- What's New
-
Service Overview(2.0)
- What Is APM
- Functions
- Application Scenarios
- Basic Concepts
- Edition Differences
- Permissions Management
-
Metric Overview
- Exception
- Basic Monitoring
-
Databases
- C3P0 Connection Pool Monitoring
- Cassandra Monitoring
- ClickHouse Database
- DBCP Connection Pool Monitoring
- Druid Connection Pool Monitoring
- EsRestClient Monitoring
- GaussDB Database
- HBase Monitoring
- Hikari Connection Pool Monitoring
- Jetcd Monitoring
- MongoDB Monitoring
- MySQL Database
- ObsClient Monitoring
- Oracle Database
- PostgreSQL Database
- URLs
- External Calls
- Cache
- Agent Monitoring
- Tomcat Monitoring
- Message Queues
- RPC
- IoT
- Communication Protocol
- Privacy and Sensitive Information Protection Statement
- Data Collection
- Usage Restrictions
- Billing
- JavaAgent Updates
- Billing(2.0)
- Getting Started(2.0)
-
User Guide(2.0)
- Before You Start
- Application List
- CMDB Management
-
Application Metric Monitoring
- Overview
- Application Monitoring Details
-
Application Monitoring Configuration
- Configuration Details
- Configuring the MySQL Monitoring Item
- Configuring the HttpClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the URL Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JavaMethod Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Druid Monitoring Item
- Configuring the ApacheHttpAsyncClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Redis Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Jedis Monitoring Item
- Configuring the HBase Monitoring Item
- Configuring the ApacheHttpClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Tomcat Monitoring Item
- Configuring the EsRestClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the WebSocket Monitoring Item
- Configuring the KafkaProducer Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Hikari Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Exception Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Thread Monitoring Item
- Configuring the GC Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JVMInfo Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JVMMonitor Monitoring Item
- Configuring ProbeInfo Monitoring Item
- Monitoring Item Views
- Instance
- Collection Status
- Component Settings
- Tracing
- Application Topology
- URL Tracing
- Resource Tag Management
- Managing Tags
- Alarm Management
- AgentAgent Management
- Configuration Management
- System Management
- Permissions Management
- Change History
-
API Reference(2.0)
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- Examples
-
APIs
-
APM
- Querying the application list.
- Querying the Master Address
- Obtaining the AK/SK
- Searching for Components, Environments, and Agents in a Region
- Saving a Monitoring Item
- Querying the Monitoring Item List
- Querying All Agents of an Application
- Enabling or Disabling Collection for an Instance
- Deleting an Agent
- REGION
- CMDB
-
VIEW
- Querying Monitoring Item Configurations
- Querying the Trace Topology
- Querying Event Details
- Querying Span Data
- Obtaining All Data of a Trace
- Obtaining the Trend Graph
- Obtaining Summary Table Data
- Obtaining the Raw Data Table
- Obtaining Raw Data Details
- Obtaining the Instance Information
- Obtaining the Monitoring Item Information
- Obtaining the Details About a Monitoring Item
- AKSK
- ALARM
- TOPOLOGY
- TRANSACTION
- TRACING
-
APM
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Appendix
- Change History
- Best Practices(2.0)
- FAQs(2.0)
- Service Overview(1.0)
- Getting Started(1.0)
- Best Practices(1.0)
- User Guide
- API Reference
- SDK Reference
-
FAQs
- General FAQs
- Consultation FAQs
-
Usage FAQs
- How Do I Obtain the AK/SK and Project ID?
- How Do I Obtain the AK/SK by Creating an Agency?
- What Can I Do If No Data Is Found or the Data Is Abnormal?
- How Do I Connect APM to Non-Web Programs?
- How Are Tracing Time Lines Drawn?
- How Does APM Collect Probe Data?
- How Does APM Collect Mesh Data?
- How Do I Calculate the Number of Used Instances?
- How Do I Connect the JBoss Server in Standalone Mode to APM?
- What Can I Do If I Cannot Search for Logs Based on Trace IDs?
- How Do I Deploy APM Probes in CCE Containers?
- What Can I Do If the SSH Tunnel Process Is Abnormal?
- How Can I Do If No Topology or Data Is Displayed After the ICAgent and Java Probes Are Installed?
- Why Are Tomcat Thread Metrics Not Displayed on the JVM Monitoring Page?
- Why Is the Allocated Memory Greater Than the Preset Maximum Memory on the JVM Monitoring Page?
- How Do I Determine Whether an ICAgent Has Been Bound in CCE?
-
More Documents
- User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- API Reference (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
-
User Guide (2.0) (Kuala Lumpur Region)
-
Service Overview
- What Is APM
- Functions
- Application Scenarios
- Basic Concepts
- Edition Differences
- Permissions Management
-
Metric Overview
- Metric Overview
- Exception
- Basic Monitoring
-
Databases
- C3P0 Connection Pool Monitoring
- Cassandra Monitoring
- ClickHouse Database
- DBCP Connection Pool Monitoring
- Druid Connection Pool Monitoring
- EsRestClient Monitoring
- GaussDB Database
- HBase Monitoring
- Hikari Connection Pool Monitoring
- Jetcd Monitoring
- MongoDB Monitoring
- MySQL Database
- ObsClient Monitoring
- Oracle Database
- PostgreSQL Database
- URLs
- External Calls
- Cache
- Agent Monitoring
- Tomcat Monitoring
- Message Queues
- RPC
- IoT
- Communication Protocol
- Privacy and Sensitive Information Protection Statement
- Data Collection
- Usage Restrictions
- Getting Started
-
User Guide
- Before You Start
- Application List
- CMDB Management
-
Application Metric Monitoring
- Overview
- Application Monitoring Details
-
Application Monitoring Configuration
- Configuration Details
- Configuring the MySQL Monitoring Item
- Configuring the HttpClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the URL Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JavaMethod Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Druid Monitoring Item
- Configuring the ApacheHttpAsyncClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Redis Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Jedis Monitoring Item
- Configuring the HBase Monitoring Item
- Configuring the ApacheHttpClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Tomcat Monitoring Item
- Configuring the EsRestClient Monitoring Item
- Configuring the WebSocket Monitoring Item
- Configuring the KafkaProducer Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Hikari Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Exception Monitoring Item
- Configuring the Thread Monitoring Item
- Configuring the GC Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JVMInfo Monitoring Item
- Configuring the JVMMonitor Monitoring Item
- Configuring ProbeInfo Monitoring Item
- Monitoring Item Views
- Tracing
- Application Topology
- URL Tracing
- Resource Tag Management
- Managing Tags
- Alarm Management
- Agent Management
- Configuration Management
- System Management
- Permissions Management
- FAQs
- Change History
-
Service Overview
- General Reference
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Constructing Requests
A request consists of three parts: a request line, request header, and request body (optional).
Request Line
A request line consists of three parts in order, separated by spaces: a method token, a request URI, and a protocol version. The format is shown in the following code:
Method Request-URI HTTP-Version CRLF
- Method: indicates a request method. All methods are capitalized. Their meanings are as follows:
- GET: obtains the resource identified by a Request-URI.
- POST: suffixes new data to the resource identified by a Request-URI.
- PUT: requests a server to store a resource and uses a Request-URI to identify the resource.
- DELETE: requests the server to delete the resource identified by a Request-URI.
- PATCH: requests a server to update a resource or create a resource if the target resource does not exist.
- Request-URI: indicates a unified resource identifier.
NOTE:
Enter a question mark (?) and an ampersand (&) at the end of the URI to define multiple search criteria. The content contained in {} in the URI is the parameter of the URI, where ? is contained. The previous part is the path parameter, and the latter part is the query parameter.
- HTTP-Version: indicates the version of the HTTP protocol used by a request.
- CRLF: indicates the carriage return and line feed characters. CRLF is placed only at the end of a line, and a separate CR or LF is not allowed.
Request Header
A request header consists of several header fields. Each header field consists of a domain name, a colon (:), and a field value.
Common request headers are listed in Table 1.
Request Body
A request message body is a JSON-style nested key-value pair. The mandatory and optional fields of an HTTP request body vary depending on the URI.
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