitem, I will do a POST to /cartitem/ but instead of having to pass up the entire body, I'd like to able to just post a reference to the product
POST /cartitem
BODY:
{
"quantity": "4"
"product":"/product/2"
}
instead of having to do:
POST /cartitem/
{
"quantity": 4
"sku": "12345"
"name":"mars bar"
}
Note, I never want to have:
GET
{
"quantity": "4"
"product":"/product/2"
}
Reason is because there are multiple to ways to add a cartitem, sometimes you will have a product, sometimes you want. I want the response to not have to reference a product URI, but I want the POST to be allowed to reference it to make it easier for some clients.
Is that okay?
Thanks
You should use the primary key (ID) of the product instead of a link. The end result would be the same but its cleaner and makes more sense. You would just have to implement the logic for this.
I am designing a RESTful API for a mobile application I am working on. My problem is with large collections containing many items. I understand that a good practice is to paginate large number of results in a collection.
I have read the Facebook Graph API doc (https://developers.facebook.com/docs/graph-api/using-graph-api/v2.2), Twitter cursors doc (https://dev.twitter.com/overview/api/cursoring), GitHub API doc (https://developer.github.com/v3/) and this post (API pagination best practices).
Consider an example collection /resources in my API that contains 100 items named resource1 to resource100 and sorted descending. This is the response you will get upon a GET request (GET http://api.path.com/resources?limit=5):
{
"_links": {
"self": { "href": "/resources?limit=5&page=1" },
"last": { "href": "/resources?limit=5&page=7" },
"next": { "href": "/resources?limit=5&page=2" }
},
"_embedded": {
"records": [
{ resource 100 },
{ resource 99 },
{ resource 98 },
{ resource 97 },
{ resource 96 }
]
}
}
Now my problem is a scenario like this:
1- I GET /resources with above contents.
2- After that, something is added to the resources collection (say another device adds a new resource for this account). So now I have 101 resources.
3- I GET /resources?limit=5&page=2 as the initial response suggests will contain the next page of my results. The response would be like this:
{
"_links": {
"self": { "href": "/history?page=2&limit=5" },
"last": { "href": "/history?page=7&limit=5" },
"next": { "href": "/history?page=3&limit=5" }
},
"_embedded": {
"records": [
{ resource 96 },
{ resource 95 },
{ resource 94 },
{ resource 93 },
{ resource 92 }
]
}
}
As you can see resource 96 is repeated in both pages (Or similar problem may happen if a resource gets deleted in step 2, in that case one resource will be lost).
Since I want to use this in a mobile app and in one list, I have to append the resources of each API call to the one before it so I can have a complete list. But this is troubling. Please let me know if you have a suggestion. Thank you in advance.
P.S: I have considered timestamp like query strings instead of cursor based pagination, but that will make problems somewhere else for me. (let me know if you need more info about that.)
We just implemented something similar to this for a mobile app via a REST API. The mobile app passed an additional query parameter which represents a timestamp at which elements in the page should be "frozen".
So your first request would look something like GET /resources?limit=5&page=1&from=2015-01-25T05:10:31.000Z and then the second page request (some time later) would increment the page count but keep the same timestamp: GET /resources?limit=5&page=2&from=2015-01-25T05:10:31.000Z
This also gives the mobile app control if it wants to differentiate a "soft" page (preserving the timestamp of the request of page 1) from a "hard refresh" page (resetting the timestamp to the current time).
Why not just maintain a set of seen resources?
Then when you process each response you can check whether the resource is already being presented.