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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / API KeysAPI Keys When you sign up for Cloud CMS, you are given your own tenant. Your tenant is essentially a guarded vault of data. To access this data, you need to present two sets of credentials to the Cloud CMS server: Client Credentials User Credentials Client Credentials identify the application that is attempting to connect and User Credentials identify who is using the application. Once signed in, the User Credentials establish the security context of the authenticated user, potentially limiting
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / APIAPI The Cloud CMS API consists of an HTTP/HTTPS endpoint that uses OAuth 2.0 authentication. It supports both REST concepts and asynchronous data operations. You can access this API using any of our drivers as well as curl or any HTTP client library. Our API provides functionality that covers all aspects of content production, publishing and presentation. 100% of the functionality of Cloud CMS is accessible from the API, including: Content Models, Creation and Editing Workflow, Scheduled Publish
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / REST API CookbookREST API Cookbook Getting Started This guide assumes that you have already installed an HTTP client with which you will be making requests. However, it is highly recommended that you look at our language drivers and you read about the one that you will be using in your application. Connecting to Gitana Gitana uses OAuth2 to perform authentication, and as such to connect you will have to perform the authentication handshake manually to connect directly with the rest api. The specifics of this dif
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Gitana / 4.0 / Self Managed / Configuration / API ServerAPI Server The Cloud CMS API Server is a Java application that launches inside of a Java Servlet Container. The Java application surfaces a REST API as well as backend services and DAOs to support connectivity to Mongo DB, Elastic Search and a slew of Amazon services including S3, SNS, SQS, Route 53, Cloud Front and more. Properties File Cloud CMS is primarily configured via a properties file that is auto-detected and loaded when the underlying Spring Framework starts up. This properties file is
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Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API Keys / Create new Application KeysCreate new Application Keys If no API keys exist for your desired project, you will need to create an application for the project. To create a new application simply go to Manage Project, select Applications, and then create a New Application. Once the application has been created you can view the API Keys either under Manage Project -> API Keys, or, Manage Platform -> API Keys Note: API keys should not be shared across more than one application. Therefore, create a separate Cloud CMS applicatio
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Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API Keys / OverviewAPI Keys When you sign up for Cloud CMS, you are given your own tenant. Your tenant is essentially a guarded vault of data. To access this data, you need to present two sets of credentials to the Cloud CMS server: Client Credentials User Credentials Client Credentials identify the application that is attempting to connect and User Credentials identify who is using the application. Once signed in, the User Credentials establish the security context of the authenticated user, potentially limiting
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Gitana / 4.0 / Forms / API / ViewsViews When Alpaca runs, the very first thing it does is sort out which view implementation it will use to render the schema and options that you provide. A view implementation consists of an ID and an implementation class. The implementation class serves as a reference object that Alpaca uses to determine things along the way such as: which template to render for a given form, container or control type what CSS classes to inject into rendered elements what callback behaviors to run against rende
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / UI Developers Guide / UI ViewsUI Views Customized changes to the user interface configuration can be introduced through the use of UI View configuration documents. UI Views are JSON documents that contain one or more configuration blocks. The UI View configuration blocks are loaded after the standard configuration document and therefore have the opportunity to either extend or override the base configuration. UI View are scoped either to the platform or to the project. As such, you can use UI Config objects to customize the
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / User Interface Customization / UI ViewsUI Views Customized changes to the user interface configuration can be introduced through the use of UI View configuration documents. UI Views are JSON documents that contain one or more configuration blocks. The UI View configuration blocks are loaded after the standard configuration document and therefore have the opportunity to either extend or override the base configuration. UI View are scoped either to the platform or to the project. As such, you can use UI Config objects to customize the
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Scripting CookbookScripting Cookbook Getting Started To get started with Server-Side Scripting, please visit the Server Side Scripting page. Code Samples Here are some code samples of common data structures to help you get started. Increment a Property With this example, we want to keep track of a counter that tracks the number of updates made to a node. After a node is created, if the user clicks update ten times, we want to have a counter on the node that indicates it has been updated ten times. This script sho
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / TreeTree Content that is organized into folders can be retrieved using the Tree API. The Tree API lets you pull back an entire path-based folder and file structure of content within a single API call. The API call lets you specify a root node, a maximum depth to traverse down the path structure, paths that should be automatically expanded and query terms for filtering of root nodes. The Tree API is deal to support a variety of cases including: retrieval of multiple deeply-nested paths within a singl
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Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Discovery / TreeTree Content that is organized into folders can be retrieved using the Tree API. The Tree API lets you pull back an entire path-based folder and file structure of content within a single API call. The API call lets you specify a root node, a maximum depth to traverse down the path structure, paths that should be automatically expanded and query terms for filtering of root nodes. The Tree API is deal to support a variety of cases including: retrieval of multiple deeply-nested paths within a singl
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Gitana / 4.0 / Self Managed / Monitoring / OverviewMonitoring API Server with an APM The Cloud CMS API Server is a Java application that launches inside of a Java Servlet Container. As such, Application Performance Montioring (APM) frameworks such as New Relic can be used to monitor performance metrics and other run-time data. Production Performance Although APM frameworks are designed such that they do not impact production performance more than is necessary, the impact is not zero. Cloud CMS Support may, therefore, ask you to disable monitorin
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Docker / Configuration / API ServerAPI Server The Cloud CMS API Server is a Java application that launches inside of a Java Servlet Container. The Java application surfaces a REST API as well as backend services and DAOs to support connectivity to Mongo DB, Elastic Search and a slew of Amazon services including S3, SNS, SQS, Route 53, Cloud Front and more. Properties File Cloud CMS is primarily configured via a properties file that is auto-detected and loaded when the underlying Spring Framework starts up. This properties file is
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / REST API CookbookREST API Cookbook Getting Started This guide assumes that you have already installed an HTTP client with which you will be making requests. However, it is highly recommended that you look at our language drivers and you read about the one that you will be using in your application. Connecting to Cloud CMS CloudCMS uses OAuth2 to perform authentication, and as such to connect you will have to perform the authentication handshake manually to connect directly with the rest api. The specifics of thi
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / PHP CookbookPHP Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the PHP driver, visit Gitana PHP Driver Page or the Github Page. It can be used in any composer php project. To install with composer from the command line: composer require cloudcms/cloudcms Connecting to Gitana You can connect to Gitana with the php driver by providing a config array containing your keys, which can be obtained from a gitana.json file. It should look something like: { "clientKey": "{your client key}", "clientSecret": "{y
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Go CookbookGo Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Go driver, visit the Github Page or Package Page to view the source code, tests and basic usage examples. You can install the driver via the command line: go get github.com/gitana/cloudcms-go-driver Connecting to Gitana There are two ways to connect with the Go driver: By finding a gitana.json file in your working directory, or by providing a config configuration. // Connect to Gitana using gitana.json in working directory session, err := clou
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / JavaScript (Legacy) CookbookJavaScript (Legacy) Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the JavaScript driver, please visit the Gitana JavaScript (Legacy) Driver Page. Connecting to Gitana To connect, supply your API Keys as the argument to the connect() method. Gitana.connect({ "clientKey": "{clientKey}", "clientSecret": "{clientSecret}", "username": "{username}", "password": "{password}", "baseURL": "https://api.cloudcms.com" }, function(err) { var platform = this; }); If a problem w
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Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API / OverviewAPI The Cloud CMS API consists of an HTTP/HTTPS endpoint that uses OAuth 2.0 authentication. It supports both REST concepts and asynchronous data operations. You can access this API using any of our drivers as well as curl or any HTTP client library. Our API provides functionality that covers all aspects of content production, publishing and presentation. 100% of the functionality of Cloud CMS is accessible from the API, including: Content Models, Creation and Editing Workflow, Scheduled Publish
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Python CookbookPython Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Python driver, visit Gitana Python Driver Page or the Github Page. It is written with Python 3 and can be used in any compatible project. You can install the driver via the command line: pip install cloudcms or pip3 install cloudcms Or add something like this to your requirements.txt: cloudcms==1.1.0 Connecting to Gitana You can connect to Gitana by providing a config file or the oauth variables directly. Using a Gitana JSON file You ca
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Ruby CookbookRuby Cookbook Getting Started The Ruby driver is published to https://rubygems.org/gems/cloudcms Install the gem as you would any other Gem gem install cloudcms You may choose to use Bundler or other dependency management tool. Connecting to Gitana To connect, create a file called gitana.json in a folder location readable by your application. For information on how to acquire this file, please read up on API Keys. Load the library containing the driver: require 'cloudcms' Connect to Cloud CMS by
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / CookbooksCookbooks We've put together the following Cook Books to help you get started coding using the Cloud CMS drivers. Content Modeling Cookbook C# Cookbook Go Cookbook Java Cookbook JavaScript (Legacy) Cookbook JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook Node.js Cookbook PHP Cookbook Python Cookbook REST API Cookbook Ruby Cookbook Scripting Cookbook
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / OverviewCookbooks We've put together the following Cook Books to help you get started coding using the Cloud CMS drivers. Content Modeling Cookbook C# Cookbook Go Cookbook Java Cookbook JavaScript (Legacy) Cookbook JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook Node.js Cookbook PHP Cookbook Python Cookbook REST API Cookbook Ruby Cookbook Scripting Cookbook
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Node.js CookbookNode.js Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Node.js driver, please visit the Cloud CMS Node.js Driver Page. One thing to keep in mind is that the Node.js driver is based on the JavaScript driver. As such, they're pretty similar. That said, the Node.js driver can do a few important tricks that you can't do in the JavaScript driver. Connecting to Cloud CMS To connect, create a file called gitana.json in your application root. For information on how to acquire this file, please read up
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / C# Cookbook
C# Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the C# driver, visit Gitana C# Driver Page or the Github Page. It is written with .NET Core and can be used in any compatible project. You can install the driver via the command line: dotnet add package cloudcms
or from within Visual Studio: Install-Package cloudcms
Or by adding this to your .csproj file (you may have to adjust the version):
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