Finally! Apiman 1.2.1.Final is released!

· apiman
Avatar for Eric Wittmann
Co-founder of Apiman, founder of Apicurio, owner of very fluffy dog.
/ Red Hat /

It’s been ages since apiman had a new release! Well the reason for that is we’ve been pushing to get the first version of 1.2.x out the door. I’m here to tell you - that day has finally arrived.

We’re happy to announce apiman 1.2.1.Final. Our goal is now to go back to our previous, more frequent, release schedule.

Where can I find more information?

We’ve updated the website, the guides, and other collateral information to reflect all the additions and changes in the new version. For more information about this latest release of apiman, here are some useful links:

Don’t want to slog through the links above? I totally understand - let me give you a quick high level overview of what’s new in 1.2 (rhyming ftw).

You should probably expect to see more detailed blog posts and documentation for each of the following, so stay tuned!

Entity Renaming

I suspect this will become a separate blog post, because it probably needs repeating. After getting feedback from users, it has become clear that the names of the apiman entities/objects aren’t very intuitive. The 1.1.x version of apiman used the following names:

  • Organization

  • Plan

  • Service

  • Application

In the new version of apiman, we made some changes to try and make things a bit more clear. It turns out that the first two concepts are clear enough, but Service and Application are a little bit ambiguous. So the new names in apiman 1.2.x are:

  • Organization

  • Plan

  • API

  • Client App (aka Client)

Functionally everything works the same, it’s just the names that have changed. It’s worth pointing out that the renaming isn’t just superficial (e.g. text in the UI). Instead, we refactored all the code and the REST endpoints to reflect these new concepts.

Plugin Support

We already had interesting support for plugins, but now we’ve gone further and made it much easier to find, install, test, and upgrade apiman plugins. There’s a new Administration UI where you can see a list of available plugins and easily install them. If you are creating your own plugin you can easily reload and/or uninstall plugins to make it easier to test your changes. And finally, if your plugin version ends with -SNAPSHOT then apiman will automatically reload the plugin every time it is used. This makes it VERY easy to iterate on the plugin code and see the results quickly, without doing anything in the UI and without restarting apiman!

Import/Export

One of the really nice new features in 1.2.x is the ability to export your apiman configuration to a file, which can later be imported into a different apiman system. This feature is designed to satisfy the following use-cases:

  • Backing up your apiman data

  • Migrating apiman data from a Test environment to a Production environment

  • Upgrading to a newer version of apiman

We’ll follow up this blog post with one that goes into this feature in more depth.

What happened to 1.2.0.Final?

You know what, don’t even worry about it.

/post