REST Resources Provided By: Bitbucket Server - Git SCM REST

This is the reference document for the Atlassian Bitbucket REST API. The REST API is for developers who want to:

You can read more about developing Bitbucket plugins in the Bitbucket Developer Documentation.

Getting started

Because the REST API is based on open standards, you can use any web development language or command line tool capable of generating an HTTP request to access the API. See the developer documentation for a basic usage example.

If you're already working with the Atlassian SDK, the REST API Browser is a great tool for exploring and experimenting with the Bitbucket REST API.

Structure of the REST URIs

Bitbucket's REST APIs provide access to resources (data entities) via URI paths. To use a REST API, your application will make an HTTP request and parse the response. The Bitbucket REST API uses JSON as its communication format, and the standard HTTP methods like GET, PUT, POST and DELETE. URIs for Bitbucket's REST API resource have the following structure:

    http://host:port/context/rest/api-name/api-version/path/to/resource

For example, the following URI would retrieve a page of the latest commits to the jira repository in the Jira project on https://stash.atlassian.com.

    https://stash.atlassian.com/rest/api/1.0/projects/JIRA/repos/jira/commits

See the API descriptions below for a full list of available resources.

Alternatively we also publish a list of resources in WADL format. It is available here.

Paged APIs

Bitbucket uses paging to conserve server resources and limit response size for resources that return potentially large collections of items. A request to a paged API will result in a values array wrapped in a JSON object with some paging metadata, like this:

    {
        "size": 3,
        "limit": 3,
        "isLastPage": false,
        "values": [
            { /* result 0 */ },
            { /* result 1 */ },
            { /* result 2 */ }
        ],
        "start": 0,
        "filter": null,
        "nextPageStart": 3
    }

Clients can use the limit and start query parameters to retrieve the desired number of results.

The limit parameter indicates how many results to return per page. Most APIs default to returning 25 if the limit is left unspecified. This number can be increased, but note that a resource-specific hard limit will apply. These hard limits can be configured by server administrators, so it's always best practice to check the limit attribute on the response to see what limit has been applied. The request to get a larger page should look like this:

    http://host:port/context/rest/api-name/api-version/path/to/resource?limit={desired size of page}

For example:

    https://stash.atlassian.com/rest/api/1.0/projects/JIRA/repos/jira/commits?limit=1000

The start parameter indicates which item should be used as the first item in the page of results. All paged responses contain an isLastPage attribute indicating whether another page of items exists.

Important: If more than one page exists (i.e. the response contains "isLastPage": false), the response object will also contain a nextPageStart attribute which must be used by the client as the start parameter on the next request. Identifiers of adjacent objects in a page may not be contiguous, so the start of the next page is not necessarily the start of the last page plus the last page's size. A client should always use nextPageStart to avoid unexpected results from a paged API. The request to get a subsequent page should look like this:

    http://host:port/context/rest/api-name/api-version/path/to/resource?start={nextPageStart from previous response}

For example:

    https://stash.atlassian.com/rest/api/1.0/projects/JIRA/repos/jira/commits?start=25

Authentication

Any authentication that works against Bitbucket will work against the REST API. The preferred authentication methods are HTTP Basic (when using SSL) and OAuth. Other supported methods include: HTTP Cookies and Trusted Applications.

You can find OAuth code samples in several programming languages at bitbucket.org/atlassian_tutorial/atlassian-oauth-examples.

The log-in page uses cookie-based authentication, so if you are using Bitbucket in a browser you can call REST from JavaScript on the page and rely on the authentication that the browser has established.

Errors & Validation

If a request fails due to client error, the resource will return an HTTP response code in the 40x range. These can be broadly categorised into:

HTTP Code Description
400 (Bad Request) One or more of the required parameters or attributes:
  • were missing from the request;
  • incorrectly formatted; or
  • inappropriate in the given context.
401 (Unauthorized) Either:
  • Authentication is required but was not attempted.
  • Authentication was attempted but failed.
  • Authentication was successful but the authenticated user does not have the requisite permission for the resource.
See the individual resource documentation for details of required permissions.
403 (Forbidden) Actions are usually "forbidden" if they involve breaching the licensed user limit of the server, or degrading the authenticated user's permission level. See the individual resource documentation for more details.
404 (Not Found) The entity you are attempting to access, or the project or repository containing it, does not exist.
405 (Method Not Allowed) The request HTTP method is not appropriate for the targeted resource. For example an HTTP GET to a resource that only accepts an HTTP POST will result in a 405.
409 (Conflict) The attempted update failed due to some conflict with an existing resource. For example:
  • Creating a project with a key that already exists
  • Merging an out-of-date pull request
  • Deleting a comment that has replies
  • etc.
See the individual resource documentation for more details.
415 (Unsupported Media Type) The request entity has a Content-Type that the server does not support. Almost all of the Bitbucket REST API accepts application/json format, but check the individual resource documentation for more details. Additionally, double-check that you are setting the Content-Type header correctly on your request (e.g. using -H "Content-Type: application/json" in cURL).

For 400 HTTP codes the response will typically contain one or more validation error messages, for example:

    {
        "errors": [
            {
                "context": "name",
                "message": "The name should be between 1 and 255 characters.",
                "exceptionName": null
            },
            {
                "context": "email",
                "message": "The email should be a valid email address.",
                "exceptionName": null
            }
        ]
    }
    

The context attribute indicates which parameter or request entity attribute failed validation. Note that the context may be null.

For 401, 403, 404 and 409 HTTP codes, the response will contain one or more descriptive error messages:

    {
        "errors": [
            {
                "context": null,
                "message": "A detailed error message.",
                "exceptionName": null
            }
        ]
    }
    

A 500 (Server Error) HTTP code indicates an incorrect resource url or an unexpected server error. Double-check the URL you are trying to access, then report the issue to your server administrator or Atlassian Support if problems persist.

Personal Repositories

Bitbucket allows users to manage their own repositories, called personal repositories. These are repositories associated with the user and to which they always have REPO_ADMIN permission.

Accessing personal repositories via REST is achieved through the normal project-centric REST URLs using the user's slug prefixed by tilde as the project key. E.g. to list personal repositories for a user with slug "johnsmith" you would make a GET to:

http://example.com/rest/api/1.0/projects/~johnsmith/repos

In addition to this, Bitbucket allows access to these repositories through an alternate set of user-centric REST URLs beginning with:

http://example.com/rest/api/1.0/users/~{userSlug}/repos
E.g. to list the forks of the repository with slug "nodejs" in the personal project of user with slug "johnsmith" using the regular REST URL you would make a GET to:
http://example.com/rest/api/1.0/projects/~johnsmith/repos/nodejs/forks
Using the alternate URL, you would make a GET to:
http://example.com/rest/api/1.0/users/johnsmith/repos/nodejs/forks

Index

Provides a REST Service for leveraging Git functionality

Resources

/rest/git/1.0/projects/{projectKey}/repos/{repositorySlug}/pull-requests/{pullRequestId}/rebase

resource-wide template parameters
parametervaluedescription

pullRequestId

long

the ID of the pull request within the repository

Methods

POST

Rebases the specified pull request, rewriting the incoming commits to start from the tip commit of the pull request's target branch. This operation alters the pull request's source branch and cannot be undone.

The authenticated user must have REPO_READ permission for the repository that this pull request targets and REPO_WRITE permission for the pull request's source repository to call this resource.

Example request representations:

  • application/json [expand]

    Example
    {"version":1}

Example response representations:

  • 200 - application/json (pullRequest) [expand]

    Example
    {"refChange":{"ref":{"id":"refs/heads/master","displayId":"master","type":"BRANCH"},"refId":"refs/heads/master","fromHash":"6053a1eaa1c009dd11092d09a72f3c41af1b59ad","toHash":"d6edcbf924697ab811a867421dab60d954ccad99","type":"UPDATE"}}

    The merged pull request.

  • 401 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The currently authenticated user has insufficient permissions to view the pull request and/or to update its source branch.

  • 404 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The specified repository or pull request does not exist.

  • 409 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    Any of the following error cases occurred (check the error message for more details):

    • The rebase encountered conflicts.
    • The rebase discarded all of the incoming commits and would have left the pull request empty
    • A PreRepositoryHook vetoed the rebase.
    • The specified version is out of date.
    • The specified pull request is not open.

GET

Checks preconditions to determine whether the pull request can be rebased.

Some of the preconditions are:

  • The pull request is between Git repositories
  • The pull request is currently open
  • The pull request's {@link PullRequest#getFromRef "from" ref} is a branch
    • In other words, the qualified ID for the "from" ref must start with {@code refs/heads/}
    • Tags, and other non-standard refs, cannot be rebased
  • The current user has an e-mail address
    • Pull requests cannot be rebased anonymously
    • {@code git rebase} records the current user as the committer for the rebased commits, which requires a name and e-mail address
  • The current user has write access to the {@link PullRequest#getFromRef "from" ref}'s repository
    • Note that in order to view a pull request a user is only required to have read access to the {@link PullRequest#getToRef toRef}'s repository, so just because a user can see a pull request does not mean they can request a rebase
This list is not exhaustive, and the exact set of preconditions applied can be extended by third-party add-ons.

The authenticated user must have REPO_READ permission for the repository that this pull request targets to call this resource.

Example response representations:

  • 200 - application/json (pullRequest) [expand]

    Example
    {"canRebase":false,"canWrite":true,"vetoes":[{"summaryMessage":"Insufficient branch permissions","detailedMessage":"You have insufficient permissions to rebase 'refs/heads/feature-branch'."}]}

    The rebaseability status of the pull request.

  • 401 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The currently authenticated user has insufficient permissions to view the specified pull request.

  • 404 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The specified repository or pull request does not exist.

/rest/git/1.0/projects/{projectKey}/repos/{repositorySlug}/tags

Methods

POST

Creates a tag in the specified repository.

The authenticated user must have an effective REPO_WRITE permission to call this resource.

'LIGHTWEIGHT' and 'ANNOTATED' are the two type of tags that can be created. The 'startPoint' can either be a ref or a 'commit'.

Example request representations:

  • application/json [expand]

    Example
    {"force":"true","message":"A new release tag","name":"release-tag","startPoint":"refs/heads/master","type":"ANNOTATED"}

Example response representations:

  • 201 - application/json [expand]

    Example
    {"id":"release-2.0.0","displayId":"refs/tags/release-2.0.0","type":"TAG","latestCommit":"8d351a10fb428c0c1239530256e21cf24f136e73","latestChangeset":"8d351a10fb428c0c1239530256e21cf24f136e73","hash":"8d51122def5632836d1cb1026e879069e10a1e13"}

    a JSON representation of the newly created tag

  • 400 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    the tag was not created because the request was invalid, e.g. the provided ref name already existed in the repository, or was not a valid ref name in the repository, or the start point is invalid

  • 401 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The currently authenticated user has insufficient permissions to create a tag. This could be due to insufficient repository permissions.

/rest/git/1.0/projects/{projectKey}/repos/{repositorySlug}/tags/{name:.*}

resource-wide template parameters
parametervaluedescription

name

string

the name of the tag to be deleted

Methods

DELETE

Deletes a tag in the specified repository.

The authenticated user must have an effective REPO_WRITE permission to call this resource.

Example response representations:

  • 204 [expand]

    an empty response indicating that the tag no longer exists in the repository

  • 400 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    the tag was not deleted because repository is either empty, or is not a git repository

  • 401 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    The currently authenticated user has insufficient permissions to delete a tag. This could be due to insufficient repository permissions.

  • 404 - application/json (errors) [expand]

    Example
    {"errors":[{"context":null,"message":"A detailed error message.","exceptionName":null}]}

    If the tag doesn't exist in the {@link Repository}