Chapter 4. Entry Point
A user begins interacting with the API through a
GET
request on the entry point URI consisting of a host and base.
Example 4.1. Accessing the API Entry Point
If the host is
www.example.com
and the base is /api
, the entry point appears with the following request:
GET /api HTTP/1.1 Accept: application/xml Host: www.example.com Authorization: [base64 encoded credentials] HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/xml <api> <link rel="hosts" href="/api/hosts"/> <link rel="vms" href="/api/vms"/> ... <product_info> <name>Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization</name> <vendor>Red Hat</vendor> <version revision="0" build="0" minor="1" major="3"/> </product_info> <special_objects> <link rel="templates/blank" href="..."/> <link rel="tags/root" href="..."/> </special_objects> <summary> <vms> <total>10</total> <active>3</active> </vms> <hosts> <total>2</total> <active>2</active> </hosts> <users> <total>8</total> <active>2</active> </users> <storage_domains> <total>2</total> <active>2</active> </storage_domains> </summary> </api>
Note
For simplicity, all other examples omit the
Host:
and Authorization:
request headers and assume the base
is the default /api
path. This base path differs depending on your implementation.
4.1. Product Information
The entry point contains a
product_info
element to help an API user determine the legitimacy of the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization environment. This includes the name
of the product, the vendor
and the version
.
Example 4.2. Verify a genuine Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization environment
The follow elements identify a genuine Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 3.2 environment:
<api> ... <product_info> <name>Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization</name> <vendor>Red Hat</vendor> <version revision="0" build="0" minor="2" major="3"/> </product_info> ... </api>