Skip to content

API documentation and wrappers for Basecamp 2

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

basecamp/bcx-api

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

The Basecamp 2 API

Basecamp 2 has its own API. It is not compatible with the Basecamp Classic API or the Basecamp 3 API. The core ingredients are still the same, though. This is a REST-style API that uses JSON for serialization and OAuth 2 for authentication.

Making a request

All URLs start with https://basecamp.com/999999999/api/v1/. SSL only. The path is prefixed with the account id and the API version. If we change the API in backward-incompatible ways, we'll bump the version marker and maintain stable support for the old URLs.

To make a request for all the projects on your account, you'd append the projects index path to the base url to form something like https://basecamp.com/999999999/api/v1/projects.json. In curl, that looks like:

curl -u user:pass -H 'User-Agent: MyApp (yourname@example.com)' https://basecamp.com/999999999/api/v1/projects.json

To create something, it's the same deal except you also have to include the Content-Type header and the JSON data:

curl -u username:password \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'User-Agent: MyApp (yourname@example.com)' \
  -d '{ "name": "My new project!" }' \
  https://basecamp.com/999999999/api/v1/projects.json

That's all!

Authentication

If you're making a private integration with Basecamp for your own purposes, you can use HTTP Basic authentication. This is secure since all requests in the new Basecamp use SSL.

If you're making a public integration with Basecamp for others to enjoy, you must use OAuth 2. This allows users to authorize your application to use Basecamp on their behalf without having to copy/paste API tokens or touch sensitive login info.

Read the authentication guide to get started.

Identify your app

You must include a User-Agent header with the name of your application and a link to it or your email address so we can get in touch in case you're doing something wrong (so we may warn you before you're blacklisted) or something awesome (so we may congratulate you). Here's a couple of examples:

User-Agent: Freshbooks (http://freshbooks.com/contact.php)
User-Agent: Fabian's Ingenious Integration (fabian@example.com) 

If you don't supply this header, you will get a 400 Bad Request response.

No XML, just JSON

We only support JSON for serialization of data. Our format is to have no root element and we use snake_case to describe attribute keys. This means that you have to send Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 when you're POSTing or PUTing data into Basecamp. All API URLs end in .json to indicate that they accept and return JSON.

You'll receive a 415 Unsupported Media Type response code if you attempt to use a different URL suffix or leave out the Content-Type header.

Pagination

Most collection APIs paginate their results. The first request returns up to 50 records. Check the next page for more results by adding ?page=2, then ?page=3 (or &page=2, &page=3, if you already have a query string in the URL), and so on until you get an empty response.

Use HTTP caching

You must make use of the HTTP freshness headers to lessen the load on our servers (and increase the speed of your application!). Most requests we return will include an ETag or Last-Modified header. When you first request a resource, store this value, and then submit them back to us on subsequent requests as If-None-Match and If-Modified-Since. If the resource hasn't changed, you'll see a 304 Not Modified response, which saves you the time and bandwidth of sending something you already have.

Handling errors

If Basecamp is having trouble, you might see a 5xx error. 500 means that the app is entirely down, but you might also see 502 Bad Gateway, 503 Service Unavailable, or 504 Gateway Timeout. It's your responsibility in all of these cases to retry your request later.

Rate limiting

You can perform up to 500 requests per 10 second period from the same IP address for the same account. If you exceed this limit, you'll get a 429 Too Many Requests response for subsequent requests. Check the Retry-After header to see how many seconds to wait before retrying the request.

API ready for use

API libraries

Help us make it better

Please tell us how we can make the API better. If you have a specific feature request or if you found a bug, please use GitHub issues. Fork these docs and send a pull request with improvements.

To talk with us and other developers about the API, post a question on StackOverflow tagged basecamp or open a support ticket.

About

API documentation and wrappers for Basecamp 2

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published