Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Comment: Transfer Quota description adapted

...

Table Filter
fixedCols
totalrow,,,
hidelabelsfalse
ddSeparator
sparkNameSparkline
hidePaneFiltration panel
customNoTableMsgText
limitHeight
sparklinefalse
default,,
isFirstTimeEntertrue
cell-width250,250,250
hideColumnsfalse
totalRowName
totalColName
customNoTableMsgfalse
disabledfalse
enabledInEditorfalse
globalFiltertrue
id1695713005337_103393718
iconfilter
order1,2,0
hideControlstrue
inversefalse,false,false
numbering
datefilter
column
sortGroup ⇧,Name ⇧
totalcol
disableSavefalse
rowsPerPage
separatorPoint (.)
labelsName‚Chapter‚Filter whole table
thousandSeparator
ignoreFirstNrows
ddOperator
userfilterName,Chapter
datepatterndd M yy
numberfilter
heightValue
updateSelectOptionsfalse
worklog365|5|8|y w d h m|y w d h m
isORAND
showNRowsifNotFiltered


ChapterNameExcerptUsage
APIsapi_contracts_and_keys


Multiexcerpt
MultiExcerptNameapi_contracts_and_keys

Only public APIs can be accessed by any consumer. The only way for a client to consume a private API is by using an API contract. An API contract is a link between a client and an API through a plan offered by that API.

API contracts can only be created between clients and published APIs which are offered through at least one plan. An API contract cannot be created between a client and a public API.

When an API contract is created, the system generates a unique API Key. This key is unique per client and the same for all contracts of this client. All requests made to the API by a client through the gateway must include this API Key. The API Key is used to create the runtime policy chain from the policies configured on the API, plan and client.

Info

You can forward the X-API-Key to the service using the API Key policy. However, you cannot define your own value for the X-API-Key, since the gateway uses the key to identify the clients.



Policiespolicy_overview


Multiexcerpt
MultiExcerptNamepolicy_overview


Security Policies

Policy SymbolPolicy NameDescription
BASIC AuthenticationEnables HTTP BASIC Authentication on an API. Use this policy to require clients to provide HTTP BASIC authentication credentials when making requests to the managed API.
CORSUse this policy to enable and configure Cross Origin Resource Sharing on an API. This allows to access resources outside the originating domain.
AuthorizationAllows to add a list of fine-grained authorization rules. Use this policy to control precisely who is allowed to access the API.
Header Allow/DenyAllows you to control which incoming requests may be forwarded to the backend service. Permission is granted by adding values for a header.
HTTP SecurityEnforces transport security when using HTTP to mitigate a range of common web vulnerabilities. Contains also a sophisticated mechanism to precisely define the types and sources of content that may be loaded, with violation reporting and the ability to restrict the availability and scope of many security-sensitive features.
Ignored ResourcesEnables the user to shield some API’s resources from being accessed, without blocking access to all the API’s resources. Requests made to API resources designated as ignored result in an HTTP 404 (not found ) error code. This policy allows fine-grained control over which of an API’s resources are accessible.
IP Allowlist

This policy allows access to an API’s resource based on the IP address of the client. The user must specify the IP address ranges to be included from being able to access the API. Any addresses that are not explicitly allowed are not able to access the API. It is possible to use wildcard characters to specify the allowed IP addresses. It is also possible to define the return error code sent in the response to the client in case a request fails due to the violation of this policy.

IP Blocklist

This policy blocks access to an API’s resource based on the IP address of the client. The user must specify the IP address ranges to be excluded from being able to access the API. Any addresses that are not explicitly excluded are able to access the API. It is possible to use wildcard characters to specify the IP addresses to be blocked. It is also possible to define the return error code sent in the response to the client in case a request fails due to the violation of this policy.

Note
An IP Blocklist policy overrides an IP Allowlist policy.


JWT
This policy can set headers as claim values or whole access token. It's main purpose is the validation of JWT tokens for authentication.
Keycloak OAuth

This Keycloak-specific OAuth2 policy regulates access to APIs. It enables a wide range of sophisticated auth facilities in combination with, for instance, Keycloak’s federation, brokering and user management capabilities. Keycloak’s token format and auth mechanism facilitate excellent performance characteristics, with users able to easily tune the setup to meet their security requirements.

Tip

In general, this is one of the best approaches for achieving security without greatly impacting performance. Refer to API Security: Authentication and Authorization for more detailed information.


SOAP Authorization

Nearly identical to the Authorization Policy with the exception that it accepts a SOAP action in the HTTP header.

Note

This policy will only accept a single SOAP action header. It will not extract the operation name from the SOAP body.


Time Restricted AccessManages a list of API routes that can be accessed at specific time and date. This policy allows to control when client and users are allowed to access your API.

Limiting Policies

Rate LimitingGoverns the number of times requests are made to an API within a specified time period. The requests can be filtered by user, client or API and can set the level of granularity for the time period to second, minute, hour, day, month, or year. The intended use of this policy type is for fine grained processing.
Transfer Quota Tracks the number of bytes transferred. Enables the user to set a transfer quota (data) in B, KB, MB or GB for upload, download or both per client, user or API in a definable period of time. The response header can also be freely defined. The intended use of this policy type is for fine grained processing.

Modification Policies

JSONP

Turns a standard REST endpoint into a JSONP compatible endpoint. The caller must provide a JSONP callback function name via the URL.

Note

If the API client does not send the JSONP callback function name in the URL, this policy will do nothing. This allows managed endpoints to support both standard REST and JSONP at the same time.


Simple Header Headers can be set and removed on request, response or both. The values can be literal strings, environment or system properties. Headers can be removed by simple string equality or regular expression.
URL Rewriting With this policy, URLs in the request URL, the request header, the response body or the response header can be changed during a request.

Other Policies

API Key Passes the API Key through to the back-end service by adding it to a customizable HTTP header.
Caching ResourcesWith this policy it is possible to cache requests based on their URL path, HTTP method and HTTP status code. This allows reducing overall traffic to the backend API.
TimeoutAllows you to determine timeouts for your API. You can differentiate between a timeout for the initial connection and a timeout for the entire request.








...