Skip to content

A specification and user manual for the Intento API – a single API to Cognitive AI models from many vendors.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

intento/intento-api

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

API User Manual

This is a human-friendly manual to the Intento API. The interactive API Reference is available at intento.github.io.

In case you don't have a key to use Intento API, please register here console.inten.to

Overview

Intents

Intento API provides a uniform intent-based access to cognitive services from multiple providers, available at the Intento Service Platform. The intent is a basic action (like translate).

Currently, the following intents are available:

Intent APIs are accessed via the base path. That said, API for the Machine Translation intent (ai.text.translate) is available at /ai/text/translate.

Using the API

In order to get a list of providers available for some intent, use GET requests. Some providers support a subset of all available inputs for an intent. For example, not every Machine Translation service supports Korean to Russian language pair. To get a list of providers that support particular inputs, specify the input data constraints in GET parameters (see below).

In order to fulfill an intent (e.g. translate some text), use POST requests. The request is routed to a provider that supports the input data. In order to control the provider selection process, you may specify a custom routing strategy (contact us at [email protected] to set up it for you) or identifier of the particular provider to use.

All methods of the Intento API return JSON responses.

Some of the features described below are supported in the testing branch of our API. They are marked by 🔒. Please contact us to enable these features for your API key.

Error handling

Intento uses the standard HTTP error reporting format for the JSON API. Successful requests return HTTP status codes in the 2xx range. Failed requests return status codes in the 4xx and 5xx ranges. Requests that require a redirect returns status codes in the 3xx range.

Authentication and keys

Currently, we use the token-based authentication via headers (more on that below). If this is inconvenient for you, let us know. We always strive to support all use-cases our clients have in mind.

We enable cross-origin resource sharing support for our API so that you can use it right from the web application. However, be careful with your access keys. If you think your access credentials are compromised, let us know. We will give you new credentials and consult on how to take care of them.

Paying for services

Third-party services may be paid via Intento (the default scenario) or via your own account at the third party service. In order to use your own account at the third party service, specify the account credentials as described below. NOTE: some of the services are available only with your own accounts (i.e. we don’t have a billing integration with them).

Additional features

Intento Service Platform provides additional APIs for convenience.

Currently, the following features are available:

  • Usage API - to get usage statistics about all calls to the API
  • Score API - a set of API methods to calculate reference-based scores (such as BLEU) on user input
  • Evaluation API - to evaluate third-party API models

Authentication

We use the token-based authentication. Each request to intento API should pass an access key in header apikey as demonstrated in the examples below.

For each account, we provide one production key by default. Requests performed with the production key are actually fulfilled via third-party services and billed towards your account. Usage limits for production keys are governed by the subscription tier you have. Additional production keys can be created upon request.

Usage limits

Intento API has the following technical limitations on the API Gateway level:

  • Requests per second: 100
  • Requests per month: 1,000,000
  • Data per request: 100MB
  • Provider-specific limits

Actual data processing limits depend on the subscription plan and the technical limitations of the selected third-party services.

Remaining limits are returned with a response in headers: X-RateLimit-Remaining-second, X-RateLimit-Remaining-month

When the limits are exceeded, Intento API returns an HTTP error 429 (see Error codes below).

In case if your request exceeds limits you can use the async mode. The current approach to handling the oversized requests is described in a separate document.

Errors

Error responses usually include a JSON document in the response body, which contains information about the error. In async mode, response also includes a specific position of the error.

Error codes:

  • 400 -- Provider-related errors.
  • 401 -- Intento: Auth key is missing
  • 403 -- Intento: Auth key is invalid
  • 404 -- Intento: Intent/Provider not found
  • 413 -- Intento: Capabilities mismatch for the chosen provider (too long text, unsupported languages, etc)
  • 429 -- Intento: API rate limit exceeded
  • 500 -- Intento: Internal error
  • 501 -- Intento: Not implemented. The server lacks the ability to fulfil the request. Will be implemented in future.
  • 502 -- Intento: Gateway timeout

Basic usage

A simple example of how to use Intento API.

To translate a text, send a POST request to Intento API at https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate. Specify the source text, the target language and the desired translation provider in JSON body of the request as in the following example:

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0"
    }
}'

Proceed to the following links for more details and examples on how to use a particular intent.

Advanced usage

Async mode

If the server responded with a status of 413 (Request Entity Too Large), then the request data is too large for the synchronous processing. In this case, you should switch to the asynchronous mode by setting service.async to true. The current approach to handling the oversized requests is described in a separate document.

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": [
           "Large text corpus"
        ],
        "to": "es",
        "from": "en"
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": [
            "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0"
        ],
        "async": true
    }
}'

The response contains id of the operation:

{
    "id": "ea1684f1-4ec7-431d-9b7e-bfbe98cf0bda"
}

Wait for processing to complete. To retrieve the result of the operation, make a GET request to the https://api.inten.to/operations/YOUR_OPERATION_ID. TTL of the resource is 30 days.

{
    "id": "ea1684f1-4ec7-431d-9b7e-bfbe98cf0bda",
    "done": true,
    "response": [
        {
            "results": [
                "Translated large text corpus"
            ],
            "meta": {},
            "service": {
                "provider": {
                    "id": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
                    "name": "Microsoft Translator API v3.0"
                }
            }
        }
    ],
    "error": null
}

If the operation is not completed the value of done is false. Wait and make request later.

{
    "id": "ea1684f1-4ec7-431d-9b7e-bfbe98cf0bda",
    "done": false,
    "response": null,
    "error": null
}

Async errors

If the operation encountered an error during fulfillment, you would see a response with partial result and error. This result contains successfully fulfilled elements of the initial request and nulls where the error occurred. More information about the cause of the problem you can find in an error object. The object contains a list of failed requests with corresponding error responses. For more convenient mapping there is an item key and a position key in the object. The item key is an index of the element in the initial request array. And the position key is an index of the element in the sub-array. Here is an example of the operation which failed:

{
    "id": "72eaec95-da77-463c-877a-def06b357888",
    "done": true,
    "response": [
        {
            "results": [
                "Translated response 1",
                "Translated response 2",
                null,
                "Translated response 4"
            ],
            "meta": {
                "detected_source_language": [
                    "en"
                ]
            },
            "service": {
                "provider": {
                    "id": "provider_id",
                    "name": "Provider Name"
                }
            }
        }
    ],
    "error": {
        "type": "AsyncSecondaryError",
        "reason": "One or more of async operations return an error",
        "data": [
            {
                "item": 3,
                "position": 0,
                "error": true,
                "provider_id": "provider_id",
                "request": {
                    "url": "https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate/",
                    "method": "POST",
                    "body": "{\"context\": {\"from\": \"ru\", \"to\": \"en\", \"text\": \"Непереведенный ответ 3\"}, \"service\": {\"provider\": [\"provider_id\"]}}"
                },
                "response": {
                    "body": {
                        "error": {
                            "code": 413,
                            "message": "Provider provider_id constraint(s) violated: Constraint violated for parameter text: max-item-length=10, passed value length=22"
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
        ]
    }
}

Debug mode

Intento do not keep payload in logs, but in some cases it may be useful for debugging. Saving data in logs can be controlled using the boolean flag trace.

There are three ways to set the trace flag:

request header

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' -H 'trace: true' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
...
}'

request arguments

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate?trace=true' -d '{
...
}'

request body in service

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": [
            "ai.text.translate.google.translate_api.v3"
        ],
        "trace": true
    }
}'

If flag do not set or set false we do not keep user payload in logs. Flag name is case insensitive.

Using a service provider with your own keys

Intento supports two modes of using 3rd party services:

  • full proxy: 3rd party service used via Intento and paid to the Intento (available for some of the services).
  • tech proxy: 3rd party service used via our user's own credentials and billed towards the user's account at the third-party service (available for all services).

In the tech proxy mode, the custom credentials are passed in the auth service field. auth field is a dictionary, it's keys are provider IDs. For each ID specify your own key(s) you want to use and values set to a list of keys for the specified provider. There could be more than one key for the provider in the case you want to work with a pool of keys (more on this advanced feature later).

Auth object structure is different for different providers and may be obtained together with other provider details by sending GET request for this provider:

curl -H 'apikey: YOUR_INTENTO_KEY'
   'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate/ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0'

Response:

{
    "id": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
    "vendor": "Microsoft",
    "logo": "https://inten.to/img/api/mcs_translate.png",
    "description": "Translator API v3.0",
    "auth_information": {
        "key": {
            "description": "YOUR_MICROSOFT_KEY"
        },
        "url": {
            "description": "YOUR URL (e.g. 'https://api.cognitive.microsofttranslator.com')",
            "default": "https://api.cognitive.microsofttranslator.com"
        },
        "region": {
            "description": "YOUR REGION (e.g. 'westeurope' or 'westus2'. If unknown use 'global')",
            "default": "global"
        }
    },
    "billing": true,
    "bulk": true,
    "languages": {
        "symmetric": [
            "gu",
            "gd",
            "ga",
            "gl",
            "lb"
        ],
        "pairs": [
            [
                [
                    "en",
                    "de"
                ],
                [
                    "fr",
                    "en"
                ]
            ]
        ]
    }
}
curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_INTENTO_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
        "auth": {
            "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0": [
                { "key": "YOUR_MICROSOFT_KEY" }
            ]
        }
    }
}'

Response:

{
    "results": [
        "Un texto de muestra"
    ],
    "meta": {
        "detected_source_language": [ "en" ],
        "timing": { "total": 0.18, "providers": 0.16 }
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": {
            "id": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
            "name": "Microsoft Translator API v3.0",
            "timing": { "provider": 0.16 }
        }
    }
}

Connected Accounts

Some providers do not provide fixed static credentials like API-keys or username/password pair but require you to use temporary tokens instead (like Google Cloud Advanced Translation API or Google AutoML). So it imposes some extra work when using your own credentials — you have to regenerate these temporary credentials by yourself and provide them with each request to Intento. You have to know when you need to regenerate a token, or we let you know when we cannot fulfill a request using a provided token (because it was expired), so you can catch this situation, regenerate a token by yourself and continue using Intento API.

It is not very handy, because some tokens expire just after an hour, so you have to regenerate them each hour. Even if this process can be automated it takes much extra work: you need to catch this particular situation, regenerate a token, resend a bunch of requests which happen to be called with the expired token. The situation becomes harder when you run large async jobs that could take more time than a token lifetime. In this situation a part of such request will fail, so you need to split your requests into smaller parts or resubmit failed tasks with a new token. It is painful.

We provide a much more convenient and hassle-free way to work with temporary credentials. You can provide us with all the required information to generate temporary tokens. The fastest way to set up Google Cloud Advanced Translation API and Google AutoML with Intento is our Connected Accounts.

Smart routing

Intento provides the smart routing feature, so that the translation request is automatically routed to the best provider. The best provider is determined based on the following information:

  • apriori benchmark on the standard dataset
  • provider usage statistics, collected by Intento, including user feedback signals (the post-editing complexity for Machine Translation).

Basic smart routing

To use the smart routing, just omit the service.provider parameter:

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    }
}'

Response:

{
    "results": [
        "Un texto de ejemplo"
    ],
    "meta": {
        "routing": { "id": "best" },
        "detected_source_language": [ "en" ],
        "timing": { "total": 0.11, "providers": 0.1 }
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": {
            "id": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
            "name": "Microsoft Translator API v3.0",
            "timing": { "provider": 0.1 }
        }
    }
}

Specifying the smart routing strategy

By default, when the provider is missing, requests are routed to a provider with the best expected price/performance ratio. This behavior may be controlled by specifying the desired routing strategy in the service.routing parameter. Contact us at [email protected] to set up it for you.

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    },
    "service": {
        "routing": "best_quality"
    }
}'

Failover mode

Both for smart routing mode and basic mode, a failover is supported. By default, the failover is off, thus when the selected provider fails, an error is returned. To enable the failover mode, set the service.failover to true. By default, failover is governed by the default routing strategy (best). To control this behavior, another routing strategy may be specified via service.routing parameter. Alternatively, you may specify a list of providers to consider for the failover (service.failover_list). This option overrides the routing strategy for the failover procedure.

In the following example we set the provider, but specify the list of alternatives to control the failover:

curl -XPOST -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "context": {
        "text": "A sample text",
        "to": "es"
    },
    "service": {
        "provider": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
        "failover": true,
        "failover_list": [
            "ai.text.translate.google.translate_api.v3",
            "ai.text.translate.yandex.cloud-translate.v2"
        ]
    }
}'

🔒 Sending feedback signals

In order to fine tune the smart routing algorithm, users may send the translation quality feedback.

For each translation, Intento returns its unique id in service.id field:

{
    "results": [
        "Un texto de ejemplo"
    ],
    "service": {
        "id": "AVsAnRaMhIu3DcCXPJYY",
        "provider": {
            "id": "ai.text.translate.microsoft.translator_text_api.3-0",
            "name": "Microsoft Translator API v3.0"
        }
    }
}

This id may be used to send back the translation quality feedback:

curl -XPUT -H 'apikey: YOUR_API_KEY' 'https://api.inten.to/ai/text/translate' -d '{
    "id": "AVsAnRaMhIu3DcCXPJYY",
    "feedback": {
        "type": "raw",
        "value": "A better text"
    }
}'

We support several types of the feedback:

  • raw - raw post-edited text
  • fuzzy_word - word-based inverted Levenstein distance
  • fuzzy_char - character-based inverted Levenstein distance
  • time - time spent on editing in seconds
  • effort - an amount of mouse clicks and keyboard strokes spent on editing

🔒 Session-based routing

The feedback signals sent back to Intento are used to fine-tune smart routing for all translations within language pair and domain for the user who sent the feedback.

To control this process, a user may specify the session as a service.session object with arbitrary string fields. We assume that sessions form some sort of hierarchy and do our best to infer it from the session data sent to Intento. Possible sessions may include:

{
    "translator": "John Reed",
    "author": "Leo Tolstoy",
    "project": "War and Peace",
    "document": "Chapter one"
}

or

{
    "author": "Leo Tolstoy",
    "project": "Anna Karenina"
}