This document provides guidelines and examples for GoCardless APIs, encouraging consistency, maintainability, and best practices.
- https://github.com/interagent/http-api-design
- https://www.gov.uk/service-manual/making-software/apis.html
- http://www.mnot.net/blog/
- http://www.vinaysahni.com/best-practices-for-a-pragmatic-restful-api
- https://github.com/WhiteHouse/api-standards
- http://apigee.com/about/content/api-fa%C3%A7ade-pattern
- https://pages.apigee.com/web-api-design-ebook.html
- https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/api-craft
All endpoints must follow the core JSON API spec
Changes from JSON API:
- The primary resource must be keyed by its resource type. The endpoint URL must also match the resource type.
- API errors do not currently follow the JSON API spec.
- Updates should always return
200 OK
with the full resource to simplify internal logic.
Example of keying the resource by type:
GET /posts/1
{
"posts": {
"id": 1
}
}
All action calls to an endpoint must be wrapped in a data
envelope.
This is because actions are carried out on a resource but use a different data type than the core resource itself.
Example of a action call:
POST /posts/action/share
{
"data": {
"recipientID": "U123"
}
}
The API should only support JSON.
Reference: http://www.mnot.net/blog/2012/04/13/json_or_xml_just_decide
- A URL identifies a resource.
- URLs should include nouns, not verbs.
- For consistency, only use plural nouns (e.g. "posts" instead of "post").
- Use HTTP verbs (
GET
,POST
,PUT
,DELETE
) to operate on resources. - Use filtering instead of nested resources:
/payments?subscription=xyz
rather than/subscriptions/xyz/payments
. Nested resources enforce relationships that could change and makes clients harder to write. - API versions should be represented as dates documented in a changelog. Version number should not be in the URL.
- API should be behind a subdomain:
api.gocardless.com
- List of payments:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments
- Filtering is a query:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments?status=failed&sort_field=-created
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments?sort_field=created
- A single payment:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments/1234
- All amendments in (or belonging to) this subscription:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/subscription_amendments?subscription=1234
- Include nested resources in a comma separated list:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments/1234?include=events
- Include only selected fields in a comma separated list:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments/1234?fields=amount
- Get multiple resources:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments/1234,444,555,666
- Action on resource:
POST https://api.gocardless.com/payments/1234/actions/cancel
- Singular nouns:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payment
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payment/123
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payment/action
- Verbs in the URL:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payment/create
- Nested resources:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/subscriptions/1234/amendments
- Filtering outside of query string:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments/desc
- Filtering to get multiple resources:
GET https://api.gocardless.com/payments?id[]=11&id[]=22
Here's an example of how HTTP verbs map to create, read, update, delete operations in a particular context:
HTTP METHOD | POST | GET | PUT | PATCH | DELETE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CRUD OP | CREATE | READ | UPDATE | UPDATE | DELETE |
/plans | Create new plan | List plans | Bulk update | Error | Delete all plans |
/plans/1234 | Error | Show Plan If exists | If exists, full/partial update Plan; If not, error | If exists, update Plan using JSON Patch format; If not, error | Delete Plan |
Avoid resource actions. Create separate resources where possible.
POST /refunds?payment=ID&amount=1000
POST /payments/ID/refund
Where special actions are required, place them under an actions
prefix.
Actions should always be idempotent.
POST /payments/ID/actions/cancel
Don’t set values in keys.
"tags": [
{"id": "125", "name": "Environment"},
{"id": "834", "name": "Water Quality"}
]
"tags": [
{"125": "Environment"},
{"834": "Water Quality"}
]
Always return string ids. Some languages, like JavaScript, don't support big ints. Serialize/deserialize ints to strings if storing ids as ints.
Error responses should include a message for the user, an internal error type (corresponding to some specific internally determined constant represented as a string), and links to info for developers.
There must only be one top level error. Errors should be returned in turn. This makes internal error logic and dealing with errors as a consumer of the API easier.
Validation and resource errors are nested in the top level error under errors
.
The error is nested in error
to make it possible to add, for example, deprecation errors on successful requests.
The HTTP status code
is used as a top level error, type
is used as a sub error, and nested
errors
may have more specific type
errors, such as invalid_field
.
Formatting errors should be separate from errors handled by the integration.
Formatting errors include things like field presence and length, and are returned when incorrect data is sent to the API.
An example of an error that should be handled by the integration is attempting to create a payment against a mandate that has expired. This is an edge case that the API integration needs to handle. Do not mask these errors as validation errors. Return them as a top level error instead.
- Top level errors MUST implement
request_id
,type
,code
andmessage
. type
MUST relate to thereason
. For example, use it to categorise the error:reason: api_error
.message
MUST be specific.- Top level errors MAY implement
documentation_url
,request_url
andid
. - Only return
id
for server errors (5xx). Theid
should point to the exception you track internally.
{
"error": {
"documentation_url": "https://api.gocardless.com/docs/beta/errors#access_forbidden",
"request_url": "https://api.gocardless.com/requests/REQUEST_ID",
"request_id": "REQUEST_ID",
"id": "ERROR_ID",
"type": "access_forbidden",
"code": 403,
"message": "You don't have the right permissions to access this resource"
}
}
- Nested errors MUST implement
reason
andmessage
. reason
MUST be specific to the error.- Nested errors MAY implement
field
.
{
"error": {
"top level errors": "...",
"errors": [
{
"field": "account_number",
"reason": "missing_field",
"message": "Account number is required"
}
]
}
}
200 OK
- everything worked as expected.400 Bad Request
- e.g. invalid JSON.401 Unauthorized
- no valid API key provided.402 Request Failed
- parameters were valid but request failed.403 Forbidden
- missing or invalid permissions.404 Not Found
- the requested item doesn’t exist.422 Unprocessable Entity
- parameters were invalid/validation failed.500, 502, 503, 504 Server errors
- something went wrong on GoCardless’ end.
- When the request body contains malformed JSON.
- When the JSON is valid but the document structure is invalid (e.g. passing an array when an object should be passed).
- When model validations fail for fields (e.g. name too long).
- Trying to create a resource when a related resource is in a bad state.
- Adding new API resources.
- Adding new optional request parameters to existing API methods.
- Adding new properties to existing API responses.
- Changing the order of properties in existing API responses.
- Changing the length or format of object IDs or other opaque strings.
- This includes adding or removing fixed prefixes (such as ch_ on charge IDs).
- You can safely assume object IDs we generate will never exceed 128 characters, but you should be able to handle IDs of up to that length. If for example you’re using MySQL, you should store IDs in a VARCHAR(128) COLLATE utf8_bin column (the COLLATE configuration ensures case-sensitivity in lookups).
- Adding new event types. Your webhook listener should gracefully handle unfamiliar events types.
The versioning scheme is designed to promote incremental improvement to the API and discourage rewrites.
Server initiated events such as webhooks should not contain serialised resources. If a resource changed, provide its id instead and let the client request it using a version.
Versions should be dated as ISO8601 (YYYY-MM-DD)
- Good: 2014-05-04
- Bad: v-1.1, v1.2, 1.3, v1, v2
Maintain old API versions for at least 6 months.
The API version must be set using a custom HTTP header. The API version must not be defined in the
URL structure (e.g. /v1
) because it makes incremental change impossible.
GoCardless-Version: 2014-05-04
Enforce the header on all requests.
Validate the version against available versions. Do not allow dates up to a version.
The API changelog must only contain backwards-incompatible changes. All non-breaking changes are automatically available to old versions.
Reference: https://stripe.com/docs/upgrades
The use of X-Custom-Header
has been deprecated.
Resource filters MUST be in singular form.
Multiple ids should be supplied to a filter as a comma separated list, and should be translated into an OR
query. Chaining multiple filters with &
should be translated into an AND
query.
GET /refunds?payment=ID1,ID2&customer=ID1
GET /refunds?payments=ID1,ID2&customer=ID1
All list/index endpoints must be paginated by default. Pagination must be reverse chronological.
Only support cursor or time based pagination.
limit=50
after=NEWEST_RESOURCE
before=null
limit=500
Parameters:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
after |
string | id to start after |
before |
string | id to start before |
limit |
string | number of records |
Paginated results are always enveloped:
{
"meta": {
"cursors": {
"after": "abcd1234",
"before": "wxyz0987"
},
"limit": 50
},
"payments": [{
…
},
…]
}
Full or partial updates using PUT
should replace any parameters passed and ignore fields not submitted.
GET /items/id_123
{
"id": "id_123",
"meta": {
"created": "date",
"published": false
}
}
PUT /items/id_123 { "meta": { "published": true } }
{
"id": "id_123",
"meta": {
"published": false
}
}
PATCH is reserved for JSON Patch operations.
POST
, PUT
and PATCH
expect JSON bodies in the request. Content-Type
header MUST be set to application/json
.
For unsupported media types a 415
(Unsupported Media Type) response code is returned.
Most responses return an ETag
header. Many responses also return a Last-Modified
header. The
values of these headers can be used to make subsequent requests to those resources using the
If-None-Match
and If-Modified-Since
headers, respectively. If the resource has not changed, the
server will return a 304 Not Modified
. Note that making a conditional request and receiving a 304
response does not count against your rate limit, so we encourage you to use it whenever possible.
Cache-Control: private, max-age=60
ETag: <hash of contents>
Last-Modified: updated_at
The following header values must be declared in the Vary header: Accept
, Authorization
and Cookie
.
Any of these headers can change the representation of the data and should invalidate a cached version. This can be useful if users have different accounts to do admin, each with different privileges and resource visibility.
Reference: https://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/
All responses should support gzip.
See JSON-API: http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-filtering
JSON responses should be pretty printed.
Explicitly provide an ISO8601 timestamp with timezone information (DateTime in UTC).
Use the exact timestamp for API calls that allow a timestamp to be specified.
These timestamps look something like 2014-02-27T15:05:06+01:00
. ISO 8601 UTC format: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ.
All endpoints must be rate limited. The current rate limit status is returned in the HTTP headers of all API requests.
Rate-Limit-Limit: 5000
Rate-Limit-Remaining: 4994
Rate-Limit-Reset: Thu, 01 Dec 1994 16:00:00 GMT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Connection: keep-alive
Retry-After: Thu, 01 May 2014 16:00:00 GMT
RateLimit-Reset uses the HTTP header date format: RFC 1123 (Thu, 01 Dec 1994 16:00:00 GMT)
Exceeding rate limit:
// 429 Too Many Requests
{
"message": "API rate limit exceeded.",
"type": "rate_limit_exceeded",
"documentation_url": "http://developer.gocardless.com/#rate_limit_exceeded"
}
Support Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) for AJAX requests.
Resources:
Any domain that is registered against the requesting account is accepted.
$ curl -i https://api.gocardless.com -H "Origin: http://dvla.com"
HTTP/1.1 302 Found
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
Access-Control-Expose-Headers: ETag, Link, RateLimit-Limit, RateLimit-Remaining, RateLimit-Reset, OAuth-Scopes, Accepted-OAuth-Scopes
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: false
// CORS Preflight request
// OPTIONS 200
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Authorization, Content-Type, If-Match, If-Modified-Since, If-None-Match, If-Unmodified-Since, Requested-With
Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, POST, PATCH, PUT, DELETE
Access-Control-Expose-Headers: ETag, RateLimit-Limit, RateLimit-Remaining, RateLimit-Reset
Access-Control-Max-Age: 86400
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: false
All API request MUST be made over SSL, including outgoing web hooks. Any non-secure requests
return ssl_required
, and no redirects are performed.
HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
Content-Length: 35
{
"message": "API requests must be made over HTTPS",
"type": "ssl_required",
"docs": "https://developer.gocardless.com/errors#ssl_required"
}
See JSON-API: http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-includes
See JSON-API: http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-sparse-fieldsets
Set a Request-Id
header to aid debugging across services.