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authorChristian Grothoff <christian@grothoff.org>2018-03-11 23:08:30 +0100
committerChristian Grothoff <christian@grothoff.org>2018-03-11 23:08:30 +0100
commit5f64092af04ceef6a1962969fbee1bcaea8548c2 (patch)
treefae17fc1e27b010ccd7030820c8c4edb958ffd79 /doc
parentf74c0306a5e32949a587d49aac309c70ce083399 (diff)
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misc edits to manual, some open comments
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/merchant-api.content.texi245
1 files changed, 160 insertions, 85 deletions
diff --git a/doc/merchant-api.content.texi b/doc/merchant-api.content.texi
index 88b96b3a..fa1f7f5c 100644
--- a/doc/merchant-api.content.texi
+++ b/doc/merchant-api.content.texi
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
@c Titlepage
@c
@titlepage
-@title The GNU Taler Merchant API tutorial
+@title The GNU Taler Merchant API tutorial
@subtitle Version @value{VERSION}
@subtitle @value{UPDATED}
@author Christian Grothoff (@email{christian@@grothoff.org})
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
* Introduction:: What this tutorial is about
* Accepting a Simple Payment:: How to accept simple payments
* Giving Refunds:: How to give refunds to customers
-* Giving Customer Tips:: How to reward customers with tips
+* Giving Customers Tips:: How to reward customers with tips
* Advanced topics:: Detailed solutions to specific issues
@@ -159,10 +159,12 @@ Some functionality of the backend (the ``public interface``) is also exposed to
customer's browser directly. In the HTTP API, all public endpoints are prefixed with @code{/public/}.
@section Public Sandbox Backend and Authentication
+@cindex sandbox
+@cindex authorization
-How the frontend authenticates with the Taler backend depends in the configuration. @xref{Top,,, manual, Taler Merchant Operating Manual}.
+How the frontend authenticates to the Taler backend depends on the configuration. @xref{Top,,, manual, Taler Merchant Operating Manual}.
-The public sandbox backend @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net} uses an API key
+The public sandbox backend @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net/} uses an API key
in the @code{Authorization} header. The value of this header must be
@code{ApiKey sandbox} for the public sandbox backend.
@@ -198,18 +200,20 @@ curl -i 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/' \
If an HTTP status code other than 200 is returned, something went wrong. You
should figure out what the problem is before continuing with this tutorial.
-The sandbox backend @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net} uses @code{KUDOS} as
-an imaginary currency. Coins denominated with @code{KUDOS} can be withdrawn
-from @url{https://bank.demo.taler.net}.
+The sandbox backend @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net/} uses @code{KUDOS} as
+an imaginary currency. Coins denominated in @code{KUDOS} can be withdrawn
+from @url{https://bank.demo.taler.net/}.
@section Merchant Instances
+@cindex instance
+
The same Taler merchant backend server can be used by multiple separate
merchants that are separate business entities. Each of these separate business
entities is called a @emph{merchant instance}, and is identified by an
alphanumeric @emph{instance id}. If the instance is omitted, the instance id
@code{default} is assumed.
-The following merchant instances are configured on @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net}:
+The following merchant instances are configured on @url{https://backend.demo.taler.net/}:
@itemize
@item @code{GNUnet} (The GNUnet project)
@item @code{FSF} (The Free Software Foundation)
@@ -217,18 +221,20 @@ The following merchant instances are configured on @url{https://backend.demo.tal
@item @code{default} (Kudos Inc.)
@end itemize
-Note that these are fictional merchants and not necessarily affiliated with the
-respective project.
+Note that these are fictional merchants used for our demonstrators and
+not affiliated with or officially approved by the respective projects.
@node Accepting a Simple Payment
@chapter Accepting a Simple Payment
@section Creating an Order for a Payment
+@cindex order
Payments in Taler revolve around an @emph{order}, which is a machine-readable
-description of the payment's details. Before accepting a Taler payment as a merchant
-you must create an order.
+description of the business transaction for which the payment is to be made.
+Before accepting a Taler payment as a merchant
+you must create such an order.
This is done by posting a JSON object to the backend's @code{/order} API endpoint. At least the
following fields must be given:
@@ -238,9 +244,9 @@ following fields must be given:
@code{CURRENCY:DECIMAL_VALUE}, for example @code{EUR:10} for 10 Euros or
@code{KUDOS:1.5} for 1.5 KUDOS.
-@item @var{summary}: A human-readable summary for what the payment is about,
-should be short enough to fit into titles, though currently no hard limit is
-enforced.
+@item @var{summary}: A human-readable summary for what the payment is about.
+The summary should be short enough to fit into titles, though no
+hard limit is enforced.
@item @var{fulfillment_url}: A URL that will be displayed once the payment is
completed. For digital goods, this should be a page that displays the product
@@ -249,7 +255,9 @@ the @code{order_id} as a query parameter, as well as the @code{session_sig} for
session-bound payments (discussed later).
@end itemize
-After successfully POSTing to @code{/order}, an @code{order_id} will be
+Orders can have many more fields, see @ref{The Taler Order Format}.
+
+After successfully @code{POST}ing to @code{/order}, an @code{order_id} will be
returned. Together with the merchant @code{instance}, the order id uniquely
identifies the order within a merchant backend.
@@ -297,13 +305,15 @@ curl -i -X POST 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/order' \
@end ifclear
The backend will fill in some details missing in the order, such as the address
-of the merchant instance. The full details are often called the @emph{contract
+of the merchant instance. The full details are called the @emph{contract
terms}.
+@cindex contract
+@cindex terms
@section Checking Payment Status and Prompting for Payment
The status of a payment can be checked with the @code{/check-payment} endpoint. If the payment
-wasn't completed yet by the customer, @code{/check-payment} will give the frontend a URL (@var{payment_redirect_url})
-that will trigger the customer's wallet to trigger the payment.
+is yet to be completed by the customer, @code{/check-payment} will give the frontend a URL (the @var{payment_redirect_url})
+that will trigger the customer's wallet to execute the payment.
Note that the only way to obtain the @var{payment_redirect_url} is to check the status of the payment,
even if you know that the user did not pay yet.
@@ -318,7 +328,7 @@ curl -i "https://backend.demo.taler.net/check-payment?order_id=$ORDER_ID" \
--header "Authorization: ApiKey sandbox"
# HTTP/1.1 200 OK
# [...]
-#
+#
# {
# "payment_redirect_url":
# "https://backend.demo.taler.net/public/trigger-pay?[...]",
@@ -345,43 +355,54 @@ curl -i "https://backend.demo.taler.net/check-payment?order_id=$ORDER_ID" \
@end example
@end ifclear
-Depending on the value of the @var{paid} field in the response, the other fields will be different. Once the
-payment was completed by the user, the response will contain the following fields:
+If the @var{paid} field in the response is @code{true}, the other
+fields in the response will be different. Once the payment was
+completed by the user, the response will contain the following fields:
@itemize
@item @var{paid}: Set to @var{true}.
-@item @var{contract_terms}: The full contract terms derived from the order.
-@item @var{refunded}: Boolean that indicates whether any (partial) refund happened for this purchase.
+@item @var{contract_terms}: The full contract terms of the order.
+@item @var{refunded}: @code{true} if a (possibly partial) refund was granted for this purchase.
@item @var{refunded_amount}: Amount that was refunded
-@item @var{last_session_id}: Last session ID used by the customer's wallet. Advanced feature, explained later.
+@item @var{last_session_id}: Last session ID used by the customer's wallet. @xref{Session-Bound Payments}.
@end itemize
+Once the frontend has confirmed that the payment was successful, it
+usually needs to trigger the business logic for the merchant to
+fulfill the merchant's obligations under the contract.
+
+
@node Giving Refunds
@chapter Giving Refunds
+@cindex refunds
+
A refund in GNU Taler is a way to ``undo'' a payment. It needs to be
-authorized by the merchant at request of the customer. Refunds can be full
-refunds, or only refund a fraction of the original amount paid. Refunds are
+authorized by the merchant. Refunds can be for any fraction of the
+original amount paid, but they cannot exceed the original payment.
+Refunds are
time-limited and can only happen while the exchange holds funds for a
particular payment in escrow. The time during which a refund is possible
can be controlled by setting the @code{refund_deadline} in an order. The default
-value for the refund deadline depends on the configuration of the backend.
+value for this refund deadline is specified in the configuration of the
+merchant's backend.
-The frontend can instruct the merchant backend to authorize a refund by posting to the
-@code{/refund} endpoint.
+The frontend can instruct the merchant backend to authorize a refund
+by @code{POST}ing to the @code{/refund} endpoint.
The refund request JSON object has the following fields:
@itemize
-@item @var{order_id}: The ID that identifies the order to be refunded.
-@item @var{instrance}: The merchant instance to use (defaults to @code{default}).
-@item @var{refund}: The amount to be refunded. If a previous refund was
-authorized for the same order, the new amout must be higher. Indicates the
-total amount refunded, @emph{not} an increase in the refund.
-@item @var{reason}: Reason for the refund, only used for the Back Office and not directly shown to the customer.
+@item @var{order_id}: Identifies for which order a customer should be refunded.
+@item @var{instrance}: Merchant instance to use (defaults to @code{default}).
+@item @var{refund}: Amount to be refunded. If a previous refund was
+authorized for the same order, the new amount must be higher, otherwise
+the operation has no effect. The value indicates the
+total amount to be refunded, @emph{not} an increase in the refund.
+@item @var{reason}: Human-readable justification for the refund. The reason is only used by the Back Office and is not exposed to the customer.
@end itemize
If the request is successful (indicated by HTTP status code 200), the response
-includes a @code{refund_redirect_url}. The frontend must navigate the
-customer's browser to allow the refund to be processed by the wallet.
+includes a @code{refund_redirect_url}. The frontend must redirect the
+customer's browser to that URL to allow the refund to be processed by the wallet.
This code snipped illustrates giving a refund:
@clear GOT_LANG
@@ -427,16 +448,31 @@ curl -i -X POST 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/refund' \
@end example
@end ifclear
-@node Giving Customer Tips
-@chapter Giving Customer Tips
-GNU Taler allows merchants to give small sums of money directly to the
-customer, for example to incentivize actions such as filling out a survey or
-trying a new feature. The merchant backend must be properly configured for
-this, and enough funds must be made available for tipping @xref{Top,,, manual,
+@node Giving Customers Tips
+@chapter Giving Customers Tips
+@cindex tips
+
+@c NOTE: Terminology should not be merchant/customer here, as
+@c the relationship is completely different. So I use
+@c ``site'' and ``visitor'', as that is right now the proper
+@c context. We may want to use more payment-ish terminology
+@c in the future, but ``donor'' and ``grantee'' sound excessive
+@c in the context of ``tips''.
+
+GNU Taler allows Web sites to grant small amounts directly to the
+visitor. The idea is that some sites may want incentivize actions
+such as filling out a survey or trying a new feature. It is important
+to note that tips are not enforcable for the visitor, as there is no
+contract. It is simply a voluntary gesture of appreciation of the site
+to its visitor. However, once a tip has been granted, the visitor
+obtains full control over the funds provided by the site.
+
+The ``merchant'' backend of the site must be properly configured for
+tipping, and sufficient funds must be made available for tipping @xref{Top,,, manual,
Taler Merchant Operating Manual}.
-To check if tipping is configured properly and if there are enough funds available to tip,
-query the @code{/tip-query} endpoint:
+To check if tipping is configured properly and if there are
+sufficient funds available for tipping, query the @code{/tip-query} endpoint:
@clear GOT_LANG
@ifset LANG_CURL
@@ -472,20 +508,20 @@ curl -i 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/tip-query?instance=default' --header "Au
@end example
@end ifclear
-To authorize a tip, post to @code{/tip-authorize}. The following fields are recognized in the JSON
+@cindex authorize tip
+To authorize a tip, @code{POST} to @code{/tip-authorize}. The following fields are recognized in the JSON
request object:
+
@itemize
-@item @var{amount}: Amount that should be given to the customer as a tip.
-@item @var{instance}: Merchant instance that gives the tip (each instance has
-their own independend tipping funds configured).
-@item @var{justification}: Description of why the tip was given. Not given to the customer, but
-used from back office purposes.
-@item @var{next_url}: The URL that the user's browser will be redirected to by the wallet, once
-the tip has been processed.
+@item @var{amount}: Amount that should be given to the visitor as a tip.
+@item @var{instance}: Merchant instance that grants the tip (each instance may have its own independend tipping funds configured).
+@item @var{justification}: Description of why the tip was granted. Human-readable text not exposed to the customer, but used by the Back Office.
+@item @var{next_url}: The URL that the user's browser should be redirected to by the wallet, once the tip has been processed.
@end itemize
-The response contains a @code{tip_redirect_url}, the customer's browser must be
-redirected to this URL to accept the tip.
+The response from the backend contains a @code{tip_redirect_url}. The customer's browser must be
+redirected to this URL for the wallet to pick up the tip.
+@cindex pick up tip
This code snipped illustrates giving a tip:
@clear GOT_LANG
@@ -539,6 +575,7 @@ curl -i -X POST 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/tip-authorize' \
* Detecting the Presence of the Taler Wallet:: Detecting the Presence of the Taler Wallet
* Integration with the Back Office:: Integration with the Back Office
* Session-Bound Payments:: Session-bound payments for digital goods
+* Product Identification:: Product Identification
* The Taler Order Format:: The Taler Order Format
@end menu
@@ -546,10 +583,13 @@ curl -i -X POST 'https://backend.demo.taler.net/tip-authorize' \
@section Detecting the Presence of the Taler Wallet
@cindex wallet
-Taler offers ways to detect whether a user has the wallet installed in their
-browser, and take actions accordingly. Note that not all platforms can do
-presence detection reliably. Some platforms might have a Taler wallet installed,
-but the browser is not aware of its presence.
+Taler offers ways to detect whether a user has the wallet installed in
+their browser. This allows Web sites to adapt accordingly. Note that
+not all platforms can do presence detection reliably. Some platforms
+might have a Taler wallet installed as a separate App instead of using
+a Web extension. In these cases, presence detection will fail. Thus,
+sites may want to allow users to request Taler payments even if a
+wallet could not be detected, especially for visitors using mobiles.
@subsection Presence detection without JavaScript
Presence detection without JavaScript is based on CSS classes. You can hide or
@@ -598,8 +638,9 @@ The following is a complete example:
@end smallexample
The @code{taler-fallback.css} is part of the Taler's @emph{web-common} repository,
-available at @code{https://git.taler.net/web-common.git}. Please adjust the @code{href}
-attribute in order to make it work with your Web site.
+available at @url{https://git.taler.net/web-common.git/tree/taler-fallback.css}.
+You may have to adjust the @code{href} attribute in the HTML code above to point
+to the correct location of the @code{taler-fallback.css} file on your Web site.
@subsection Detection with JavaScript
@@ -608,60 +649,94 @@ available at @url{https://git.taler.net/web-common.git/tree/taler-wallet-lib.js}
@table @code
@item onPresent(callback: () => void)
-Add a callback to be called when support for Taler payments is detected.
+Adds a callback to be called when support for Taler payments is detected.
@item onAbsent(callback: () => void)
-Add a callback to be called when support for Taler payments is disabled.
+Adds a callback to be called when support for Taler payments is disabled.
@end table
-Note that the registered callbacks can be called more than once, since a user
-can disable/enable the wallet in the browser's setting while a shop frontend
-page is open.
+Note that the registered callbacks may be called more than once. This may
+happen if a user disables or enables the wallet in the browser's extension
+settings while a shop's frontend page is open.
+
+@c FIXME: include full example of Web site including taler-wallet-lib.js
+@c and using JS detection actions. (alert()?)
@node Integration with the Back Office
@section Integration with the Back Office
-Taler ships the back-office feature as a stand-alone Web application.
-See how to run it, on its own documentaion: @url{https://docs.taler.net/backoffice/html/manual.html}.
+
+Taler ships a Back Office application as a stand-alone Web application.
+The Back Office has its own documentation at @url{https://docs.taler.net/backoffice/html/manual.html}.
+
+Developers wishing to tightly integrate back office support for
+Taler-based payments into an existing back office application should
+focus on the wire transfer tracking and transaction history sections
+of the Taler Backend API specification at
+@url{https://docs.taler.net/api/api-merchant.html}
@node Session-Bound Payments
@section Session-Bound Payments
-Sometimes checking if an order has been paid for is not enough, but the
-merchant wants to checked if the ``payment receipt'' is available on the user's
-current device. This prevents users from easily sharing digital goods by just
-sharing a link to the fulfillment page. Of course advanced users can
-easily share these payment receipts, but it is not as easy as sharing a link.
+@cindex session
+
+Sometimes checking if an order has been paid for is not enough. For
+example, when selling access to online media, the publisher may want
+to be paid for exactly the same product by each customer. Taler
+supports this model by allowing the mechant to check whether the
+``payment receipt'' is available on the user's current device. This
+prevents users from easily sharing media access by transmitting a link
+to the fulfillment page. Of course sophisticated users could share
+payment receipts as well, but this is not as easy as sharing a link,
+and in this case they are more likely to just share the media
+directly.
To use this feature, the merchant must first assign the user's current browser
an ephemeral @code{session_id}, usually via a session cookie. When executing
-or re-playing a payment, the wallet will receive a signature
-(@code{session_sig}) that certifies that in the current session, the wallet
-showed a payment receipt for the respective order.
+or re-playing a payment, the wallet will receive an additional signature
+(@code{session_sig}). This signature certifies that the wallet
+showed a payment receipt for the respective order in the current session.
+@cindex cookie
Session-bound payments are triggerd by passing the @code{session_id} parameter
to the @code{/check-payment} endpoint. The wallet will then redirect to the
fulfillment page, but include an additional @code{session_sig} parameter. The
frontend can query @code{/check-payment} with both the @code{session_id} and
-the @code{session_sig} again to verify that the signature is correct.
+the @code{session_sig} to verify that the signature is correct.
The last session ID that was successfuly used to prove that the payment
receipt is in the user's wallet is also available as @code{last_session_id} in
the response to @code{/check-payment}.
+@c FIXME: used for what?
-In some situations the user has paid for some digital good, but the frontend
-does not know the exact order ID, and thus can't instruct the wallet to show
+@node Product Identification
+@section Product Identification
+@cindex resource url
+
+In some situations the user may have paid for some digital good, but the frontend
+does not know the exact order ID, and thus cannot instruct the wallet to reveil
the existing payment receipt. This is common for simple shops without a login
system. In this case, the user would be prompted for payment again, even
-though they already purchased the product. To allow the wallet to instead show
-the existing payment receipt, the @code{resource_url} parameter must be given
-to @code{/check-payment}. It should correspond to the fulfillment URL for the
-potentially existing payment for the same product.
+though they already purchased the product.
+
+To allow the wallet to instead find the existing payment receipt, the
+shop must use a unique fulfillment URL for each product. Then, the
+frontend must provide an additional @code{resource_url} parameter to
+to @code{/check-payment}. It should identify this unique fulfillment
+URL for the product. The wallet will then check whether it has paid
+for a contract with the same @code{resource_url} before, and if so
+replay the previous payment.
+@c FIXME: design question (!): why do we not simply set a flag (``unique fulfillment url'')
+@c instead of passing the fulfillment URL a *second* time to the backend?
+@c (and having to worry about it being the same as in the order on /order)?
+
@c Section describing the format of Taler contracts/proposals in detail
@node The Taler Order Format
@section The Taler Order Format
@cindex contract
+@cindex terms
+@cindex order
A Taler order can specify many details about the payment.
This section describes each of the fields in depth.
@@ -836,7 +911,7 @@ Street number (number of the house) for delivery, as found on a postal package.
@end table
Note that locations are not required to specify all of these fields,
-and it is also allowed to have additional fields. Contract renderers
+and they is also allowed to have additional fields. Contract renderers
must render at least the fields listed above, and should render fields
that they do not understand as a key-value list.