adobe-fetch
Call Adobe APIs
Goals
Make calling Adobe APIs a breeze!
This package will handle JWT authentication, token caching and storage.
Otherwise it works exactly as fetch
Installation
npm install --save @adobe/fetch
Common Usage
const fs = require('fs');
const config = {
auth: {
clientId: 'asasdfasf',
clientSecret: 'aslfjasljf-=asdfalasjdf==asdfa',
technicalAccountId: 'asdfasdfas@techacct.adobe.com',
orgId: 'asdfasdfasdf@AdobeOrg',
metaScopes: ['ent_dataservices_sdk']
}
};
config.auth.privateKey = fs.readFileSync('private.key');
const adobefetch = require('@adobe/fetch').config(config);
adobefetch("https://platform.adobe.io/some/adobe/api", { method: 'get'})
.then(response => response.json())
.then(json => console.log('Result: ',json));
Config object
The config object is where you pass in all the required and optional parameters to authenticate API calls.
parameter | integration name | required | type | default |
---|
clientId | API Key (Client ID) | true | String | |
technicalAccountId | Technical account ID | true | String | |
orgId | Organization ID | true | String | |
clientSecret | Client secret | true | String | |
privateKey | | true | String | |
passphrase | | false | String | |
metaScopes | | true | Comma separated Sting or an Array | |
ims | | false | String | https://ims-na1.adobelogin.com |
In order to determine which metaScopes you need to register for you can look them up by product in this handy table.
For instance if you need to be authenticated to call API's for both GDPR and User Management you would look them up and find that they are:
They you would create an array of metaScopes as part of the config object. For instance:
const config = {
auth: {
clientId: 'asasdfasf',
clientSecret: 'aslfjasljf-=asdfalasjdf==asdfa',
technicalAccountId: 'asdfasdfas@techacct.adobe.com',
orgId: 'asdfasdfasdf@AdobeOrg',
metaScopes: [
'https://ims-na1.adobelogin.com/s/ent_gdpr_sdk',
'https://ims-na1.adobelogin.com/s/ent_user_sdk'
]
}
};
However, if you omit the IMS url the package will automatically add it for you when making the call to generate the JWT. For example:
const config = {
auth: {
clientId: 'asasdfasf',
clientSecret: 'aslfjasljf-=asdfalasjdf==asdfa',
technicalAccountId: 'asdfasdfas@techacct.adobe.com',
orgId: 'asdfasdfasdf@AdobeOrg',
metaScopes: ['ent_gdpr_sdk', 'ent_user_sdk']
}
};
This is the recommended approach.
Custom Storage
By default, node-persist is used to store all the active tokens locally.
Tokens will be stored under /.node-perist/storage
It is possible to use any other storage for token persistance. This is done by providing read and write methods as follows:
const config = {
auth: {
clientId: 'asasdfasf',
...
storage: {
read: function() {
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
let tokens;
resolve(tokens);
});
},
write: function(tokens) {
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
resolve();
});
}
}
}
};
Alternatively, use async/await:
const config = {
auth: {
clientId: 'asasdfasf',
...
storage: {
read: async function() {
return await myGetTokensImplementation();
},
write: async function(tokens) {
await myStoreTokensImplementation(tokens);
}
}
}
};
Logging
Every request will include a unique request identifier sent via the x-request-id.
The request identifier can be overriden by providing it through the headers:
fetch(url, {
headers: { 'x-request-id': myRequestID }
});
We use debug to log requests. In order to see all the debug output, including the request identifiers, run your app with DEBUG environment variable including the @adobe/fetch scope as follows:
DEBUG=@adobe/fetch
Contributing
Contributions are welcomed! Read the Contributing Guide for more information.
Licensing
This project is licensed under the Apache V2 License. See LICENSE for more information.