Samples for Hyperledger Fabric
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sapthasurendran c3a34ef559 apikey auth for Org1
Signed-off-by: sapthasurendran <saptha.surendran@ibm.com>

removed auth check from live,ready apis..

code format

http file changes for apikey

comments for getting api key

readme update for apikey usage

replaced -H with --header

apikey config made mandatory

fix linting

Signed-off-by: sapthasurendran <saptha.surendran@ibm.com>
2021-12-14 14:31:13 +00:00
asset-transfer-basic/rest-api-typescript apikey auth for Org1 2021-12-14 14:31:13 +00:00
.gitignore Refactor transaction logic 2021-12-14 14:14:56 +00:00
demo.http apikey auth for Org1 2021-12-14 14:31:13 +00:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2021-12-14 14:14:39 +00:00
README.md apikey auth for Org1 2021-12-14 14:31:13 +00:00

Fabric REST sample

Prototype sample REST server to demonstrate good Fabric Node SDK practices for parts of FAB-18511

The primary aim of this sample is to show how to write a long running client application using the Fabric Node SDK

The REST API is intended to work with the basic asset transfer example

To install the basic asset transfer chaincode on a local Fabric network, follow the Using the Fabric test network tutorial

Usage

Note: these instructions should work with the release-2.2 branch of fabric-samples but later versions require some changes

To build and start the sample REST server, you'll need to download and install an LTS version of node

Clone this repository and change to the fabric-rest-sample/asset-transfer-basic/rest-api-typescript directory before running the following commands

Install dependencies

npm install

Build the REST server

npm run build

Create a .env file to configure the server for the test network (make sure TEST_NETWORK_HOME is set to the fully qualified test-network directory)

TEST_NETWORK_HOME=$HOME/fabric-samples/test-network npm run generateEnv

Start a Redis server

npm run start:redis

Start the sample REST server

npm run start:dev

REST API

If everything went well, you can now make basic asset transfer REST calls! For example...

Get all assets...

curl http://localhost:3000/api/assets

Check whether an asset exists...

curl --include --request OPTIONS http://localhost:3000/api/assets/asset7

Create an asset...

curl --include --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" --request POST --data '{"id":"asset7","color":"red","size":42,"owner":"Jean","appraisedValue":101}' http://localhost:3000/api/assets

Read transaction status...

curl --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" http://localhost:3000/api/transactions/__transaction_id__

Read an asset...

curl --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" http://localhost:3000/api/assets/asset7

Update an asset...

curl --include --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" --request PUT --data '{"id":"asset7","color":"red","size":11,"owner":"Jean","appraisedValue":101}' http://localhost:3000/api/assets/asset7

Transfer an asset...

curl --include --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" --request PATCH --data '[{"op":"replace","path":"/owner","value":"Ashleigh"}]' http://localhost:3000/api/assets/asset7

Delete an asset...

curl --include --header "api-key:Api-Key <apikeyfororg>" --request DELETE http://localhost:3000/api/assets/asset7