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Usage

First, make sure Cap Standalone is installed and running by following the installation guide.

Then, you can get to using Cap Standalone:

Client-side

Let's configure your widget to use your self-hosted Cap Standalone server. To do this, set the widget's API endpoint option to:

https://<instance_url>/<site_key>/

Make sure to replace:

  • <instance_url>: The actual URL where your Cap Standalone instance is running. This URL must be publicly accessible from the internet.
  • <site_key>: Your site key from this dashboard.

Example:

html
<cap-widget
  data-cap-api-endpoint="https://cap.example.com/d9256640cb53/"
></cap-widget>

Server-side

After a user completes the CAPTCHA on your site, your backend needs to verify their token using this server's API.

You can do this by sending a POST request from your server to the following endpoint:

https://<instance_url>/<site_key>/siteverify

Your request needs to include the following data:

  • secret: Your key secret from this dashboard. This is not the admin key, but rather your site key's secret.

  • response: The CAPTCHA token generated by the widget on the client-side

Example using curl:

bash
curl "https://<instance_url>/<site_key>/siteverify" \
  -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{ "secret": "<key_secret>", "response": "<captcha_token>" }'

The response should look like this:

json
{
  "success": true
}

Or, if the captcha token is invalid or expired, it will return:

json
{
  "success": false
}

If success is true, you can proceed with your app logic.

Client-side library storage

To learn more about using the client-side library, check out the guide on it.

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Released under the Apache 2.0 License.