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# API Integration

Table of Contents

A successful integration of an API with an Airnode requires the mapping of each other's interface. This is accomplished using an OIS (Oracle Integration Specifications) json object, found in the config.json file, that is designed to follow three basic steps.

  • API operations are specified
  • Airnode endpoints are specified
  • Airnode endpoints are mapped to API operations


The OIS object in config.json contains mapping information of API operations to Airnode endpoint definitions.

OIS is a mapping of API operations, such as GET /coins/{id}, to Airnode endpoints. When a requester contract calls a AirnodeRrpV0.sol contract request function, such as makeFullRequest(..., callData), the callData is communicated to the off-chain Airnode which uses OIS mappings to translate the callData into a valid HTTP request for the appropriate API operation.

The only thing needed to integrate an API to Airnode is to create an OIS object which is in the Airnode's config.json file. This guide is an instructive approach to create an OIS object. OIS borrows formatting from OAS OpenAPI Specification (opens new window). If you have experience with OAS, OIS will seem familiar.

OAS

It is not recommended to refer to OAS for help while creating your OIS object. OIS only borrows formatting practices from OAS. Everything needed to create an OIS object is in these docs.

Tips while using this guide.

# OIS Template

OIS is a json object that is added to an Airnode's config.json file as the (ois) key, sometimes called a field. Try using the OIS template to construct an OIS and add it to the Airnode's config.json file later.

In the OIS template, there are some fields that contain {FILL_*}. This means that the value added is independent from other fields. On the other hand, if two fields contain the same expression (e.g., {FILL_OPERATION_PARAMETER_1_NAME}), you must use the same value in them, because they are referencing each other.

OIS uses a simplified version of the OAS. This means that if you have the OpenAPI specifications of the API that you are going to integrate, you are about 80% done, because you can copy paste entire sections (but make sure that you make the necessary modifications to conform to the OIS format).

This guide will assume you do not have the OpenAPI specifications of the API that you will be integrating.

# Step 1: Specify OIS Definitions

Start building an OIS by adding three descriptive fields to the root of the OIS json object.

{
  "oisFormat": "1.0.0",
  "title": "myOisTitle",
  "version": "0.1.0",
  ...
}
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# oisFormat

A specific version of the OIS Specification to be used. For this guide, which uses Airnode v0.7.x, the proper OIS version is 1.0.0.

# title

This is a unique title of the OIS. Note that an Airnode can be configured with more than one OIS and uses the title as the OIS identifier.

# version

This is the version of the OIS which allows for version-control of the OIS integration. It is recommended to use semver (opens new window) versioning. The initial version could be <0.1.0>.

# Step 2: Specifying the API

The apiSpecifications field is used to describe the API and its operations.

"apiSpecifications": {
  "servers": [...],
  "paths": {...},
  "components": {...}
}
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# Servers

The first step of specifying your API is to enter its baseURL in the apiSpecifications.servers[0].url field. Only one object (i.e., url) is allowed in the apiSpecifications.servers array. A warning is raised during conversion if servers has multiple elements. This baseURL will apply to all operations.

# Choosing a Base URL

Consider the following full URL to execute an API operation that returns all know tokens.

https://www.myapi.com/v1/tokens

There are two ways to segment this.

baseURL: https://www.myapi.com

path: /v1/data

or

baseURL: https://www.myapi.com/v1

path: /data

Because the call will be made to <baseURL+path> both will result in the same full URL.

Set the baseURL as the section of the full URL that you expect to be shared by all operations. From the examples above it is recommended to use https://www.myapi.com, in case additional paths starting with /v2 get added to the API in the future. As you can tell, API integration requires many subjective choices, and is more art than science.

"apiSpecifications": {
  "servers": [ // Only one element is allowed in the servers array.
    {
      "url": "https://www.myapi.com"
    }
  ],
  ...
}
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# Paths

The paths field defines all the API operations much like an OpenAPI Specification file.

What is an API operation?

An API operation is specified as a unique combination of a path and an HTTP method. GET /token/{id}

# Operations

In the examples below, GET refers to an HTTP request method (opens new window). This implies that you could have another API operation that can be specified using a different method but the same path.

path: /data

method: GET

path: /data

method: POST

Therefore, a path is not enough to specify an API operation by itself, you must also provide a method. If a new path is needed then it must start a new object in paths with its own methods. Currently only the GET and POST methods are supported by Airnode.

With regards to the OIS template, the name of the element (denoted as {FILL_PATH}) should be replaced with the path (e.g., /data). Similarly, {FILL_METHOD} should be replaced with the method of the operation you want to integrate (e.g., get). The method must be lowercase.

The following example illustrates three operations, GET /data, POST /data, GET /tokens.

"paths": {
  "/data": {   // path    {FILL_PATH}
    "get": {   // method  {FILL_METHOD}
      ...      // parameters
    },
    "post": {  // method  {FILL_METHOD}
      ...      // parameters
    }
  },
  "/tokens": { // path    {FILL_PATH}
    "get": {   // method  {FILL_METHOD}
      ...      // parameters
    }
  }
}
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# Parameters (operation)

After specifying the path and method of an API operation, the final step is to specify its parameters. Each parameter is an object in the apiSpecifications.paths.{PATH}.{METHOD}.parameters array, with the fields in and name. in tells where the parameter goes in the HTTP request and name tells the name that the parameter value will be sent under. Currently Airnode supports the following parameter types for use with in.

  • query
  • header
  • path
  • cookie

When integrating a POST method, define the body parameters with in: query. Airnode will convert all query types into the requestBody. Note that only the non-nested application/json content-type is supported.

It is not necessary to specify all API operation parameters, but only the ones the on-chain requester will need to be able to provide (see Airnode endpoint parameters), and the ones that you want to hard-code a value for (see Airnode endpoint fixed operation parameters).

"paths": {
  "/data/{id}": {
    "get": {
      "parameters": [
        {
          "in": "path",
          "name": "id"
        },
        {
          "in": "header",
          "name": "Accept"
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}
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Example: Get a token

The GET /token/{id} returns a token using the token's id which is a path parameter.

Method Path in name
GET /token/{id} path id

Example: Create a token

The POST /token operation accepts three parameters. The name and description of the token are placed in the type query and will be moved by Airnode to the requestBody upon calling the API operation. The third is a header parameter that describes the Content-Type of the request such as application/json or application/x-www-form-urlencoded.

Method Path in name
POST /token query name
query description
header Accept

Example: Get all tokens

The GET /tokens returns a list of all tokens. The list count can be limited using the `limit' parameter which the API operation considers as optional since it will not return an error if omitted.

GET /tokens returns all tokens.

GET /tokens?limit=10 returns the first ten tokens.

Method Path in name
GET /tokens query limit

# Step 3: Specifying Airnode Endpoints

An Airnode endpoint is a service that Airnode exposes to on-chain requesters. It maps to an API operation, but the nature of this mapping is customizable. It is the integrator's job to define what this service is.

For example, if your API operation returns an asset price given its ticker (e.g., BTC), you can specify the endpoint such that the requester provides the ticker as a parameter. The resulting endpoint would be a general one that returns prices for any kind of asset. On the other hand, you can hardcode BTC as the asset whose price will be returned (using fixed operation parameters), which would make your endpoint a specific one that only returns the BTC price.

The recommended endpoint definition pattern is to create an Airnode endpoint for each API operation, and allow the requesters to provide all operation parameters themselves. This results in optimal flexibility, and essentially allows the requesters to use the entire API functionality on-chain. Normally, oracle integrations strive to hard-code as many API parameters as possible because passing these parameters on-chain results in a gas cost overhead. However, the Airnode protocol uses templates (not to be confused with the OIS template used for this guide), which allow requesters to specify a large number of endpoint parameters at no additional gas cost.

Note that there are some cases where you may not want to map endpoints to API operations one-to-one. For example, an API operation can have a header parameter, Accept, that can take the values application/json or applicatino/xml to determine how to format the data that the API will respond to the call. Airnode expects responses to be in JSON format, and thus hard-coding this parameter as JSON would be more suitable than letting the requester decide, as there is only one valid choice. Again, the integrator's job is to be aware of these subtleties and use judgement.

After this brief detour, let us get back to filling in our OIS template.

# Endpoints

The field endpoints is an array, with each row representing an Airnode endpoint. The first field you need to fill in is name. Make sure that it is descriptive and unique from other endpoint names. If you are integrating API operations to Airnode endpoints one-to-one, using the API operation path as the endpoint name is a decent choice (i.e., /token). Note that you would also add the method to this name if there were multiple operations with different methods for a single path (i.e., GET/token).

The next step is to fill in operation object. Here, you need to enter the path and method of an API operation you have defined in apiSpecifications.paths, resulting in the Airnode endpoint calling the now linked API operation.

# fixedOperationParameters

It is not uncommon to hard-code API parameters (recall the Accept operation parameter in the above example). Such hard-coded parameters are called fixedOperationParameters.

In the OIS template there is a fixed operation parameter under endpoints[n].fixedOperationParameters, and it refers to the first API operation parameter. This means that whenever the Airnode receives a request for this endpoint, the respective API call will be made with that API operation parameter set to endpoints[n].fixedOperationParameters[n].value. The requester does not supply a value for fixedOperationParameters.

An Airnode endpoint can have multiple fixedOperationParameters. An API operation parameter cannot be in both endpoints[n].fixedOperationParameters and endpoints[n].parameters.

# reservedParameters

The requester can provide some parameters that are not mapped to API operation parameters. These parameters are called "reserved parameters", and their names start with an underscore. See the related OIS docs for more information.

The current list of reserved parameters are _type, _path and _times. See Reserved Parameters in the OIS document set to understand what each of these parameters are for. In most cases, all three should be defined as reserved parameters with no fixed/default values, as doing so provides the requester with the most flexibility.

# parameters

Airnode endpoint parameters map to API operation parameters that the requester is allowed to provide values for. It refers to an API operation through its field operationParameter. You can also provide default values for endpoint parameters, though this is not recommended in most cases.

Endpoint parameters have a name field, which does not have to be the same as the API operation parameter that they map to. As a separate note, an Airnode endpoint can have multiple parameters.

# Conclusion

The API operations and Airnode endpoints are now specified. Each Airnode endpoint maps to an API operation, and each Airnode endpoint parameter or fixedOperationParameter maps to an API operation parameter. The resulting OIS includes no user-specific information, which means that you can share it for others to easily provide the same services (for example, to set up a third-party oracle network).

Note that there was some subjectivity while defining the Airnode endpoints. This means that two different OISes can exist for the same exact API, differing based on how the integrators designed the interface that the requester will use. However, in most cases, one would simply map API operations to Airnode endpoints directly, and let the requester provide all API operation parameters through the Airnode endpoint parameters.

Now that you have an OIS object, the next step is API Security.

Last Updated: 8/9/2022, 2:28:25 PM