Introduction to PPM RESTful Web Services
This topic provides the general information of PPM RESTful web services.
Overview of PPM RESTful web services
Using the PPM-supported REST APIs, developers can retrieve and perform CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations on the related entities.
- For the REST APIs whose URIs are prefixed with
http(s)://server:port/itg/rest2/
, see Interactive REST API Help. -
For the REST APIs whose URIs are prefixed with
http(s)://server:port/itg/rest/
, see the following:
The Web Application Description Language (WADL) descriptor that lists all supported PPM RESTful Web services can be found at the following location:http(s)://server:port/itg/rest/service.
Configuration
Starting from PPM version 9.13, the following line is added to the websecurity.conf
file to enable RESTful web services:
/rest=com.kintana.core.web.servlet.AllAccessURLSecurity
Check and make sure whether the above line is already there. If not, simply copy and paste it to the websecurity.conf
file, which is located in the <
PPM_Home
>/conf
directory.
Authentication
All requests to the RESTful Web services interfaces (URLs) must be authenticated. PPM supports the following authentication types for RESTful Web services:
Authentication | Description |
---|---|
HTTP Basic Access Authentication |
When you use the HTTP Basic Access Authentication, an authorization HTTP header is sent along with the request, containing the base64-encoded username and password. For example:
For more information about HTTP Basic Access Authentication, see RFC 2617. |
HTTP Request Query String |
When you use the HTTP Request Query String, you must specify the username and password parameters in the URL. For example:
|
Lightweight Single Sign-on (LWSSO) | For details, see the Installation and Administration Guide. |
JSON Web Token (JWT) |
Only the RS256 algorithm is supported for signing JWT, which requires you to define a JWK provider. The HA256 algorithm is not supported. When you use the JWT, you should specify values for the following parameters:
|
API key authentication |
Obtain a secret key from PPM administrator and enter it in the following URL to authenticate:
For details about how to obtain a secret key, see Set up API key access. Upon successful authentication, the CSRF-X-TOKEN token is returned. If required, provide this token in the subsequent API calls. |
Caution:
-
HTTPS is preferred whenever you use RESTful Web services by Basic Access Authentication or Request Query String authentication in order to prevent username and password to be transmitted over the network.
-
Since Request Query String authentication requires your username and password as the parameters in the URL, your username and password will be logged in the log file if the web server is configured to log URLs. This will cause a security flaw.
Session management
If you make multiple REST calls to PPM and only pass the basic authentication information, a new PPM session will be created every time and the session will not be closed until it times out.
We recommend that you use either of the following to manage the REST session:
-
Keep track of the REST session once it is opened by retrieving the session cookie in the response, and re-submit it in subsequent calls to reuse the session instead of opening a new one. Once you do not need the session anymore, close it by calling
GET /itg/rest2/logout
. -
Pass the following header in every REST call:
Ephemeral: true
This will automatically close the session once the REST call completes. This is useful if you want to make many individual REST calls without any easy way to reuse opened sessions.
Messaging type
PPM supports the following two messaging types for RESTful Web services:
-
XML (default)
-
JSON
To enable JSON messaging type, you have to append the string alt=application/json
to the parameter list of the URL.
For example:
http://<instance_address>:<port>/itg/rest/dm
/requestTypes?username=admin&password=admin&
alt=application/json