Demo using Java
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The rest demo script demonstrates authenticating a REST application, management and use of the authorization token, and creating, updating, discovering, and deleting supported Learn objects. For a more complete tutorial, check out this page to walkthrough building a Java command-line application.
Prerequisites
- You must [register a developer account and application](/rest-apis/learn/Getting Started/registry) in the Developer Portal
- You must [register your application](/rest-apis/learn/Getting Started/registry) in Learn
- You must also configure the script as outlined in the README for the project
This webapp allows you to:
- Authenticate
- Create, Read, and Update a Data Source
- Create, Read, and Update a Term
- Create, Read, and Update a Course
- Create, Read, and Update a User
- Create, Read, and Update a Membership
- Delete created objects in reverse order of create - membership, user, course, term, datasource.
All generated output is sent to the browser.
This is not meant to be a Java tutorial. It will not teach you to write code in Java. It will, however, give a Developer familiar with Java the knowledge necessary to build a Web Services integration.
Assumptions
This help topic assumes the Developer:
- is familiar with Java
- has Tomcat running somewhere the webapp can be installed
- has obtained a copy of the source code and built and deployed it to Tomcat in conjunction with the project README.md file.
- has a REST-enabled Learn instance.
Code Walkthrough
To build an integration with the Learn REST Web Services, regardless of the programming language of choice, can really be summed up in two steps:
- Use the Application Key and Secret to obtain an OAuth 2.0 access token, as described in the [Basic Authentication](/rest-apis/learn/Getting Started/basic-authentication) document.
- Call the appropriate REST endpoint with the appropriate data to perform the appropriate action.
Authorization and Authentication
The REST Services rely on OAuth 2.0 Bearer Tokens for authentication. A request is made to the token endpoint with a Basic Authorization header containing the base64-encoded key:secret string as its key. The token service returns a JSON object containing the Access Token, the Token Type, and the number of seconds until the token expires. The token is set to expire after one hour, and subsequent calls to retrieve the token will return the same token with an updated expiry time until such time that the token has expired. There is no refresh token and currently no revoke token method.
The java code handles this in bbdn.rest.Authorizer
:
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.add("Authorization", "Basic " + getHash());
headers.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_FORM_URLENCODED);
HttpEntity<String> request = new HttpEntity<String>("grant_type=client_credentials",headers);
ResponseEntity<Token> response = restTemplate.exchange(uri, HttpMethod.POST, request, Token.class);
Token token = response.getBody();
The JSON response is serialized into the Token object, and you may then retrieve those values from that object.
Calling Services
The individual service calls are handled by Java Classes in service specific
packages, that all implement the bbdn.rest.RestHandler
interface. The
interface is used to normalize each service handler to make additional service
implementation standardized as new endpoints are added.
RestHandler dictates that four methods must be implemented:
- String createObject(String access_token);
- String readObject(String access_token);
- String updateObject(String access_token);
- String deleteObject(String access_token);
Each of these methods creates the JSON body when appropriate and then calls
bbdn.rest.RestRequest
to generate the appropriate HTTP Request, ship it to
Learn, and return the JSON response as a String to be displayed in the browser
window.
This all happens with the following code:
public static String sendRequest(String sUri, HttpMethod method, String access_token, String body) {
try {
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
// Workaround for allowing unsuccessful HTTP Errors to still print to the screen
restTemplate.setErrorHandler(new DefaultResponseErrorHandler(){
protected boolean hasError(HttpStatus statusCode) {
return false;
}});
// Workaround to allow for PATCH requests
HttpComponentsClientHttpRequestFactory requestFactory = new HttpComponentsClientHttpRequestFactory();
restTemplate.setRequestFactory(requestFactory);
URI uri = null;
try {
uri = new URI(RestConstants.HOSTNAME + sUri);
} catch (URISyntaxException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.add("Authorization", "Bearer " + access_token);
headers.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON);
HttpEntity<String> request = new HttpEntity<String>(body, headers);
ResponseEntity<String> response = restTemplate.exchange(uri, method, request, String.class);
return (response.toString());
}
catch (Exception e) {
return(e.getMessage());
}
}
End points are generally defined as /learn/api/public/v1/<object type>/<objectId>
. Object ID can be either the pk1, like _1_1
, or as the
batchuid. This value should be prepended by externalId:, like
externalId:test101
.
For example, to retrieve a course by the pk1 _1_1
, you would call GET
/learn/api/public/v1/courses/_1_1. To retrieve by the batchuid test101
, you
would call GET /learn/api/public/v1/courses/externalId:test101.
Create is sent to Learn as a HTTP POST message with a JSON body that defines the object. The endpoint should omit the objectId, as this will be generated on creation.
Read is sent to Learn as a HTTP GET message with an empty body. The endpoint should include the objectId being retrieved.
Update is sent to Learn as a HTTP PATCH message with a JSON body that defines the object. The endpoint should include the objectId being updated.
Delete is sent to Learn as a HTTP DELETE message with empty body. The endpoint should include the objectId being deleted.
Datasources
Datasources are handled in bbdn.rest.datasources.DatasourceHandler
. As
illustrated above, this Class implements the RestHandler interface and exposes
four methods. It also includes a private method to create the JSON payload.
Create
@Override
public String createObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.DATASOURCE_PATH, HttpMethod.POST, access_token, getBody()));
}
Read
@Override
public String readObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.DATASOURCE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID, HttpMethod.GET, access_token, ""));
}
Update
@Override
public String updateObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.DATASOURCE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID, HttpMethod.PATCH, access_token, getBody()));
}
Delete
@Override
public String deleteObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.DATASOURCE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID, HttpMethod.DELETE, access_token, ""));
}
Create Body
private String getBody() {
ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();
JsonNode datasource = objMapper.createObjectNode();
((ObjectNode) datasource).put("externalId", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID);
((ObjectNode) datasource).put("description", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_DESCRIPTION);
String body = "";
try {
body = objMapper.writeValueAsString(datasource);
} catch (JsonProcessingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return(body);
}
Terms
Terms are handled in bbdn.rest.terms.TermHandler
. As illustrated above, this
Class implements the RestHandler interface and exposes four methods. It also
includes a private method to create the JSON payload. In this initial release,
we are omitting the datasource. This is because the externalId version of the
datasource is not accepted in JSON payloads at this time. We could create a
CONSTANT and set it to what we think it will be, but the ID isn't set until
the Datasource is created, so we don't know for sure what it will be.
Create
@Override
public String createObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.TERM_PATH, HttpMethod.POST, access_token, getBody()));
}
Read
@Override
public String readObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.TERM_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.TERM_ID, HttpMethod.GET, access_token, ""));
}
Update
@Override
public String updateObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.TERM_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.TERM_ID, HttpMethod.PATCH, access_token, getBody()));
}
Delete
@Override
public String deleteObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.TERM_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.TERM_ID, HttpMethod.DELETE, access_token, ""));
}
Create Body
private String getBody() {
ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectNode term = objMapper.createObjectNode();
term.put("externalId", RestConstants.TERM_ID);
//term.put("dataSourceId", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID);
term.put("name", RestConstants.TERM_NAME);
term.put("description", RestConstants.TERM_DISPLAY);
ObjectNode availability = term.putObject("availability");
availability.put("available", "Yes");
ObjectNode duration = availability.putObject("duration");
duration.put("type", "Continuous");
String body = "";
try {
body = objMapper.writeValueAsString(term);
} catch (JsonProcessingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return(body);
}
Courses
Course are handled in bbdn.rest.course.CourseHandler
. As illustrated above,
this Class implements the RestHandler interface and exposes four methods. It
also includes a private method to create the JSON payload. In this initial
release, we are omitting the datasource. This is because the externalId
version of the datasource is not accepted in JSON payloads at this time. We
could create a CONSTANT and set it to what we think it will be, but the ID
isn't set until the Datasource is created, so we don't know for sure what it
will be.
Create
@Override
public String createObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH, HttpMethod.POST, access_token, getBody()));
}
Read
@Override
public String readObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID, HttpMethod.GET, access_token, ""));
}
Update
@Override
public String updateObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID, HttpMethod.PATCH, access_token, getBody()));
}
Delete
@Override
public String deleteObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID, HttpMethod.DELETE, access_token, ""));
}
Create Body
private String getBody() {
ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectNode course = objMapper.createObjectNode();
course.put("externalId", RestConstants.COURSE_ID);
//course.put("dataSourceId", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID);
course.put("courseId", RestConstants.COURSE_ID);
course.put("name", RestConstants.COURSE_NAME);
course.put("description", RestConstants.COURSE_DESCRIPTION);
course.put("allowGuests", "true");
course.put("readOnly", "false");
course.put("termId", RestConstants.TERM_ID);
ObjectNode availability = course.putObject("availability");
availability.put("duration", "continuous");
String body = "";
try {
body = objMapper.writeValueAsString(course);
} catch (JsonProcessingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return(body);
}
Users
Users are handled in bbdn.rest.users.UserHandler
. As illustrated above, this
Class implements the RestHandler interface and exposes four methods. It also
includes a private method to create the JSON payload. In this initial release,
we are omitting the datasource. This is because the externalId version of the
datasource is not accepted in JSON payloads at this time. We could create a
CONSTANT and set it to what we think it will be, but the ID isn't set until
the Datasource is created, so we don't know for sure what it will be.
Create
@Override
public String createObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.USER_PATH, HttpMethod.POST, access_token, getBody()));
}
Read
@Override
public String readObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.USER_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.GET, access_token, ""));
}
Update
@Override
public String updateObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.USER_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.PATCH, access_token, getBody()));
}
Delete
@Override
public String deleteObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.USER_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.DELETE, access_token, ""));
}
Create Body
private String getBody() {
ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectNode user = objMapper.createObjectNode();
user.put("externalId", RestConstants.USER_ID);
//user.put("dataSourceId", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID);
user.put("userName", RestConstants.USER_NAME);
user.put("password", RestConstants.USER_PASS);
ObjectNode availability = user.putObject("availability");
availability.put("available", "Yes");
ObjectNode name = user.putObject("name");
name.put("given", RestConstants.USER_FIRST);
name.put("family", RestConstants.USER_LAST);
ObjectNode contact = user.putObject("contact");
contact.put("email", RestConstants.USER_EMAIL);
String body = "";
try {
body = objMapper.writeValueAsString(user);
} catch (JsonProcessingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return(body);
}
Memberships
Memberships are handled in bbdn.rest.memberships.MemberHandler
. As illustrated
above, this Class implements the RestHandler interface and exposes four
methods. It also includes a private method to create the JSON payload. In this
initial release, we are omitting the datasource. This is because the
externalId version of the datasource is not accepted in JSON payloads at this
time. We could create a CONSTANT and set it to what we think it will be, but
the ID isn't set until the Datasource is created, so we don't know for sure
what it will be. In addition, the endpoint for memberships is a bit different,
in that it is a sub-call to courses, so the endpoint would look like
/learn/api/public/v1/courses/<courseId>/users/<userId>
.
Create
@Override
public String createObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID + "/users/externalId:"+ RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.PUT, access_token, getBody()));
}
Read
@Override
public String readObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID + "/users/externalId:"+ RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.GET, access_token, ""));
}
Update
@Override
public String updateObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID + "/users/externalId:"+ RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.PATCH, access_token, getBody()));
}
Delete
@Override
public String deleteObject(String access_token) {
return(RestRequest.sendRequest(RestConstants.COURSE_PATH + "/externalId:" + RestConstants.COURSE_ID + "/users/externalId:"+ RestConstants.USER_ID, HttpMethod.DELETE, access_token, ""));
}
Create Body
private String getBody() {
ObjectMapper objMapper = new ObjectMapper();
ObjectNode membership = objMapper.createObjectNode();
//membership.put("dataSourceId", RestConstants.DATASOURCE_ID);
ObjectNode availability = membership.putObject("availability");
availability.put("available", "Yes");
membership.put("courseRoleId", "Instructor");
String body = "";
try {
body = objMapper.writeValueAsString(membership);
} catch (JsonProcessingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return(body);
}
Conclusion
All of the code snippets included in this document at included in a sample REST Demo Java Webapp application available on GitHub. There is a README.html included that talks more specifically about building and running the code. Feel free to review the code and run it against a test or development Learn instance to see how it works.