Easy build nodejs code to safe deploy to other service.
adds node crypto signing for browsers
abstract base class for crypto-streams
browserify version of publicEncrypt & privateDecrypt
RSA for browserify
aes, for browserify
Provides functions for detecting if the host environment supports the WebCrypto API
browserify-des ===
A pure JS implementation SHA256.
abstract base class for hash-streams
implementation of crypto for the browser
ciphers for the browser
Minimalistic tools for JS crypto modules
SHA256 wrapper for browsers that prefers `window.crypto.subtle` but will fall back to a pure JS implementation in @aws-crypto/sha256-js to provide a consistent interface for SHA256.
JavaScript library of crypto standards.
Helper functions
pure js diffie-hellman
Asm.js content for wasm-crypto
Wasm content for wasm-crypto
Pure JS implementation of CRC32 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_redundancy_check
createECDH but browserifiable
Compute ripemd160 of bytes or strings.
Pure JS implementation of CRC32-C https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_redundancy_check
Streamable SHA hashes in pure javascript
Ruby library to help you build your crypto application on BlockCypher
Ruby library to help you build your crypto application on BlockSDK
Ruby library to help you build your crypto application on BlockSDK
blockchain-lite - build your own blockchain with crypto hashes - revolutionize the world with blockchains, blockchains, blockchains one block at a time
merkletree - build your own crypto hash trees; named after Ralph Merkle who patented hash trees in 1979; grow your own money on trees
An easy-to-use client/wrapper for CoinGecko's crypto API. Get prices, exchanges, volume, and more without building your own API class.
= Mcrypt - libmcrypt bindings for Ruby Mcrypt provides Ruby-language bindings for libmcrypt(3), a symmetric cryptography library. {Libmcrypt}[http://mcrypt.sourceforge.net/] supports lots of different ciphers and encryption modes. == You will need * A working Ruby installation (>= 1.8.6 or 1.9) * A working libmcrypt installation (2.5.x or 2.6.x, tested with 2.5.8) * A sane build environment == Installation Install the gem: gem install ruby-mcrypt --test -- --with-mcrypt-dir=/path/to/mcrypt/prefix If you're installing on Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install mcrypt libmcrypt-dev gem install ruby-mcrypt If you want to run the longer test suite, do this instead: MCRYPT_TEST_BRUTE=1 \ gem install ruby-mcrypt --test -- --with-mcrypt-dir=/path/to/mcrypt/prefix Put this in your code: require 'rubygems' require 'mcrypt' Or in Rails' environment.rb: gem "ruby-mcrypt", :lib => "mcrypt" == Usage crypto = Mcrypt.new(:twofish, :cbc, MY_KEY, MY_IV, :pkcs) # encryption and decryption in one step ciphertext = crypto.encrypt(plaintext) plaintext = crypto.decrypt(ciphertext) # encrypt in smaller steps while chunk = $stdin.read(4096) $stdout << crypto.encrypt_more(chunk) end $stdout << crypto.encrypt_finish # or decrypt: while chunk = $stdin.read(4096) $stdout << crypto.decrypt_more(chunk) end $stdout << crypto.decrypt_finish == Known Issues * Test coverage is lacking. If you find any bugs, please let the author know. == Wish List * IO-like behavior, e.g. crypto.open($stdin) { |stream| ... } == Author * Philip Garrett <philgarr at gmail.com> == Copyright and License Copyright (c) 2009-2013 Philip Garrett. Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
The affixapi.com API documentation. # Introduction Affix API is an OAuth 2.1 application that allows developers to access customer data, without developers needing to manage or maintain integrations; or collect login credentials or API keys from users for these third party systems. # OAuth 2.1 Affix API follows the [OAuth 2.1 spec](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-oauth-v2-1-08). As an OAuth application, Affix API handles not only both the collection of sensitive user credentials or API keys, but also builds and maintains the integrations with the providers, so you don't have to. # How to obtain an access token in order to get started, you must: - register a `client_id` - direct your user to the sign in flow (`https://connect.affixapi.com` [with the appropriate query parameters](https://github.com/affixapi/starter-kit/tree/master/connect)) - capture `authorization_code` we will send to your redirect URI after the sign in flow is complete and exchange that `authorization_code` for a Bearer token # Sandbox keys (developer mode) ### dev ``` eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6Ims5RmxwSFR1YklmZWNsUU5QRVZzeFcxazFZZ0Zfbk1BWllOSGVuOFQxdGciLCJ0eXAiOiJKV1MifQ.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.VLWYjCQvBS0C3ZA6_J3-U-idZj5EYI2IlDdTjAWBxSIHGufp6cqaVodKsF2BeIqcIeB3P0lW-KL9mY3xGd7ckQ ``` #### `employees` endpoint sample: ``` curl --fail \ -X GET \ -H 'Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6Ims5RmxwSFR1YklmZWNsUU5QRVZzeFcxazFZZ0Zfbk1BWllOSGVuOFQxdGciLCJ0eXAiOiJKV1MifQ.eyJwcm92aWRlciI6InNhbmRib3giLCJzY29wZXMiOlsiLzIwMjMtMDMtMDEvZGV2ZWxvcGVyL2NvbXBhbnkiLCIvMjAyMy0wMy0wMS9kZXZlbG9wZXIvZW1wbG95ZWUiLCIvMjAyMy0wMy0wMS9kZXZlbG9wZXIvZW1wbG95ZWVzIiwiLzIwMjMtMDMtMDEvZGV2ZWxvcGVyL2lkZW50aXR5IiwiLzIwMjMtMDMtMDEvZGV2ZWxvcGVyL3BheXJ1bnMiLCIvMjAyMy0wMy0wMS9kZXZlbG9wZXIvcGF5cnVucy86cGF5cnVuX2lkIiwiLzIwMjMtMDMtMDEvZGV2ZWxvcGVyL3RpbWUtb2ZmLWJhbGFuY2VzIiwiLzIwMjMtMDMtMDEvZGV2ZWxvcGVyL3RpbWUtb2ZmLWVudHJpZXMiLCIvMjAyMy0wMy0wMS9kZXZlbG9wZXIvdGltZXNoZWV0cyJdLCJ0b2tlbiI6ImQ1OTZhMmYzLWYzNzktNGE1ZC1hMmRhLTk4OWJmYWViYTg1ZCIsImlhdCI6MTcwMjkyMDkwMywiaXNzIjoicHVibGljYXBpLWludGVybWVkaWF0ZS5kZXYuZW5naW5lZXJpbmcuYWZmaXhhcGkuY29tIiwic3ViIjoiZGV2ZWxvcGVyIiwiYXVkIjoiM0ZEQUVERjktMURDQTRGNTQtODc5NDlGNkEtNDEwMjc2NDMifQ.VLWYjCQvBS0C3ZA6_J3-U-idZj5EYI2IlDdTjAWBxSIHGufp6cqaVodKsF2BeIqcIeB3P0lW-KL9mY3xGd7ckQ' \ 'https://dev.api.affixapi.com/2023-03-01/developer/employees' ``` ### prod ``` eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6Ims5RmxwSFR1YklmZWNsUU5QRVZzeFcxazFZZ0Zfbk1BWllOSGVuOFQxdGciLCJ0eXAiOiJKV1MifQ.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.2zdpFAmiyYiYk6MOcbXNUwwR4M1Fextnaac340x54AidiWXCyw-u9KeavbqfYF6q8a9kcDLrxhJ8Wc_3tIzuVw ``` #### `employees` endpoint sample: ``` curl --fail \ -X GET \ -H 'Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6Ims5RmxwSFR1YklmZWNsUU5QRVZzeFcxazFZZ0Zfbk1BWllOSGVuOFQxdGciLCJ0eXAiOiJKV1MifQ.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.2zdpFAmiyYiYk6MOcbXNUwwR4M1Fextnaac340x54AidiWXCyw-u9KeavbqfYF6q8a9kcDLrxhJ8Wc_3tIzuVw' \ 'https://api.affixapi.com/2023-03-01/developer/employees' ``` # Webhooks An exciting feature for HR/Payroll modes are webhooks. If enabled, your `webhook_uri` is set on your `client_id` for the respective environment: `dev | prod` Webhooks are configured to make live requests to the underlying integration 1x/hr, and if a difference is detected since the last request, we will send a request to your `webhook_uri` with this shape: ``` { added: <api.v20230301.Employees>[ <api.v20230301.Employee>{ ..., date_of_birth: '2010-08-06', display_full_name: 'Daija Rogahn', employee_number: '57993', employment_status: 'pending', employment_type: 'other', employments: [ { currency: 'eur', effective_date: '2022-02-25', employment_type: 'other', job_title: 'Dynamic Implementation Manager', pay_frequency: 'semimonthly', pay_period: 'YEAR', pay_rate: 96000, }, ], first_name: 'Daija', ... } ], removed: [], updated: [ <api.v20230301.Employee>{ ..., date_of_birth: '2009-11-09', display_full_name: 'Lourdes Stiedemann', employee_number: '63189', employment_status: 'leave', employment_type: 'full_time', employments: [ { currency: 'gbp', effective_date: '2023-01-16', employment_type: 'full_time', job_title: 'Forward Brand Planner', pay_frequency: 'semimonthly', pay_period: 'YEAR', pay_rate: 86000, }, ], first_name: 'Lourdes', } ] } ``` the following headers will be sent with webhook requests: ``` x-affix-api-signature: ab8474e609db95d5df3adc39ea3add7a7544bd215c5c520a30a650ae93a2fba7 x-affix-api-origin: webhooks-employees-webhook user-agent: affixapi.com ``` Before trusting the payload, you should sign the payload and verify the signature matches the signature sent by the `affixapi.com` service. This secures that the data sent to your `webhook_uri` is from the `affixapi.com` server. The signature is created by combining the signing secret (your `client_secret`) with the body of the request sent using a standard HMAC-SHA256 keyed hash. The signature can be created via: - create an `HMAC` with your `client_secret` - update the `HMAC` with the payload - get the hex digest -> this is the signature Sample `typescript` code that follows this recipe: ``` import { createHmac } from 'crypto'; export const computeSignature = ({ str, signingSecret, }: { signingSecret: string; str: string; }): string => { const hmac = createHmac('sha256', signingSecret); hmac.update(str); const signature = hmac.digest('hex'); return signature; }; ``` ## Rate limits Open endpoints (not gated by an API key) (applied at endpoint level): - 15 requests every 1 minute (by IP address) - 25 requests every 5 minutes (by IP address) Gated endpoints (require an API key) (applied at endpoint level): - 40 requests every 1 minute (by IP address) - 40 requests every 5 minutes (by `client_id`) Things to keep in mind: - Open endpoints (not gated by an API key) will likely be called by your users, not you, so rate limits generally would not apply to you. - As a developer, rate limits are applied at the endpoint granularity. - For example, say the rate limits below are 10 requests per minute by ip. from that same ip, within 1 minute, you get: - 10 requests per minute on `/orders`, - another 10 requests per minute on `/items`, - and another 10 requests per minute on `/identity`, - for a total of 30 requests per minute.
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