Found 418 results for "docs api functions"
The search executed in 0.00152398 seconds. That's fast.
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / 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):
Score: 3.4156551
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / 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
Score: 3.3178902
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / Java Cookbook
Java Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Java driver, please visit the Gitana Java Driver Page. We recommend that you use Maven. At a minimum, you will need to add the following repository declaration to your pom.xml file:
Score: 3.3032134
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / 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 Cloud CMS 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 CloudCMS using gitana.json in working directory session, err :=
Score: 3.2535298
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / ScriptingScripting Cloud CMS provides a server-side Scripting API that allows you to write custom actions, rules and behaviors that execute on the server. These scripts can be introduced at any time and do not require any server downtime. Developers can write scripts and hook them into Cloud CMS at any time to adjust how the product behaves and operates. The Scripting API consists of a set of server-side Scripting Objects that wrap your content and expose a select set of API service methods for your use.
Score: 3.1950483
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Scripting / OverviewScripting Cloud CMS provides a server-side Scripting API that allows you to write custom actions, rules and behaviors that execute on the server. These scripts can be introduced at any time and do not require any server downtime. Developers can write scripts and hook them into Cloud CMS at any time to adjust how the product behaves and operates. The Scripting API consists of a set of server-side Scripting Objects that wrap your content and expose a select set of API service methods for your use.
Score: 3.1950483
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / JavaScript 2.0 CookbookJavaScript 2.0 Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the JavaScript driver, please visit the Gitana JavaScript 2.0 Driver Page. This JavaScript driver, in contrast to the Gitana JavaScript 1.0 Driver, fully supports ECMAScript promises, which makes it easier to seamlessly integrate with your javascript apps. Connecting to Cloud CMS You can connect and then use this driver in three different but equivalent ways: Async / Await Promises Callbacks Async / Await const cloudcms = require("cloud
Score: 3.1941912
|
|
Setup a Next.JS Static Site using Cloud CMSThe web application ecosystem has improved leaps and bounds over the years, and its never been easier to make high performance static/hybrid sites quickly and using good development practices. And its just as easy to get these sites going using Cloud CMS as a datasource! Below you'll find a quick guide to get you started using Next.JS with Cloud CMS to setup a simple bookstore website, and some highlights from the code. Getting Started First, you'll need to have a Cloud CMS account and Sample pr
Score: 3.157812
|
|
REST based access callsThe authentication mechanism in Cloud CMS is OAuth 2.0. While you can use any of the flows, the easiest one to begin with is "password". We've outlined a basic example here using Advanced REST Client to show our API-first platform in action. First, from your Cloud CMS platform home page, navigate to "Manage Platform" and select the "API Keys" section to list all available projects for remote access: If you have no keys for your project then create a new "Application" from "Manage Platform" and t
Score: 2.8755958
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Application Server / Installation / Module InstallationModule Installation The Cloud CMS Application Server can also be run as a custom Node.js application. It is available as a Node.js module that you can require() in from npmjs.org. The server features a number of extension points that you can utilize to wire in new functionality or extend the framework. Getting Started Here is a simple example where we start up the Application Server from within a Node.js application: var server = require("cloudcms-server/server"); server.start(); The start() me
Score: 2.780478
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Application Server / Installation / Module InstallationModule Installation The Cloud CMS Application Server can also be run as a custom Node.js application. It is available as a Node.js module that you can require() in from npmjs.org. The server features a number of extension points that you can utilize to wire in new functionality or extend the framework. Getting Started Here is a simple example where we start up the Application Server from within a Node.js application: var server = require("cloudcms-server/server"); server.start(); The start() me
Score: 2.780478
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / User Interface / Add-onsAdd-ons Cloud CMS Add-Ons let you enhance your editorial user interface with new features and capabilities that integrate to popular third-party services like YouTube, Vimeo and Google Docs. Add-ons provision your editorial environment with things like: new form field types that integrate to third-party services new user interface pages for browsing and working with media from third-party services new actions or rules to enhance your repository's business logic new content types, associations an
Score: 2.6824522
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / User Interface / Add-ons / OverviewAdd-ons Cloud CMS Add-Ons let you enhance your editorial user interface with new features and capabilities that integrate to popular third-party services like YouTube, Vimeo and Google Docs. Add-ons provision your editorial environment with things like: new form field types that integrate to third-party services new user interface pages for browsing and working with media from third-party services new actions or rules to enhance your repository's business logic new content types, associations an
Score: 2.6824522
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / API / Rate LimitingRate Limiting Important This section only applies to Cloud CMS Hosted Subscriptions Your Cloud CMS subscription may be configured to limit the number of concurrent API calls you are allowed to make per band. This is known as rate-limiting. When the number of concurrent API calls exceeds your tenant's configured rate limit for a given band, you will experience rate limiting. Generally, this consists of receiving an HTTP 429 response code and response headers that describe the rate limiting. The a
Score: 2.6823921
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Drivers / JavaScript (Legacy)JavaScript (Legacy) Connect your HTML browser applications to Gitana Latest Version Version undefined Date The Gitana JavaScript driver can be dropped into any web or mobile application running in the browser, within Node.js or any of a host of web frameworks including jQuery, Vue.js, Next.js, Nuxt and many others. Loading the Driver In the Browser ### Using AMD define(["gitana"], function(Gitana) { Gitana.connect({...}, function() { // ...your code
Score: 2.6697083
|
|
Can your CMS do this?This is not going to be a list of features in Cloud CMS, that to be honest, you righfully expect in a CMS: API, versioning, workflow, Content model, Content entry forms,.. For a bit of fun, I started thinking “what really makes Cloud CMS better than your CMS” embracing my school boy mentality. 1. SaaS and/or On-Premise Cloud CMS is avaible as a SaaS product and OnPremise. Docker containers have allowed us to distribute the Cloud CMS product easily for On-Premise/Private Cloud installation. Whils
Score: 2.6033783
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Self Managed / Configuration / Encrypting PropertiesEncrypting Properties Cloud CMS lets you encrypt properties within your API configuration files to protect sensitive passwords, secrets and credentials. This encryption utilizes a public and private key. The private key is supplied to the Cloud CMS API server and the public key is provided to developers to encrypt sensitive data. To help you do this, Cloud CMS provides a command line tool. gitana-tools-encryptor.jar The gitana-tools-encryptor.jar works with Java 8 and gives you commands that you
Score: 2.5989668
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Forms / API / ConnectorsConnectors Alpaca supports Connectors as a means for loading schema, options, view and data information from remote data sources. By default, Alpaca comes with a default connector that handles loading of data from public / unprotected HTTP/HTTPS URLs. Connectors are used to load information based on what they receive in the following properties: schemaSource optionsSource dataSource viewSource Information loaded from any of these sources is merged with information that is fed directly into Alpac
Score: 2.5031848
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Application Server / Authentication / Authenticators / DefaultDefault The Default Authenticator supports the storage of the user object onto the request. The user variable on the request is set on login() and removed on logout(). Its presence is used to determine whether a user is authenticated or not. In addition, the Passport.js logIn and logout functions are supported. If they are available on the request, they will be invoked. Finally, req.session is supported. If req.session is available, its save() method will be called to persist session state after
Score: 2.3994453
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Application Server / Authentication / Authenticators / SessionSession The Session Authenticator supports the storage of the user object on the session. The user variable on the request is set on login() and removed on logout(). Its presence is used to determine whether a user is authenticated or not. In addition, the Passport.js logIn and logout functions are supported. If they are available on the request, they will be invoked. Finally, req.session is supported. If req.session is available, its save() method will be called to persist session state after l
Score: 2.3994453
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Application Server / Authentication / Authenticators / DefaultDefault The Default Authenticator supports the storage of the user object onto the request. The user variable on the request is set on login() and removed on logout(). Its presence is used to determine whether a user is authenticated or not. In addition, the Passport.js logIn and logout functions are supported. If they are available on the request, they will be invoked. Finally, req.session is supported. If req.session is available, its save() method will be called to persist session state after
Score: 2.3994453
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Application Server / Authentication / Authenticators / SessionSession The Session Authenticator supports the storage of the user object on the session. The user variable on the request is set on login() and removed on logout(). Its presence is used to determine whether a user is authenticated or not. In addition, the Passport.js logIn and logout functions are supported. If they are available on the request, they will be invoked. Finally, req.session is supported. If req.session is available, its save() method will be called to persist session state after l
Score: 2.3994453
|
|
Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / User Interface / AwarenessAwareness Awareness service allows you to see who's viewing/editing the same document with you in real-time, just like google docs. In the above screenshot, there are three user avatars showing in the top right corner. That indicates that there are three people (including yourself) viewing/editing this document right now. Hover on each avatar to see the detail -- find out whom they are if you don't recognize the avatar. Auto Lock on Document Editing There are three possible phases you might see
Score: 2.3851585
|
|
Gitana / 4.0 / User Interface / User Interface / AwarenessAwareness Awareness service allows you to see who's viewing/editing the same document with you in real-time, just like google docs. In the above screenshot, there are three user avatars showing in the top right corner. That indicates that there are three people (including yourself) viewing/editing this document right now. Hover on each avatar to see the detail -- find out whom they are if you don't recognize the avatar. Auto Lock on Document Editing There are three possible phases you might see
Score: 2.3851585
|
|
Cloud CMS JavaScript Driver Release 1.0.3 is out!The Cloud CMS team is pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 1.0.3 of the Cloud CMS JavaScript Driver for jQuery, Dojo, Javascript/HTML5 and Node.js applications. Download today from http://github.com/gitana/gitana-javascript-driver. JavaScript Driver for Cloud CMS The Cloud CMS JavaScript Driver is a JS library that you can drop into your HTML5/JS applications to take advantage of the authoring and delivery APIs of the Cloud CMS server. It makes it easier for developers to ut
Score: 2.2932448
|