JSON Schema

Kazoo uses JSON Schemas to validate incoming data from clients.

Any fields that aren’t defined in the JSON schema will be stored, unmodified, along side the validated fields (assuming all is well). This excludes Kazoo-managed private fields (top-level keys prefixed with "_" or "pvt_").

This is the API endpoint to inspect all JSON Schemas.

List All Available Schema

The default fetch will retrieve only the documents meant for the APIs to operate on (doc and system_config schemas). Kazoo also has the internal JSON APIs available as JSON schemas, which can be fetched via /v2/schemas?internals=true.

GET /v2/schemas

curl -v -X GET \
    -H "X-Auth-Token: {AUTH_TOKEN}" \
    http://{SERVER}:8000/v2/schemas
{
    "auth_token": "{AUTH_TOKEN}",
    "data": [
        "access_lists",
        "account_rate_limits",
        "accounts",
        "acls",
        "allotments",
        "api_auth",
        "app",
        "audit_logs",
        "blacklists",
        "bookkeepers",
        "call_waiting",
        "caller_id",
        "callflows",
        "callflows.collect_dtmf",
        "callflows.conference",
        "callflows.language",
        "callflows.lookupcidname",
        "callflows.manual_presence",
        "callflows.nomorobo",
        "callflows.pivot",
        "callflows.record_call",
        "callflows.response",
        "callflows.ring_group",
        "callflows.send_dtmf",
        "callflows.tts",
        "callflows.voicemail",
        "cccps",
        "cdr",
        "clicktocall",
        "conferences",
        "connectivity",
        "device_rate_limits",
        "devices",
        "dialplans",
        "directories",
        "domain_hosts",
        "domains",
        "faxbox",
        "faxes",
        "ledgers",
        "limits",
        "list_entries",
        "lists",
        "media",
        "menus",
        "metaflows",
        "notifications",
        "notify.callback",
        "phone_numbers",
        "port_requests",
        "profile",
        "provisioner_v5",
        "queue_update",
        "queues",
        "rates",
        "resource_jobs",
        "resources",
        "sms",
        "temporal_rules",
        "temporal_rules_sets",
        "token_restrictions",
        "trunkstore",
        "user_auth",
        "user_auth_recovery",
        "users",
        "vmboxes",
        "webhook_attempts",
        "webhooks",
        "whitelabels"
    ],
    "request_id": "{REQUEST_ID}",
    "revision": "{REVISION}",
    "status": "success"
}

Fetch the schema definitions

GET /v2/schemas/{SCHEMA_NAME}

curl -v -X GET \
    -H "X-Auth-Token: {AUTH_TOKEN}" \
    http://{SERVER}:8000/v2/schemas/acls
{
    "auth_token": "",
    "data": {
        "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
        "additionalProperties": false,
        "description": "Access Control List entries",
        "id": "acls",
        "properties": {
            "cidr": {
                "description": "Classless Inter-Domain Routing IP notation for use on the ACL",
                "type": "string"
            },
            "description": {
                "description": "Will be added as a comment for quick identification later",
                "maxLength": 30,
                "type": "string"
            },
            "network-list-name": {
                "description": "The trusted list should represent anything that can issue calls without authorization.  The authoritative list should indicate inter-network routing equipment (SBC, etc).",
                "enum": [
                    "authoritative",
                    "trusted"
                ],
                "type": "string"
            },
            "type": {
                "default": "allow",
                "description": "Allow or deny this CIDR",
                "enum": [
                    "allow",
                    "deny"
                ],
                "type": "string"
            }
        },
        "required": [
            "cidr",
            "network-list-name",
            "type"
        ],
        "type": "object"
    },
    "request_id": "{REQUEST_ID}",
    "revision": "{REVISION}",
    "status": "success"
}

Perform a validation

Test your request data against the validation schema (without performing a database operation).

PUT /v2/schemas/{SCHEMA_NAME}/validation

curl -v -X PUT \
    -H "X-Auth-Token: {AUTH_TOKEN}" \
    -d '{"data":{...}}'
    http://{SERVER}:8000/v2/schemas/{SCHEMA_NAME}/validation
{
    "auth_token":"",
    "data":{...},
    "request_id":"{REQUEST_ID}",
    "revision":"{REVISION}",
    "status":"success"
}