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You can either authorize with the organizationKey and the UserLoginName or you can use the apiToken (
Image Added) for the authorization. For more informtaion information about the two different authorizations please have a look at the Postman Tutorial
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title | Alternative: SOAP implementation (deprecated) |
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The authorization XML has to be encoded via HTML special characters (“<” in “<” and “>” in “>”). If this encoding is not done you will receive a HTTP 400 Bad Request error. Higher programming languages takes automatically care of the conversation, so just in lower languages it is required (or also SOAPUI). You can find a configuration for the authorization for SOAP (XML) in the next lines: Note: The next lines show a authorization with the organizationKey and the userLoginName. Code Block |
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language | xml |
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theme | Eclipse |
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firstline | 0 |
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| <authorization>
<organizationKey>4647688a-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxx</organizationKey>
<userLoginName>your@email.address</userLoginName>
</authorization>
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Inline-XML (with HTML special characters): Code Block |
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language | xml |
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theme | Eclipse |
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firstline | 0 |
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| <authorization>
<organizationKey>4647688a-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxx</organizationKey>
<userLoginName>your@email.address</userLoginName>
</authorization> |
You can also authorize with the apiToken. Please see the following configurations: Code Block |
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language | xml |
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theme | Eclipse |
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firstline | 0 |
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| <authorization>
<apiToken >hizit4enf8ellb6b5hwh5b------------------------------</apiToken >
</authorization> |
Inline-XML (with HTML special characters): Code Block |
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language | xml |
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theme | Eclipse |
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firstline | 0 |
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| <authorization>
<apiToken >hizit4enf8ellb6b5hwh5b------------------------------</apiToken >
</authorization> |
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