1RT::Client::REST::AttacUhsmeerntC(o3n)tributed Perl DocuRmTe:n:tCaltiieonnt::REST::Attachment(3)
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NAME

6       RT::Client::REST::Attachment - attachment object representation.
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VERSION

9       version 0.56
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SYNOPSIS

12         my $attachments = $ticket->attachments;
13
14         my $count = $attachments->count;
15         print "There are $count attachments.\n";
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17         my $iterator = $attachments->get_iterator;
18         while (my $att = &$iterator) {
19             print "Id: ", $att->id, "; Subject: ", $att->subject, "\n";
20         }
21

DESCRIPTION

23       An attachment is a second-class citizen, as it does not exist (at least
24       from the current REST protocol implementation) by itself.  At the
25       moment, it is always associated with a ticket (see parent_id
26       attribute).  Thus, you will rarely retrieve an attachment by itself;
27       instead, you should use "attachments()" method of
28       RT::Client::REST::Ticket object to get an iterator for all attachments
29       for that ticket.
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ATTRIBUTES

32       id
33         Numeric ID of the attachment.
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35       creator_id
36         Numeric ID of the user who created the attachment.
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38       parent_id
39         Numeric ID of the object the attachment is associated with.  This is
40         not a proper attribute of the attachment as specified by REST -- it
41         is simply to store the ID of the RT::Client::REST::Ticket object this
42         attachment belongs to.
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44       subject
45         Subject of the attachment.
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47       content_type
48         Content type.
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50       file_name
51         File name (if any).
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53       transaction_id
54         Numeric ID of the RT::Client::REST::Transaction object this
55         attachment is associated with.
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57       message_id
58         Message ID.
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60       created
61         Time when the attachment was created
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63       content
64         Actual content of the attachment.
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66       headers
67         Headers (not parsed), if any.
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69       parent
70         Parent (not sure what this is yet).
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72       content_encoding
73         Content encoding, if any.
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METHODS

76       RT::Client::REST::Attachment is a read-only object, so you cannot
77       "store()" it.  Also, because it is a second-class citizen, you cannot
78       "search()" or "count()" it -- use "attachments()" method provided by
79       RT::Client::REST::Ticket.
80
81       retrieve
82         To retrieve an attachment, attributes id and parent_id must be set.
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INTERNAL METHODS

85       can
86         Wraps the normal can() call, to exclude unsupported methods from
87         parent.
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89       rt_type
90         Returns 'attachment'.
91

CREATING ATTACHMENTS

93       Currently RT does not allow creating attachments via their API.
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95       See <https://rt-wiki.bestpractical.com/wiki/REST#Ticket_Attachment>
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SEE ALSO

98       RT::Client::REST::Ticket, RT::Client::REST::SearchResult.
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AUTHORS

101       ·   Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@wiw.org>
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103       ·   Dmitri Tikhonov <dtikhonov@yahoo.com>
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105       ·   Damien "dams" Krotkine <dams@cpan.org>
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107       ·   Dean Hamstead <dean@bytefoundry.com.au>
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109       ·   Miquel Ruiz <mruiz@cpan.org>
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111       ·   JLMARTIN
112
113       ·   SRVSH
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116       This software is copyright (c) 2018 by Dmitri Tikhonov.
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118       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
119       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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123perl v5.28.1                      2018-12-24   RT::Client::REST::Attachment(3)
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