Everything you need to know to work with the VerneMQ HTTP administration interface
The VerneMQ HTTP API is enabled by default and installs an HTTP handler on http://localhost:8888/api/v1. To read more about configuring the HTTP listener, see HTTP Listener Configuration. You can configure a HTTP listener, or a HTTPS listener to serve the HTTP API v1.
Managing API keys
The VerneMQ HTTP API uses basic authentication where an API key is passed as the username and the password is left empty. So the first step to us the HTTP API is to create an API key:
The VerneMQ HTTP API is a wrapper over the vmq-admin CLI tool, and anything that can be done using vmq-admin can be done using the HTTP API. Note that the HTTP API is therefore subject to any changes made to the vmq-admin tools and their flags & options structure. All requests are performed doing a HTTP GET and if no errors occurred an HTTP 200 OK code is returned with a possible non-empty JSON payload.
The API is using basic auth where the API key is passed as the username. An example using curl would look like this:
The mapping between vmq-admin and the HTTP API is straightforward, and if one is already familiar with how the vmq-admin tool works, working with the API should be easy. The mapping works such that the command part of a vmq-admin invocation is turned into a path, and the options and flags are turned into the query string.
A mandatory parameter like the client-id in the vmq-admin session disconnect client-id=myclient command should be translated as: ?client-id=myclient.
An optional flag like --cleanup in the vmq-admin session disconnect client-id=myclient --cleanup command should be translated as: &--cleanup
Let's look at the cluster join command as an example, which looks like this: