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Referencing Request Values

Adnan Hajdarević edited this page Sep 29, 2016 · 6 revisions

Referencing request values

There are three types of request values:

  1. HTTP Request Header values

    {
      "source": "header",
      "name": "Header-Name"
    }
  2. HTTP Query parameters

    {
      "source": "url",
      "name": "parameter-name"
    }
  3. Payload (JSON or form-value encoded)

    {
      "source": "payload",
      "name": "parameter-name"
    }

    Note: For JSON encoded payload, you can reference nested values using the dot-notation. For example, if you have following JSON payload

    {
      "commits": [
        {
          "commit": {
            "id": 1
          }
        }, {
          "commit": {
            "id": 2
          }
        }
      ]
    }

    You can reference the first commit id as

    {
      "source": "payload",
      "name": "commits.0.commit.id"
    }

    If the payload contains a key with the specified name "commits.0.commit.id", then the value of that key has priority over the dot-notation referencing.

If you are referencing values for environment, you can use envname property to set the name of the environment variable like so

{
  "source": "url",
  "name": "q",
  "envname": "QUERY"
}

to get the QUERY environment variable set to the q parameter passed in the query string.

Special cases

If you want to pass the entire payload as JSON string to your command you can use

{
  "source": "entire-payload"
}

for headers you can use

{
  "source": "entire-headers"
}

and for query variables you can use

{
  "source": "entire-query"
}

This is very important and helpful resources for planning

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