I’m in the process of building an application which requires strong integration with the Amazon API. I needed to submit product feeds, update inventory and prices, as well as downloading reports and couple other things. When I first was given the project, of course the first I did was a quick google search to see what kind of documentation is out there on the API. There was some info out there (links below), but I had to do a lot playing around first with bits of google searches to get what I needed.
In hopes of making this easier for other Amazon API developers, I’ll outline the basic process for a feed submission and some methods that I’ve ended up integrating into my application using the Amazon Feeds API.
Here’s a few FeedTypes I’ve used.
To get started, you’ll need your Amazon MarketPlaceId, Merchant, Access Key and Secret Access Key, and of course the actual Feeds API.
Note, in the examples posted below, there’s a method called GetClient() which is used. It returns a MarketplaceWebserviceClient object. Looks like this:
private MarketplaceWebServiceClient GetClient() { MarketplaceWebServiceConfig mwsConfig = new MarketplaceWebServiceConfig(); mwsConfig.ServiceURL = "https://mws.amazonservices.com"; mwsConfig.SetUserAgentHeader("YourCompany", "1.0", "C#", new string[] { }); return new MarketplaceWebServiceClient(AccessKey, SecretAccessKey, mwsConfig); }
I’ve created a generic method to submit all feeds, which goes like this:
public SubmitFeedResult SubmitFeed(FileInfo file, FeedType feedType) { SubmitFeedResponse response = new SubmitFeedResponse(); SubmitFeedRequest sfrequest = new SubmitFeedRequest(); sfrequest.Merchant = Merchant; sfrequest.MarketplaceIdList = MarketPlaceID; using (FileStream stream = new FileStream(file.FullName, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.ReadWrite)) { sfrequest.FeedContent = stream; sfrequest.ContentMD5 = MarketplaceWebServiceClient.CalculateContentMD5(sfrequest.FeedContent); sfrequest.FeedContent.Position = 0; sfrequest.FeedType = feedType.ToString(); response = GetClient().SubmitFeed(sfrequest); } return response.SubmitFeedResult; }
I pass in the file which contains the XML to submit, along with an FeedType enum I’ve declared, which contains my FeedTypes listed above.
Once you submit a feed, you’d want to see the status. Did it go through, were there any errors/warnings etc.
There’s a FeedSubmissionInfo object that returns info for a specific submission. I use this method to return a list of feed submissions.
public List<FeedSubmissionInfo> GetFeedSubmissionList() { GetFeedSubmissionListRequest request = new GetFeedSubmissionListRequest(); request.Merchant = Merchant; GetFeedSubmissionListResponse response = GetClient().GetFeedSubmissionList(request); return response.GetFeedSubmissionListResult.FeedSubmissionInfo; }
You can now get one FeedSubmissionID from one of the FeedSubmissionInfo objects returned, and pass it in to the following method, which will create and return a FileInfo containing the response. You can further modify this to parse out the XML and reformat the text so it’s readable. Change the path to your preferred location for the file to be created to.
public FileInfo GetFeedSubmissionResultFile(string feedSubmissionID) { GetFeedSubmissionResultRequest request = new GetFeedSubmissionResultRequest(); request.FeedSubmissionId = feedSubmissionID; request.Merchant = Merchant; GetFeedSubmissionResultResponse response; string path = HttpContext.Current.Server.MapPath("~/Files/SubmissionResult-" + feedSubmissionID + ".txt); using (FileStream stream = new FileStream(path, FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.ReadWrite)) { request.FeedSubmissionResult = stream; response = GetClient().GetFeedSubmissionResult(request); } return new FileInfo(path); }
That’s the basic process of a feed submission using the Amazon Feed API. You can do plenty more with the Amazon APIs, like managing orders, prices, inventory, and shipping.