| GET | /warranty/v1/articles |
|---|
import java.math.*
import java.util.*
import net.servicestack.client.*
import com.google.gson.annotations.*
import com.google.gson.reflect.*
open class StockRequest : BaseRequest<StockResponse>()
{
}
open class BaseRequest<TResponse> : IRequest
{
var sid:String? = null
var app:String? = null
var _os:String? = null
var _appVersion:String? = null
var _searchMethod:String? = null
}
open class StockResponse : BaseResponse()
{
var articles:ArrayList<Article> = ArrayList<Article>()
}
open class BaseResponse : IRespose
{
var _xmlns:String? = null
var _type:String? = null
var _source:String? = null
var _tstamp:String? = null
var _user:String? = null
var _env:String? = null
var _uri:String? = null
var _query:String? = null
}
open class Article
{
var ref:String? = null
var serial:String? = null
var name:String? = null
var site:LookupInt? = null
var brand:String? = null
var isConsignment:Boolean? = null
}
open class LookupInt : ILookupInt
{
@SerializedName("object") var Object:String? = null
var id:Int? = null
}
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .jsv suffix or ?format=jsv
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
GET /warranty/v1/articles HTTP/1.1 Host: qp-microservices-booster.richemont.com Accept: text/jsv
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/jsv
Content-Length: length
{
articles:
[
{
ref: String,
serial: String,
name: String,
site:
{
object: String,
id: 0
},
brand: String,
isConsignment: False
}
],
_xmlns: String,
_type: String,
_source: String,
_tstamp: String,
_user: String,
_env: String,
_uri: String,
_query: String
}