GetDetector C++ Example
#include <CkRest.h>
#include <CkAuthAws.h>
#include <CkStringBuilder.h>
#include <CkJsonObject.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
// This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
CkRest rest;
bool success;
CkAuthAws authAws;
authAws.put_AccessKey("AWS_ACCESS_KEY");
authAws.put_SecretKey("AWS_SECRET_KEY");
// Don't forget to change the region to your particular region. (Also make the same change in the call to Connect below.)
authAws.put_Region("us-west-2");
authAws.put_ServiceName("guardduty");
// SetAuthAws causes Chilkat to automatically add the following headers: Authorization, X-Amz-Date
rest.SetAuthAws(authAws);
// URL: https://guardduty.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/
// Use the same region as specified above.
success = rest.Connect("guardduty.us-west-2.amazonaws.com",443,true,true);
if (success != true) {
std::cout << "ConnectFailReason: " << rest.get_ConnectFailReason() << "\r\n";
std::cout << rest.lastErrorText() << "\r\n";
return;
}
rest.AddHeader("Content-Type","application/x-amz-json-1.1");
rest.AddHeader("X-Amz-Target","GetDetector");
CkStringBuilder sbResponseBody;
success = rest.FullRequestNoBodySb("GET","/detector/{detectorId}",sbResponseBody);
if (success != true) {
std::cout << rest.lastErrorText() << "\r\n";
return;
}
int respStatusCode = rest.get_ResponseStatusCode();
std::cout << "response status code = " << respStatusCode << "\r\n";
if (respStatusCode != 200) {
std::cout << "Response Header:" << "\r\n";
std::cout << rest.responseHeader() << "\r\n";
std::cout << "Response Body:" << "\r\n";
std::cout << sbResponseBody.getAsString() << "\r\n";
return;
}
CkJsonObject jResp;
jResp.LoadSb(sbResponseBody);
// The following code parses the JSON response.
// A sample JSON response is shown below the sample code.
// Use this online tool to generate parsing code from sample JSON:
// Generate Parsing Code from JSON
// Chilkat functions returning "const char *" return a pointer to temporary internal memory owned and managed by Chilkat.
// See this example explaining how this memory should be used: const char * functions.
const char *createdAt = jResp.stringOf("createdAt");
const char *Status = jResp.stringOf("dataSources.cloudTrail.status");
const char *DnsLogsStatus = jResp.stringOf("dataSources.dnsLogs.status");
const char *FlowLogsStatus = jResp.stringOf("dataSources.flowLogs.status");
const char *AuditLogsStatus = jResp.stringOf("dataSources.kubernetes.auditLogs.status");
const char *S3LogsStatus = jResp.stringOf("dataSources.s3Logs.status");
const char *findingPublishingFrequency = jResp.stringOf("findingPublishingFrequency");
const char *serviceRole = jResp.stringOf("serviceRole");
const char *status = jResp.stringOf("status");
const char *v_String = jResp.stringOf("tags.string");
const char *updatedAt = jResp.stringOf("updatedAt");
// A sample JSON response body parsed by the above code:
// {
// "createdAt": "string",
// "dataSources": {
// "cloudTrail": {
// "status": "string"
// },
// "dnsLogs": {
// "status": "string"
// },
// "flowLogs": {
// "status": "string"
// },
// "kubernetes": {
// "auditLogs": {
// "status": "string"
// }
// },
// "s3Logs": {
// "status": "string"
// }
// },
// "findingPublishingFrequency": "string",
// "serviceRole": "string",
// "status": "string",
// "tags": {
// "string": "string"
// },
// "updatedAt": "string"
// }
}