| = Gerrit Code Review - REST API |
| |
| Gerrit Code Review comes with a REST like API available over HTTP. |
| The API is suitable for automated tools to build upon, as well as |
| supporting some ad-hoc scripting use cases. |
| |
| See also: link:dev-rest-api.html[REST API Developers' Notes]. |
| |
| == Endpoints |
| link:rest-api-access.html[/access/]:: |
| Access Right related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-accounts.html[/accounts/]:: |
| Account related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-changes.html[/changes/]:: |
| Change related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-config.html[/config/]:: |
| Config related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-groups.html[/groups/]:: |
| Group related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-plugins.html[/plugins/]:: |
| Plugin related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-projects.html[/projects/]:: |
| Project related REST endpoints |
| link:rest-api-documentation.html[/Documentation/]:: |
| Documentation related REST endpoints |
| |
| == Protocol Details |
| |
| [[authentication]] |
| === Authentication |
| By default all REST endpoints assume anonymous access and filter |
| results to correspond to what anonymous users can read (which may |
| be nothing at all). |
| |
| Users (and programs) can authenticate with HTTP passwords by prefixing |
| the endpoint URL with `/a/`. For example to authenticate to |
| `/projects/`, request the URL `/a/projects/`. Gerrit will use HTTP basic |
| authentication with the HTTP password from the user's account settings |
| page. This form of authentication bypasses the need for XSRF tokens. |
| |
| An authorization cookie may be presented in the request URL inside the |
| `access_token` query parameter. XSRF tokens are not required when a |
| valid `access_token` is used in the URL. |
| |
| [[cors]] |
| === CORS |
| |
| Cross-site scripting may be supported if the administrator has configured |
| link:config-gerrit.html#site.allowOriginRegex[site.allowOriginRegex]. |
| |
| Approved web applications running from an allowed origin can rely on |
| CORS preflight to authorize requests requiring cookie based |
| authentication, or mutations (POST, PUT, DELETE). Mutations require a |
| valid XSRF token in the `X-Gerrit-Auth` request header. |
| |
| Alternatively applications can use `access_token` in the URL (see |
| above) to authorize requests. Mutations sent as POST with a request |
| content type of `text/plain` can skip CORS preflight. Gerrit accepts |
| additional query parameters `$m` to override the correct method (PUT, |
| POST, DELETE) and `$ct` to specify the actual content type, such as |
| `application/json; charset=UTF-8`. Example: |
| |
| ---- |
| POST /changes/42/topic?$m=PUT&$ct=application/json%3B%20charset%3DUTF-8&access_token=secret HTTP/1.1 |
| Content-Type: text/plain |
| Content-Length: 23 |
| |
| {"topic": "new-topic"} |
| ---- |
| |
| [[preconditions]] |
| === Preconditions |
| Clients can request PUT to create a new resource and not overwrite |
| an existing one by adding `If-None-Match: *` to the request HTTP |
| headers. If the named resource already exists the server will respond |
| with HTTP 412 Precondition Failed. |
| |
| [[output]] |
| === Output Format |
| JSON responses are encoded using UTF-8 and use content type |
| `application/json`. |
| |
| By default most APIs return pretty-printed JSON, which uses extra |
| whitespace to make the output more readable for humans. |
| |
| Compact JSON can be requested by setting the `pp=0` query parameter, |
| or by setting the `Accept` HTTP request header to include `application/json`: |
| |
| ---- |
| GET /projects/ HTTP/1.0 |
| Accept: application/json |
| ---- |
| |
| Producing (and parsing) the non-pretty compact format is more efficient, |
| so tools should request it whenever possible. |
| |
| To prevent against Cross Site Script Inclusion (XSSI) attacks, the JSON |
| response body starts with a magic prefix line that must be stripped before |
| feeding the rest of the response body to a JSON parser: |
| |
| ---- |
| )]}' |
| [ ... valid JSON ... ] |
| ---- |
| |
| Responses will be gzip compressed by the server if the HTTP |
| `Accept-Encoding` request header is set to `gzip`. This may |
| save on network transfer time for larger responses. |
| |
| [[input]] |
| === Input Format |
| Unknown JSON parameters will simply be ignored by Gerrit without causing |
| an exception. This also applies to case-sensitive parameters, such as |
| map keys. |
| |
| [[timestamp]] |
| === Timestamp |
| Timestamps are given in UTC and have the format |
| "'yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss.fffffffff'" where "'ffffffffff'" represents |
| nanoseconds. |
| |
| [[encoding]] |
| === Encoding |
| All IDs that appear in the URL of a REST call (e.g. project name, group name) |
| must be URL encoded. |
| |
| [[response-codes]] |
| === Response Codes |
| The Gerrit REST endpoints use HTTP status codes as described |
| in the link:http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html[ |
| HTTP specification]. |
| |
| In most cases, the response body of an error response will be a |
| plaintext, human-readable error message. |
| |
| Here are examples that show how HTTP status codes are used in the |
| context of the Gerrit REST API. |
| |
| ==== 400 Bad Request |
| "`400 Bad Request`" is returned if the request is not understood by the |
| server due to malformed syntax. |
| |
| E.g. "`400 Bad Request`" is returned if JSON input is expected but the |
| 'Content-Type' of the request is not 'application/json' or the request |
| body doesn't contain valid JSON. |
| |
| "`400 Bad Request`" is also returned if required input fields are not set or |
| if options are set which cannot be used together. |
| |
| ==== 403 Forbidden |
| "`403 Forbidden`" is returned if the operation is not allowed because the |
| calling user does not have sufficient permissions. |
| |
| E.g. some REST endpoints require that the calling user has certain |
| link:access-control.html#global_capabilities[global capabilities] |
| assigned. |
| |
| "`403 Forbidden`" is also returned if `self` is used as account ID and the |
| REST call was done without authentication. |
| |
| ==== 404 Not Found |
| "`404 Not Found`" is returned if the resource that is specified by the |
| URL is not found or is not visible to the calling user. A resource |
| cannot be found if the URL contains a non-existing ID or view. |
| |
| ==== 405 Method Not Allowed |
| "`405 Method Not Allowed`" is returned if the resource exists but doesn't |
| support the operation. |
| |
| E.g. some of the `/groups/` endpoints are only supported for Gerrit |
| internal groups; if they are invoked for an external group the response |
| is "`405 Method Not Allowed`". |
| |
| ==== 409 Conflict |
| "`409 Conflict`" is returned if the request cannot be completed because the |
| current state of the resource doesn't allow the operation. |
| |
| E.g. if you try to submit a change that is abandoned, this fails with |
| "`409 Conflict`" because the state of the change doesn't allow the submit |
| operation. |
| |
| "`409 Conflict`" is also returned if you try to create a resource but the |
| name is already occupied by an existing resource. |
| |
| ==== 412 Precondition Failed |
| "`412 Precondition Failed`" is returned if a precondition from the request |
| header fields is not fulfilled, as described in the link:#preconditions[ |
| Preconditions] section. |
| |
| ==== 422 Unprocessable Entity |
| "`422 Unprocessable Entity`" is returned if the ID of a resource that is |
| specified in the request body cannot be resolved. |
| |
| [[tracing]] |
| === Request Tracing |
| For each REST endpoint tracing can be enabled by setting the |
| `trace=<trace-id>` request parameter. It is recommended to use the ID |
| of the issue that is being investigated as trace ID. |
| |
| .Example Request |
| ---- |
| GET /changes/myProject~master~I8473b95934b5732ac55d26311a706c9c2bde9940/suggest_reviewers?trace=issue/123&q=J |
| ---- |
| |
| It is also possible to omit the trace ID and get a unique trace ID |
| generated. |
| |
| .Example Request |
| ---- |
| GET /changes/myProject~master~I8473b95934b5732ac55d26311a706c9c2bde9940/suggest_reviewers?trace&q=J |
| ---- |
| |
| Alternatively request tracing can also be enabled by setting the |
| `X-Gerrit-Trace` header: |
| |
| .Example Request |
| ---- |
| GET /changes/myProject~master~I8473b95934b5732ac55d26311a706c9c2bde9940/suggest_reviewers?q=J |
| X-Gerrit-Trace: issue/123 |
| ---- |
| |
| Enabling tracing results in additional logs with debug information that |
| are written to the `error_log`. All logs that correspond to the traced |
| request are associated with the trace ID. The trace ID is returned with |
| the REST response in the `X-Gerrit-Trace` header. |
| |
| .Example Response |
| ---- |
| HTTP/1.1 200 OK |
| Content-Disposition: attachment |
| Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8 |
| X-Gerrit-Trace: 1533885943749-8257c498 |
| |
| )]}' |
| ... <json> ... |
| ---- |
| |
| Given the trace ID an administrator can find the corresponding logs and |
| investigate issues more easily. |
| |
| GERRIT |
| ------ |
| Part of link:index.html[Gerrit Code Review] |
| |
| SEARCHBOX |
| --------- |