The Headless dashboard is the interface where you manage the connectivity of third-party applications with your CMS.
The following table provides an overview of the dashboard and its key features:
Dashboard component | Description |
---|---|
API URL | The API URL is the access to your API endpoints. By default, there is a single API endpoint listed: When configuring connectivity with a third-party application, you must know what this URL is. You can also customize the base URL by clicking the Update Base API URL button. For example, you can change the path from |
API Documentation | As the data model in your CMS changes, API endpoints also change. Drupal Starter Kits Headless uses the Open API standard to dynamically document the By default, there is restricted access to the documentation. You can modify which roles and CMS users have access to the documentation. If your site is publicly accessible, you might require CMS authentication to access the API documentation. However, if the CMS user interface is not publicly accessible, you can allow the documentation to be accessed without Drupal authentication. This assumes that you are providing authorization through a system design such as network controls. |
API Keys | The API keys panel shows the registered OAuth consumers by label and Client ID. Client ID and Secret are used in the OAuth authentication process to obtain an OAuth token. The consumer secrets are stored as encrypted values in CMS and cannot be retrieved. If the key is forgotten, you must generate a new key from the dropdown edit button. Consumers can be modified to change their label, user, and roles (scopes). |
API Users | This displays the users in the system who use the “headless” role. This role is designed to be used with Next.js sites. The user with this role can view unpublished content to provide preview capabilities within the Next.js site. |
Next.js sites | The Drupal Starter Kits Headless starter kit comes with out-of-the-box integration for Next.js applications using the next-acms starter kit or the next-drupal library in Next.js. The sites listed here are the sites registered with the CMS. This is useful to discover the Node.js environment variables needed in your Next.js application and to determine which sites show a preview for given content types. Drupal Starter Kits Headless ships with a Next.js starter kit that can quickly initialize a setup for a local Next.js application. |
Next.js entity types | Next.js entity types map which content types can be previewed through a Next.js application. This is primarily used for configuring site preview from the CMS. |
Important
Site preview is currently an experimental feature and is only available in the Hybrid mode. It is not available when operating in the Headless mode.