Call the Microsoft Graph REST API
call_graph_endpoint(token, operation, ..., options = list(),
api_version = getOption("azure_graph_api_version"))call_graph_url(token, url, ..., body = NULL, encode = "json",
http_verb = c("GET", "DELETE", "PUT", "POST", "HEAD", "PATCH"),
http_status_handler = c("stop", "warn", "message", "pass"),
auto_refresh = TRUE)
An Azure OAuth token, of class AzureToken.
The operation to perform, which will form part of the URL path.
Other arguments passed to lower-level code, ultimately to the appropriate functions in httr.
A named list giving the URL query parameters.
The API version to use, which will form part of the URL sent to the host.
A complete URL to send to the host.
The body of the request, for PUT
/POST
/PATCH
.
The encoding (really content-type) for the request body. The default value "json" means to serialize a list body into a JSON object. If you pass an already-serialized JSON object as the body, set encode
to "raw".
The HTTP verb as a string, one of GET
, PUT
, POST
, DELETE
, HEAD
or PATCH
.
How to handle in R the HTTP status code of a response. "stop"
, "warn"
or "message"
will call the appropriate handlers in httr, while "pass"
ignores the status code.
Whether to refresh/renew the OAuth token if it is no longer valid.
If http_status_handler
is one of "stop"
, "warn"
or "message"
, the status code of the response is checked. If an error is not thrown, the parsed content of the response is returned with the status code attached as the "status" attribute.
If http_status_handler
is "pass"
, the entire response is returned without modification.
These functions form the low-level interface between R and Microsoft Graph. call_graph_endpoint
forms a URL from its arguments and passes it to call_graph_url
.
httr::GET, httr::PUT, httr::POST, httr::DELETE, httr::stop_for_status, httr::content