Apostrophe is great for building websites, but many projects these days just need a "headless" CMS: an easy way to create new content types by defining schemas and immediately have a friendly interface for managing them on the back end... and REST APIs on the front end for React, React Native and other frontend frameworks to talk to.
Just as often, projects call for a mix of the two: Apostrophe as a CMS for the pages of the site, with React-style apps "mixed in" on certain pages.
The apostrophe-headless
module provides REST APIs for content types created with Apostrophe's pieces feature. With this module, you might choose to just click "Page Settings" and lock down the "home page" of your site to "logged in users only," then use Apostrophe as a pure headless CMS... or you might mix and match. It's up to you.
We'll start out by talking about pieces, because they map so well to REST concepts. But
apostrophe-headless
also supports working with pages. We recommend you read about pieces first to figure out the basics, especially authentication.
Let's assume you have a module called products
that extends apostrophe-pieces
as described in our reusable content with pieces tutorial. Now you want a REST API so your app can easily get information about pieces.
npm install apostrophe-headless
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {},
'products': {
// Usually you'll put most of this in lib/products/index.js
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'product',
// etc...
restApi: true
}
}
You can also pass options for the REST API:
'products': {
// etc...
restApi: {
// max 50 pieces per API result (the default)
maxPerPage: 50,
// Allow the public API to invoke additional
// cursor filters. Note that most schema
// fields have a cursor filter available
safeFilters: [ 'slug' ],
// Restrict GET routes to users with correct permission (false by default)
getRequiresEditPermission: true
}
}
}
Setting
maxPerPage
high can have performance impacts. Consider designing your app with pagination or infinite scroll in mind rather than fetching thousands of pieces the user will not actually look at.
All of the documentation below discusses the
products
example above. Of course you may also configure therestApi
option for other modules that extend pieces.
When used in the presence of the apostrophe-workflow
, this module currently only supports GET requests. When making GET requests, you must specify the locale name of interest using the _workflowLocale
query parameter, otherwise you will get results for the default locale only.
Note that this is not an issue if the document type in question is excluded from workflow via excludeTypes
.
Now your app can access:
/api/v1/products
To get the first page of products (50 per page, unless maxPerPage
is adjusted as shown above). The response is JSON. See the results
property for an array of products included in the first page, and the pages
property for the total number of pages.
If you want to fetch a second page of products:
/api/v1/products?page=2
To avoid performance issues we do not send more than 50 products per API call. Your app should make additional queries as needed.
Here are some examples:
/api/v1/products?search=cheese
/api/v1/products?autocomplete=che
There's much more. You can use any s filter that offers a sanitize
method via the query string. It's not hard to add custom filters if you need to, but keep in mind that most schema field types have built-in filter support.
To call most filters from the public API, you will need to use the safeFilters
option to declare these filters "safe.". Rather than just restApi: true
, write:
'my-module': {
restApi: {
// We're assuming here that you have added fields
// called 'color' and 'brand' in your schema
safeFilters: [ 'slug', 'color', 'brand' ]
}
}
You may filter
joinByOne
andjoinByArray
fields, as long as they are listed insafeFilters
. When doing so pass the_id
property. Alternatively, leave the leading_
off the field name and pass theslug
property.
You can restrict what fields to send by adding api: false
to a specific schema field. If only users with editing permissions for the doc should see a specific field, you can pass the option api: 'editPermissionRequired'
.
{
name: 'specificField',
label: 'Specific Field',
type: 'string',
api: false
}
You can also require only specific fields in the GET request by adding the query filters includeFields
and excludeFields
.
Examples:
/api/v1/products?includeFields=type,slug,name
// response example
[
{
_id: 'whatever_id',
type: 'product',
slug: 'product-key-product'
}
]
The response will contain only _id
, type
, slug
and (if present) name
.
/api/v1/products?excludeFields=type,slug,name
// response example
[
{
_id: 'whatever_id',
title: 'Product',
body: { ... }
}
]
The response will contain everything except type
, slug
and name
.
It is useless to use both
includeFields
andexcludeFields
in the same query, asincludeFields
has priority overexcludeFields
. This is due to the way MongoDB projections work.
If there is any conflict between the api
schema field option above and the includeFields
option, the api
schema field option takes priority.
In addition to fetching actual pieces, you can obtain information about the distinct tags that may exist on those pieces, as well as information about the distinct objects that are joined to them.
This is useful to populate your filters. For instance, to allow the user to filter the results by tag without prefetching every result in the database to scan for tags, you must know what tags exist.
To add information about distinct tags to the response, first configure your module to allow it:
// in lib/modules/products/index.js
'products': {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'product',
restApi: {
safeDistinct: [ 'tags' ]
}
}
Without
safeDistinct
, developers would be able to cause a denial of service by requesting all distinct values at once for fields like_id
that are always different.
Now, you may access URLs like this:
/api/v1/products?distinct=tags
The response will look like:
{
results: [ ... pieces here ],
distinct: {
tags: [
{
label: 'Free',
value: 'Free'
},
{
label: 'Paid',
value: 'Paid'
}
]
}
}
Now we can display the labels to our users, and if they pick one, send back the value in the tags
query parameter:
/api/v1/products?tags=Paid
Since the distinct values are intended for use as filters, use of safeDistinct
implies safeFilter
as well. You don't have to specify both for the same filter.
You can pass multiple values for
tags
, with or without the familiar[]
, syntax, for example:tags[]=one&tags[]=two
You'll get results that include at least one of the tags.
Now let's assume there is a joinByOne
schema field called _specialist
that joins our product
piece with a specialist
piece. We can fetch distinct values here too. In this case, the value
property will be the _id
:
// in lib/modules/products/index.js
'products': {
name: 'product',
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
addFields: [
{
type: 'joinByOne',
name: '_specialist'
}
],
restApi: {
safeDistinct: [ '_specialist' ]
}
}
Then we can access:
/api/v1/products?distinct=_specialist
The response will look like:
{
results: [ ... pieces here ],
distinct: {
_specialist: [
{
label: 'Jane Doe',
value: '_cyyyy'
},
{
label: 'Joe Smith',
value: '_czzzz'
}
]
}
}
Once again we can display the labels to our users, and if they pick one, send back the value in the _specialist
query parameter:
/api/v1/products?_specialist=_cyyyy
We send the value, NOT the label. Again, you can send more than one by passing more than one
_specialist
query parameter. You'll get results that include at least one of the specialists.
Want to show the user how many items are tagged Free
as part of your filter interface? You can do that by using distinct-counts
in place of distinct
. Keep in mind that the answer will still be in the distinct
object; however, each choice will now have a count
property in addition to label
and value
.
Example request:
/api/v1/products?distinct-counts=tags
Example response:
{
results: [ ... pieces here ],
distinct: {
tags: [
{
label: 'Free',
value: 'Free',
count: 5
},
... More tags here
]
}
}
Yes, this is supported. Just use comma-separated field names when passing distinct
or counts
in your URL.
For example, you might make this request:
/api/v1/products?distinct=_specialist,tags
In which case the distinct
property of the response will have both _specialist
and tags
subproperties.
Make sure both _specialist
and tags
are configured as safeDistinct
:
// in lib/modules/products/index.js
'products': {
name: 'product',
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
addFields: [
{
type: 'joinByOne',
name: '_specialist'
}
],
restApi: {
safeDistinct: [ '_specialist', 'tags' ]
}
}
If you are accessing the API as a user who can edit this piece type, you can use all cursor filters intended for web use, otherwise only the filters marked safeFor: 'public'
.
You can also retrieve one product via its _id
property:
/api/v1/products/cxxxxxxx
The response is a single JSON object containing the product.
Even though you are fetching just one product, you can still invoke filters via the query string. If you are carrying out this request with the privileges of an admin user, you might want to add ?published=any
to gain access to an unpublished product.
These operations follow the usual REST patterns. But first, we need to talk about permissions.
This is simple: if the user is not logged in, they will be able to GET
public, published content, and that's all.
For many apps, that's fine. You're using Apostrophe's admin bar to create the content anyway.
Your content editors log into a site that's just for content creation, and your app users pull content from it via REST APIs. Great! You're done here.
But for those who need to create and manage content via REST too... read on!
If you're building a React app or similar that is part of a webpage delivered by your Apostrophe site, and the right user is already logged into the site, then the APIs will automatically "see" the user and run with the right permissions. However, see the note that follows re: CSRF protection.
If this doesn't sound relevant to your project, skip ahead to learn how to use API keys and bearer tokens instead. We've got your back, headless horseman.
If an API request comes from an Apostrophe user who logged in conventionally via the website, and not via the REST login APIs below, then Apostrophe will check for CSRF (Cross-Site Request Forgery) attacks.
If your API request is being sent by jQuery as provided by Apostrophe, you're good to go: Apostrophe automatically adds the necessary header.
If your API request is sent via fetch
or another alternative to jQuery, you'll need to set the X-XSRF-TOKEN
HTTP header to the current value of window.apos.csrfCookieName
. This ensures the request didn't come from a sneaky form on a third-party website.
It's also possible to add a specific CORS configuration for headless routes. Note that this does not secure your routes against the use of scripts, curl
, etc. It only prevents well-behaved browsers like Chrome from making unwanted cross-site requests.
See available options here
'apostrophe-headless': {
cors: {
// CORS options
}
},
By default, the POST
, DELETE
and PUT
APIs are available to logged-in users of the site. This is quite useful if you want to provide some editing features in a React or similar app that is part of your Apostrophe site.
But for a standalone app that uses Apostrophe as a headless backend, and isn't part of your Apostrophe site in any other way, logging in via Apostrophe's interface might not be an option.
For such cases, you can log in via REST and obtain a "bearer token" to be sent with requests. Or, you can use a hardcoded API key with total admin access. We'll look at API keys first, to help you get started. Then we'll look at bearer tokens.
It's easy to configure API keys to have full admin access to all content for which the REST API has been activated:
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {
apiKeys: [ 'example-i-sure-hope-you-changed-this' ]
},
products: {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'product',
restApi: true
},
locations: {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'location',
restApi: true
}
}
You can also configure api keys for a single module:
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {
// This option MUST EXIST to allow api keys at all. If you
// do not want any global api keys, leave it empty
apiKeys: []
},
products: {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'product',
restApi: true,
apiKeys: [ 'i-only-grant-access-to-this-one-module' ]
},
locations: {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'location',
restApi: true
}
}
Either way, the api key is allowed to create attachments (see Images, files and attachments in REST).
Now you can pass the API key in either of two ways when inserting a product or making a similar request:
- Just add an
apikey
property to the query string. This goes in the query string regardless of the request method.
Example:
POST /api/v1/products?apikey=example-api-key
The body of the POST may be a JSON body or use the traditional url encoding, as described below; the important thing is that the apikey is separate, in the query string, as shown here.
- Pass an
Authorization
header as part of your HTTP request:
Authorization: ApiKey your-api-key-goes-here
Always secure sites that accept API keys with HTTPS. You should never send an API key over "plain HTTP." Of course, browsers are starting to deprecate sites that don't accept HTTPS anyway!
API keys are useful for hardcoded situations where there is no way an untrusted user could ever see them. For instance, it's fine to use an API key for back-end communication between two servers.
However, you should never use api keys in the code of a mobile app, browser-based web app, JavaScript in the browser of any kind or other situation where code might be viewed as source, decompiled, etc. In these situations, you must use bearer tokens, which are specific to a user.
Bearer tokens are a way to let users log in even though they never see an Apostrophe-powered website. They allow you to implement your own login mechanism in your mobile app.
Using bearer tokens only makes sense if you are using Apostrophe as your authentication system. If you are using
apostrophe-passport
to connect Apostrophe to google login, Twitter login, etc., you'll need to log users in via the Apostrophe site and then deliver your app via a stripped-down Apostrophe "home page" on that site. See the notes above re: working smoothly with our CSRF protection in this configuration.
- Turn on support for bearer tokens:
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {
bearerTokens: true
}
}
By default bearer tokens last 2 weeks, which is very secure but can be frustrating for casual apps that don't contain sensitive data. Here's how to set the bearer token lifetime:
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {
bearerTokens: {
// 4 weeks, in seconds
lifetime: 86400 * 7 * 4
}
}
}
- Send a
POST
request to:
/api/v1/login
With username
and password
properties in the body.
-
On success, you will receive a JSON object with a single property:
bearer
. -
For all of the REST API calls that follow, pass that value as the
Authorization
header, preceded byBearer
and a space:
Bearer nnnn
Where nnnn
should be replaced with the value of the bearer
property you received.
There is no need to pass the XSRF header when using a valid bearer token because bearer tokens are never part of an Apostrophe session.
-
If you receive a
401 Unauthorized
response to a later API request, consider making anotherlogin
call to obtain a new bearer token. The expiration of bearer tokens depends on theexpires
setting as shown earlier. -
If the user logs out of your app, send a POST request as follows:
/api/v1/logout
With the appropriate Bearer
heading as for any other request. That bearer token will be invalidated.
Always secure sites that accept bearer tokens with HTTPS. Of course, browsers are starting to deprecate sites that don't accept HTTPS anyway!
If you submit an invalid or outdated bearer token for any request, you will receive a
401
HTTP status, and a JSON object with anerror
property set to'bearer token invalid'
. This is your cue to ask the user to log in again and then retry the request.
You can find an apostrophe-headless:beforeLogin
promise event which is emitted with (req) before a login attempt is evaluated.
You can insert a product via a POST request. You should POST to:
/api/v1/products
The body of your POST should contain all of the schema fields you wish to set.
You may use either traditional URL-style encoding or a JSON body. However if you are working with Apostrophe areas you must use a JSON body (see below).
On success you will receive a 200 status code and a JSON object containing the new product.
To update a product completely, sending all the data again, make a PUT request. Send it to:
/api/v1/products/cxxxxxxx
Where cxxxxxxx
is the _id
property of the existing product you wish to update.
On success you will receive a 200 status code and the updated JSON object representing the product.
You may use either traditional URL-style encoding or a JSON body. However if you are working with Apostrophe areas you must use a JSON body (see below).
If you want to update just SOME of the properties, without the risk that some of your other data is incomplete or out of date, use PATCH (see below).
To patch a product partially, sending only the changes, make a PATCH
request. Send it to:
/api/v1/products/cxxxxxxx
Where cxxxxxxx
is the _id
property of the existing product you wish to patch. Use the PATCH
HTTP method.
Include only the properties you wish to change. If a property is present in your request body, it will be updated. If it is present, but empty, it will be updated to an empty value, which may or may not be accepted depending on your schema.
On success you will receive a 200 status code and the updated JSON object representing the entire product.
You may use either traditional URL-style encoding or a JSON body. However if you are working with Apostrophe areas you must use a JSON body (see below).
You may also PATCH
an array property without re-sending the entire array. apostrophe-headless
supports several operators based on the MongoDB operators of the same name.
To use this feature, you MUST use a JSON body, not traditional URL-style encoding.
If your schema includes this field:
{
name: 'addresses',
type: 'array',
schema: [
{
name: 'street',
type: 'string'
}
]
}
Then you may carry out the following operations:
{
$push: {
addresses: {
street: '103 Test Lane'
}
}
}
{
$push: {
addresses: {
$each: [
{
street: '104 Test Lane'
},
{
street: '105 Test Lane'
},
{
street: '106 Test Lane'
},
]
}
}
}
{
$pullAll: {
addresses: [ addresses[0] ]
}
}
$pullAllById: {
addresses: [ addresses[0].id ]
}
"But where do I get
addresses[0].id
from?" Typically from an earlierGET
orPOST
operation.
Array operators can be used to manipulate
array
schema fields, the widget array of an area, or theidsField
of a join.
To delete a product, make a DELETE request. Send it to:
/api/v1/products/cxxxxxxx
Where cxxxxxxx
is the _id
property of the existing product you wish to delete.
The response will be an appropriate HTTP status code.
Given how powerful they are, areas and widgets in Apostrophe are surprisingly easy to work with via the REST API.
Just bear these facts in mind:
- Singletons are just areas restricted to one widget of a specified type when edited via the website. There's no difference in the database, and none in your API calls. So everything you read below applies to them too.
- An area is just a property of the piece. It is an object with a
type
property equal toarea
, and anitems
array containing the widgets that make up the area. - Each widget in the area must have a unique
id
property (we recommend that you use thecuid
npm module like we do), and atype
property set to the name of the widget. That is, if it comes from thepeople-widgets
module, thetype
property will just bepeople
. - Other properties are specific to each widget type, based on its schema. It's often helpful to use the MongoDB shell to investigate a few examples in your site's database.
- Rich text widgets contain markup in a
content
property. - Array schema fields have
type: "array"
and anitems
array containing their content. Each item must have a uniqueid
property. - You must fully specify your areas and singletons in the schema of your piece type or page type, including passing all the options you would otherwise pass in a template. Since templates are not in play there would otherwise be no validation of appropriate widget types.
Here's an example of a simple area containing a standard apostrophe-rich-text
widget, a "nav" widget specific to a particular site which contains an array
schema field, and a standard apostrophe-images
widget:
body: {
type: 'area',
items: [
{
id: 'cxxxxx1',
type: 'apostrophe-rich-text',
content: '<h4>Subheading</h4><p>Here is some text.</p>'
},
{
id: 'cxxxxx2',
type: 'nav',
links: {
type: 'array',
items: [
{
id: 'cxxxxx3',
url: 'http://cnn.com',
label: 'CNN'
},
{
id: 'cxxxxx4',
url: 'http://google.com',
label: 'Google'
},
]
}
},
{
id: 'cxxxxx5',
type: 'apostrophe-images',
by: 'id',
pieceIds: [ 'imageid1', 'imageid2' ]
}
]
}
We'll see how pieceIds
works in the apostrophe-images
widget in a moment when we discuss images, files and attachments in REST.
When retrieving pieces, joined content is included, via the join field's name, as you might expect.
When inserting or updating pieces, it is possible to set a join. You will need to set the idField
(for joinByOne
) or idsField
(for joinByArray
) corresponding to the join. If you did not explicitly configure these when configuring the join in your schema, they are based on the name of the join:
_stores
-> storeIds
_owner
-> ownerId
etc. Set that property to the appropriate ID or array of IDs.
It is possible to attach files to a new or updated piece. To do so you will first need to understand how attachments work in Apostrophe. In most cases, you'll also need understand how apostrophe-images
and apostrophe-files
widgets work.
attachment
is a special schema field type. Ideally, files attached to a piece would live right inside it. However since files are large and it does not make sense to resend the same file every time you update a piece, you will instead need to first send Apostrophe the file and obtain an attachment object. You can then use that attachment object as the value of any field of type attachment
. Think of the attachment as a "pointer" to the real file on disk.
To send an attachment, POST a file (using the multipart/form-data
encoding) to the following URL:
/api/v1/attachments
Send the actual file as the file
field in your form submission.
The user POSTing the attachments must have the
edit-attachment
permission. POST is currently the only method provided for attachments.
On success, you will receive a JSON object containing properties similar to these:
{
_id: 'attachmentidnnnn',
width: 500,
height: 400,
group: 'images',
extension: 'jpg',
name: 'cleaned-up-name-without-extension'
}
The
content-type
of the response will betext/plain
, for backwards compatibility with certain browsers, but it will contain valid JSON.
You can now send this object as the value of any attachment
schema field when communicating with the REST API.
If you're doing most of your editing through the REST API, or your content types don't really need a shared image library from which images can be chosen by the end user, you might just add a schema field like this in your module:
addFields: [
{
type: 'attachment',
name: 'snapshot',
// Accepts only images. Can also specify `office`
// to accept workplace document formats
groups: [ 'images' ]
}
]
Then you can simply pass the file
object you received from the attachments API as the snapshot
property when POSTing a product.
Later, when you
GET
this product from the API, you'll note that the attachment has a._urls
property with versions of various sizes for your use. To make those URLs absolute, set thebaseUrl
option for your site inapp.js
. This is a top-level option, likeshortName
. It does not belong to a specific module. It should be set to the URL of your site, without any path part. In production, that might look likehttp://example.com
while in development, it might look like:http://localhost:3000
Sometimes, you'll want to introduce an image to the shared media library of Apostrophe and reference it via an images widget. Here's how to do that.
Often you'll use a widget of type apostrophe-images
or apostrophe-files
to display a slideshow of images, or a download button for a file. This allows the user to choose them from a shared media library. If you're doing at least some of your editing through Apostrophe then this is an attractive option.
So if you want to create these widgets with the REST API, you'll need to first use the technique above to create an attachment.
Here we're assuming a
singleton
field calledthumbnail
containing anapostrophe-images
widget is part of your schema forprojects
. In the database, both areas and singletons are simply stored as areas. The only difference is that the end user can't put more than one widget in a singleton via the editor.
So, make sure you turn on the REST API for apostrophe-images
too. Images are pieces in their own right:
// in app.js
modules: {
'apostrophe-images': {
restApi: true
},
// etc
}
Note that the user POSTing these images must have
edit
permission for both images and products.
Now, POST to /api/v1/apostrophe-images
. You'll need to supply at least title
, slug
, and attachment
. The attachment
field must contain the file
object you received from the attachment upload API, above.
Just set
attachment
toresult
, whereresult
is the JSON object you got back from the upload API.
You will receive a JSON object in response. Using the _id
property, you can create a project that includes that file in an images widget, in an area called thumbnail
. POST an object like this to /api/v1/projects
to create a project with a thumbnail:
{
title: 'My Project',
slug: 'my-project',
thumbnail: {
type: 'area',
items: [
{
type: 'apostrophe-images',
by: 'id',
pieceIds: [ yourImageId ]
}
]
}
}
Set yourImageId
to the _id
of the object you received when you POSTed to /api/v1/apostrophe-images
.
The examples above all concern pieces. Pieces are the most natural candidate for a REST API, but you can also use apostrophe-headless
to work with pages:
modules: {
'apostrophe-headless': {},
'apostrophe-pages': {
restApi: true
}
}
Now your app can access:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages
To get information about the home page and its children. The response is a single JSON object with slug
, path
, title
, type
, _url
and other properties describing the home page, similar to the way pieces are returned (see the "products" examples above). In addition, information about children of the home page is returned.
Basic information about the top-level children of the home page (aka the "tabs" of your site) is available in the _children
property of the returned object. This property is an array. Each element has, at a minimum, _id
, title
, type
and slug
properties.
By default, the _children
property always exists. It may be empty. You can disable this property for a smaller response by including the query parameter, children=false
.
Armed with the _id
, you can obtain detailed information about a page by making a separate API request:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages/ID_GOES_HERE
A page returned in this way will in turn offer its own _children
property.
This response will include schema fields, areas, etc. in the same detail as it would when requesting a piece.
Pages also have an _ancestors
array. This functions similarly to the _children
array. The first entry is the home page, and the last entry is the immediate parent of the page in question.
By default, the _ancestors
property also always exists. It may be empty. You can disable _ancestors
for a smaller response by including the query parameter, ancestors=false
.
It is possible to obtain summary information about the entire page tree with a single request. Since the unrestricted use of this feature could have a performance impact, This feature requires a bearer token or API key.
If a bearer token is used, the returned tree will not contain pages to which the user does not have edit access, except for ancestors of pages to which the user does have edit access, which is necessary to accurately present the tree.
To fetch the entire tree, add all=1
to your query:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages?all=1
The response will be a single object representing the home page, with at least title
, slug
, tags
, _url
and _id
properties, and a _children
array. For speed, the response will not be as detailed as in a regular request to /api/v1/apostrophe-pages
.
The pages in the _children
array, in turn, will feature their own _children
arrays where needed, with a similarly limited level of detail.
It is possible to obtain a flat version of this data by adding ?flat=1
to the URL. In this case, a flat JSON array is returned. The array is sorted by depth, then by rank. Pages may still have a _children
array, however it will only contain the _id
s of the child pages, not the pages themselves. In this way you can still reconstruct the tree if you wish.
All write operations to pages are governed by permissions. See "invoking APIs when logged out," above. You will need to use an API key or bearer token.
It is possible to insert a page via the API:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages
The body of your POST should contain all of the schema fields you wish to set, and in addition it must contain a _parentId
property (note the underscore). The page will be added as the last child of the specified parent page.
The use of a JSON body, rather than traditional URL encoding, is strongly recommended and if you are working with areas it is mandatory.
On success you will receive a 200 status code and a JSON object containing the new page.
If you wish to insert or update areas, they must be present in the schema of the page type.
To update a product, make a PUT request. Send it to:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages/cxxxxxxx
Where cxxxxxxx
is the _id
property of the existing page you wish to update.
On success you will receive a 200 status code and the updated JSON object representing the product.
You may use either traditional URL-style encoding or a JSON body. However if you are working with Apostrophe areas you must use a JSON body (see below).
You may not move a page in the page tree via this method. The path
, level
and rank
properties cannot be modified by this method. To move a page in the page tree, see "moving a page in the page tree," below.
If you wish to insert or update areas, they must be present in the schema of the page type.
To delete a page, make a DELETE request. Send it to:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages/cxxxxxxx
Where cxxxxxxx
is the _id
property of the existing page you wish to delete.
The response will be an appropriate HTTP status code.
For consistency with the rest of Apostrophe, a deleted page is moved to the trash.
To move a page in the page tree, make a POST request to the following URL:
/api/v1/apostrophe-pages/ID-OF-PAGE/move
Your POST body must contain the following fields:
targetId
must be the _id of another page.position
must bebefore
,after
orinside
. The page whose_id
appears in the URL is movedbefore
,after
orinside
the page specified bytargetId
. Ifinside
is specified, the page becomes the first child oftargetId
.
The home page and other "parked" pages may not be moved.
Ordinarily, the API simply returns the content of the page or piece as a JSON data structure. Sometimes, you'd like rendered markup.
If you just want the full page representation of a page or piece, rendered as Apostrophe would normally do it, use the API to fetch information about that page or piece, and then separately request the URL in its ._url
property.
If you make that request from a browser, it will be detected as an AJAX (“xhr”) request, and the outermost markup of the page (styles, script tags, etc.) will not be returned, just the portion inside the div with the
apos-refreshable
class. You can also get this effect in a non-browser request by setting theapos_refresh=1
query parameter. Otherwise the page is fully rendered, including assets.
If you wish to render just a fragment of HTML, read on to see how you can create your own templates specifically for use with the API. This is the best approach when Apostrophe content is just one part of the page or experience you are building.
Let's return to the "products" example and create a Nunjucks template to be rendered by the API:
{# In lib/modules/products/views/api/fragment.html #}
{# Let's output the title of the piece #}
<h4>{{ data.piece.title }}</h4>
{# Now let's render an area as Apostrophe normally would #}
{{ apos.area(data.piece, 'body') }}
{# On second thought, let's just render the first image in that area directly #}
{% set image = apos.images.first(data.piece, 'body') %}
{% if image %}
<img src="{{ apos.attachments.url(image, { size: 'one-half' }) }} " />
{% endif %}
Now let's configure the products
module to allow rendering of the api/fragment.html
template:
// in app.js, building on your configuration of products earlier
'products': {
extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
name: 'product',
// etc...
restApi: true,
apiTemplates: [ 'fragment' ]
}
You will now receive this fragment of HTML as part of the render
property of a product retrieved from the API, as long as you ask for it as part of your GET
REST API request:
/api/v1/products/ID-OF-PRODUCT-GOES-HERE?render=fragment
Notice we have added render=fragment
to the query string, to specifically ask that api/fragment.html
be rendered.
Now the response will look like:
{
_id: "ID-OF-PRODUCT-GOES-HERE",
title: "Cool Product",
rendered: {
fragment: "<h4>Cool Product</h4>... more markup ..."
}
}
You can render more than one, by passing more than one value for
render
. The resulting URL will look like this:?render[]=fragment&render[]=other
If you're using
qs
or another good query string builder, you won't have to worry about building that yourself. Just pass an array of template names asrender
.