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The W3C Credentials Community Group Verifiable Credential APIs are a set of RESTful API definitions conforming with the OpenAPI 3.0 Specification that support Verifiable Credential Lifecycle Management such as Issuing, Holding/Presentation/Exchange, and Verification for the roles of Issuer, Holder, and Verifier as described in the Verifiable Credential Data Model specification.

These APIs provide a standard set of interfaces by which interoperability may be tested and verified by various parties who leverage Verifiable Credentials (VCs).

You can view the latest version of the specification here:

The Verifiable Credential API

As some implementations might not support all endpoints defined by this specification, the APIs provide a clean measure by which to identify which methods are or are not implemented when comparing solutions that provide VC support across vendors.

Test procedures and specifications are provided as part of this API definition to allow for repeatable and automated interoperability testing between solutions that interact with Verifiable Credentials. Some of these tests suites include:

Style, Versioning, and Contribution

This API is versioned in conformance with the Semantic Versioning 2.0 specification to prevent breaking changes between minor versions, and to allow for reliable testing and integration of implementations of this API within enterprise environments.

API style, endpoint naming, and object definitions within the vc-api should be in compliance with the guidelines laid out in the REST API Tutorial. The VC API conforms primarily to the controller model as detailed in the REST documentation.

The actual standard and specification defined by the VC-API is provided in YAML format and should be referenced directly by developers should questions arise, as certain interfaces on top of OpenAPI specifications may differ in their presentation of certain scenarios commonly encountered in API definitions, especially when dealing with nullable parameters or properties.

Contributions to this repository should take place via pull requests, and should generally reference an issue and related discussion around the topic

Best Practices

Security

Implementations of this API SHOULD NOT be exposed directly over http(s) without authorization. Best Practices around OAuth and other widely accepted standards for authentication and/or authorization should be followed.

Holder APIs

Holder APIs are optional as many implementations will not need them, however they are extremely useful for testing purposes as well as for cases where WebKMS is not present or not an option.

Public Meetings

The editors host an open community call using W3C-CCG meeting infrastructure. This entails:

  • Proposed agendas and supplemental materials for review are sent out by any regularly-participating member to the CCG mailing list; editors and CCG chairs reserve the right to adjudicate if conflicting, inappropriate, or contentious agenda proposals are put forward.
  • Mostly-audio calls hosted on a CCG Jitsi room, Tuesdays at 4pm Eastern Time. This allows members to screenshare during issue review or discussion of diagrams.
  • Minutes are scribed by volunteers from the group and sent to the CCG mailing list for review.

Development

Before committing changes to the OpenAPI spec files, please be sure to run the linter and correct any errors:

npm ci
npm run lint

To assemble bundled yaml files, as well as an all-in-one bundle of all definitions, run the following:

npm ci
npm run build

This will generate the following files:

  • api/vc-api.yaml - a bundle with all specifications rolled into one
  • api/bundles/issuer.yml - issuer endpoints bundled with no external refs
  • api/bundles/verifier.yml - verifier endpoints bundled with no external refs
  • api/bundles/holder.yml - holder endpoints bundled with no external refs

To view the generated specifications, execute npm run serve. By default, this will start an http server on http://127.0.0.1:8080. Once you have the server started, you can view the documentation in several formats:

To view changes to the related to the index.html, execute npm run serveIndex. By default this will start an http server on http://127.0.0.1:8080. Once you have the server started, you can view the index.html here:

You can can view the documentation here:

Documentation for the http-server can be found here.

If you need to run on another port, execute npm run serveIndex -- -p 4543 replacing 4543 with a custom port.

Additional Documentation