This section introduces handlers and using an example, explains how to write a custom handler:
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APIAuthenticationHandler:
Validates the OAuth2 bearer token used to invoke the API. It also determines whether the token is of typeProduction
orSandbox
and setsMessageContext
variables as appropriate.APIThrottleHandler:
Throttles requests based on the throttling policy specified by thepolicyKey
property. Throttling is applied both at the application level as well as subscription level.-
APIMgtUsageHandler:
Publishes events to BAM for collection and analysis of statistics. This handler only comes to effect if API usage tracking is enabled. See Publishing API Runtime Statistics for more information. APIMgtGoogleAnalyticsTrackingHandler:
Publishes events to Google Analytics. This handler only comes into effect if Google analytics tracking is enabled. See Integrating with Google Analytics for more information.APIManagerExtensionHandler
: Triggers extension sequences. By default, the extension handler is listed at last in the handler chain, and therefore is executed last. You cannot change the order in which the handlers are executed, except the extension handler. To configure the API Gateway to execute extension handler first, uncomment the<ExtensionHandlerPosition>
section in the<APIM_HOME>/repository/conf/api-manager.xml
file and provide the valuetop
. This is useful when you want to execute your own extensions before our default handlers in situations like doing additional security checks such as signature verification on access tokens before executing the default security handler.
See Adding Mediation Extensions.
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package org.wso2.carbon.test; import org.apache.synapse.MessageContext; import org.apache.synapse.core.axis2.Axis2MessageContext; import org.apache.synapse.rest.AbstractHandler; import org.wso2.carbon.apimgt.gateway.handlers.security.APISecurityException; import java.util.Map; public class CustomAPIAuthenticationHandler extends AbstractHandler { private static final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(CustomAPIAuthenticationHandler.class); public boolean handleRequest(MessageContext messageContext) { try { if (authenticate(messageContext)) { return true; } } catch (APISecurityException e) { elogger.printStackTraceerror(); } return false; } public boolean handleResponse(MessageContext messageContext) { return true; } public boolean authenticate(MessageContext synCtx) throws APISecurityException { Map headers = getTransportHeaders(synCtx); String authHeader = getAuthorizationHeader(headers); if (authHeader.startsWith("userName")) { return true; } return false; } private String getAuthorizationHeader(Map headers) { return (String) headers.get("Authorization"); } private Map getTransportHeaders(MessageContext messageContext) { return (Map) ((Axis2MessageContext) messageContext).getAxis2MessageContext(). getProperty(org.apache.axis2.context.MessageContext.TRANSPORT_HEADERS); } } |
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You can engage a custom handler to all APIs at once or only to selected APIs.
To engage to all APIs, the recommended approach is to add it to the <APIM_HOME>/repository/resources/api_templates/velocity_template.xml
file. For example, the following code segment adds the custom authentication handler that you wrote earlier to the velocity_template.xml
file while making sure that it skips the default APIAuthenticationHandler
implementation:
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<handler class="org.wso2.carbon.apimgt.custom.authentication.handler.CustomAPIAuthenticationHandler" /> #foreach($handler in $handlers) #if(!($handler.className == "org.wso2.carbon.apimgt.gateway.handlers.security.APIAuthenticationHandler")) <handler xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" class="$handler.className"> #if($handler.hasProperties()) #set ($map = $handler.getProperties() ) #foreach($property in $map.entrySet()) <property name="$!property.key" value="$!property.value"/> #end #end </handler> #end #end </handlers> |
Given below is how to engage handlers to a single API, by editing its source view.
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