Risk management app today

Business

Product management software today? Autogenerate your App’s Actions! It is really super-easy to generate all available Actions in your API/App by pointing out the OpenAPI/Swagger file. Copyl Integration Platform parses this file and adds all available Actions together with information about fields needed. Even the documentation is available in CIP afterwards. You need to manually start the parser from the administration interface of your app. You can delete any unwanted Actions afterwards and you can also hide them when generating the Swagger file.

Copyl started out from our own needs. We had an agency with 30 consultants and we were planning them all in an Excel sheet. We love Excel but we quickly got different planning in the projects and in the resource planning. We needed something more connected. And something that we could follow up in the time sheets and billing process. After a few years with this planning system we got a call from a big organization in Sweden that needed a ERP system. We scanned the market for them, not able to find a perfect match. We had a meeting and we showed them we showed how we managed our own resource planning. Instantly the customer said that they wanted that system. Copyl 1.0 was born. This was 2011. Find more information on https://www.copyl.com/en/software/start. Collaborate with your colleagues. Copyl Contract Management solution enables you to share contracts and set permissions on them to allow certain groups/users access.

All Contracts in one place! See current and past contracts from the overview page. Group by supplier, customer or status. Discuss and follow up on tasks: All contracts have their own forum were you and the counterparts can discuss the contract. The Task Management system in Copyl is also automatically connected to each contract. Integrated with Search and other pages: The contracts appears on the related contacts, search, projects and other pages were the contract is connected.

Copyl has a solution for the biggest challenges. How do microservices communicate with each other? The absolute most common communication between microservices are via REST API. It’s done over https and requires no or very little configuration on the network. We recommend to use the standard methods for your api requests; GET for fetching data, POST for saving new data, PUT for updating and DELETE for deletion. PATCH can also be used for updating, it’s a matter of taste. Read additional information at https://www.copyl.com/.

It’s a common issue that developers that are new to the design concept of microservices create too many service. A common design for a e-commerce solution is to have one microservice for Billing and another for Payment Collection. The Payment Collection microservice usually depends on Billing and Billing depends on knowing when a payment has been done. That’s a good reason to have both functionalities in one microservice.