3.0.0 • Published 21 hours ago

@azure/arm-managedapplications v3.0.0

Weekly downloads
49
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
21 hours ago

Azure Application client library for JavaScript

This package contains an isomorphic SDK (runs both in Node.js and in browsers) for Azure Application client.

ARM applications

Source code | Package (NPM) | API reference documentation | Samples

Getting started

Currently supported environments

Prerequisites

Install the @azure/arm-managedapplications package

Install the Azure Application client library for JavaScript with npm:

npm install @azure/arm-managedapplications

Create and authenticate a ApplicationClient

To create a client object to access the Azure Application API, you will need the endpoint of your Azure Application resource and a credential. The Azure Application client can use Azure Active Directory credentials to authenticate. You can find the endpoint for your Azure Application resource in the Azure Portal.

Using an Azure Active Directory Credential

You can authenticate with Azure Active Directory using the Azure Identity library. To use the DefaultAzureCredential provider shown below, or other credential providers provided with the Azure SDK, please install the @azure/identity package:

npm install @azure/identity

You will also need to register a new AAD application and grant access to Azure Application by assigning the suitable role to your service principal (note: roles such as "Owner" will not grant the necessary permissions). Set the values of the client ID, tenant ID, and client secret of the AAD application as environment variables: AZURE_CLIENT_ID, AZURE_TENANT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET.

const { ApplicationClient } = require("@azure/arm-managedapplications");
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const client = new ApplicationClient("<endpoint>", new DefaultAzureCredential());

Key concepts

ApplicationClient

ApplicationClient is the primary interface for developers using the Azure Application client library. Explore the methods on this client object to understand the different features of the Azure Application service that you can access.

Troubleshooting

Logging

Enabling logging may help uncover useful information about failures. In order to see a log of HTTP requests and responses, set the AZURE_LOG_LEVEL environment variable to info. Alternatively, logging can be enabled at runtime by calling setLogLevel in the @azure/logger:

import { setLogLevel } from "@azure/logger";
setLogLevel("info");

For more detailed instructions on how to enable logs, you can look at the @azure/logger package docs.

Next steps

Please take a look at the samples directory for detailed examples on how to use this library.

Contributing

If you'd like to contribute to this library, please read the contributing guide to learn more about how to build and test the code.

Related projects

Impressions

3.0.0

8 months ago

2.1.0

1 year ago

2.0.1

2 years ago

2.0.0

2 years ago

2.0.0-beta.1

3 years ago

1.1.2

3 years ago

30.0.0-beta.2

3 years ago

1.1.1

3 years ago

30.0.0-beta.1

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1.1.0

3 years ago

1.0.2

5 years ago

1.0.1

5 years ago

1.0.0

5 years ago

0.1.0

5 years ago