| POST | /callback |
|---|
import 'package:servicestack/servicestack.dart';
class TwilioCallback implements IConvertible
{
String? accountSid;
String? body;
String? from;
String? messageSid;
String? to;
TwilioCallback({this.accountSid,this.body,this.from,this.messageSid,this.to});
TwilioCallback.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) { fromMap(json); }
fromMap(Map<String, dynamic> json) {
accountSid = json['accountSid'];
body = json['body'];
from = json['from'];
messageSid = json['messageSid'];
to = json['to'];
return this;
}
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => {
'accountSid': accountSid,
'body': body,
'from': from,
'messageSid': messageSid,
'to': to
};
getTypeName() => "TwilioCallback";
TypeContext? context = _ctx;
}
TypeContext _ctx = TypeContext(library: 'cpmwebservices_t.clarkpud.com', types: <String, TypeInfo> {
'TwilioCallback': TypeInfo(TypeOf.Class, create:() => TwilioCallback()),
});
To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .json suffix or ?format=json
To embed the response in a jsonp callback, append ?callback=myCallback
The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.
POST /callback HTTP/1.1
Host: cpmwebservices-t.clarkpud.com
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: length
{"accountSid":"String","body":"String","from":"String","messageSid":"String","to":"String"}
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json Content-Length: length (string)