Webhooks

Events for RESTful APIs

Nonfiction, Computers, Programming, Software Development, Internet, Web Development
Cover of the book Webhooks by Matthias Biehl, API-University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Matthias Biehl ISBN: 1230003164273
Publisher: API-University Press Publication: April 2, 2019
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Matthias Biehl
ISBN: 1230003164273
Publisher: API-University Press
Publication: April 2, 2019
Imprint:
Language: English

Got RESTful APIs? Great. API consumers love them. But today, such RESTful APIs are not enough for the evolving expectations of API consumers. Their apps need to be responsive, event-based and react to changes in near real-time.

This results in a new set of requirements for the APIs, which power the apps. APIs now need to provide concepts such as events, notifications, triggers, and subscriptions. These concepts are not natively supported by the REST architectural style.

The good thing: we can engineer RESTful APIs that support events with a webhook infrastructure. The bad thing: it requires some heavy lifting. The webhook infrastructure needs to be developer-friendly, easy to use, reliable, secure and highly available.

With the best practices and design templates provided in this book, we want to help you extend your API portfolio with a modern webhook infrastructure. So you can offer both APIs and events that developers love to use.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Got RESTful APIs? Great. API consumers love them. But today, such RESTful APIs are not enough for the evolving expectations of API consumers. Their apps need to be responsive, event-based and react to changes in near real-time.

This results in a new set of requirements for the APIs, which power the apps. APIs now need to provide concepts such as events, notifications, triggers, and subscriptions. These concepts are not natively supported by the REST architectural style.

The good thing: we can engineer RESTful APIs that support events with a webhook infrastructure. The bad thing: it requires some heavy lifting. The webhook infrastructure needs to be developer-friendly, easy to use, reliable, secure and highly available.

With the best practices and design templates provided in this book, we want to help you extend your API portfolio with a modern webhook infrastructure. So you can offer both APIs and events that developers love to use.

More books from Web Development

Cover of the book Write Your Way To Success by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Internet Business: The Basics by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Learning RabbitMQ by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Free Web Hosting - How To Host Your Website For Free With No Hidden Costs, No Setup Fees, No Ads, Just Pure Free Hosting Services For Everyone by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Search Engine Optimization for Flash by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Jenkins 2: Up and Running by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Learn Node.js by Building 6 Projects by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Build Your First Web App by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Getting Down To Blogging Business by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book The Manager's Guide to Web Application Security by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book JavaScript - Program a Dynamic, User-Responsive Website - A Crash Course to Learn JavaScript Programming and HTML the Easy Way by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Adobe Dreamweaver CS6 on Demand by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Java EE Applications on Oracle Java Cloud: by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Adobe Dreamweaver CC Classroom in a Book (2018 release) by Matthias Biehl
Cover of the book Angular Services by Matthias Biehl
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy