Thanks very much Niphlod. I am much closer now.. However I am getting this response: {"version": "1.1", "id": 1, "error": {"message": "method \"save_message\" does not exist", "code": 100, "name": "JSONRPCError"}}
from this script: url="https://domain.net:8000/ircmessage/rpc/call/jsonrpc" curl -v -k -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"id": 1, "method": "save_message", "params": { "message": "mymessage", "uid" : "myemail@localhost"}}' $url I guess my url is probably incorrect. Cheers again Niphlod. On Wednesday, 7 November 2012 15:16:42 UTC-5, Niphlod wrote: > > Yes, but without that I wouldn't have been able to tell you: "Follow the > protocol, Mike!" :P > > You are publishing a service behind the jsonrpc protocol, but you surely > missed on how to interact with them ^_^ > > Every request per the spec has to carry an id , a method and a params > value in the json body of the request. > > So, you are trying to fire function that needs 'message' and 'uid' > parameters, and the function is called 'save_message' > The following json must be POSTed (and using single quotes will save you > lots of backslashes if you're using cURL) > > '{"id": 1, "method": "save_message", "params": { "message": "mymessage", > "uid" : "myemail@localhost"}}' > > So, the complete cmdline is > curl -v -k -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"id": 1, > "method": "save_message", "params": { "message": "mymessage", "uid" : > "myemail@localhost"}}' $url > > This will generate a response like this > {"error": null, "version": "1.1", "id": 1, "result": {"status": "saved"}} > > The 'id' is the one you sent (so, if you POST id=2, the response will hold > 2, and so on). In "result" you get what you return in the controller. > > > --