SetWebhook

fun SetWebhook(    url: String,     certificate: MultipartFile,     ipAddress: String? = null,     maxAllowedConnections: Int? = null,     allowedUpdates: List<String>? = null,     dropPendingUpdates: Boolean? = null,     secretToken: String? = null): MultipartSetWebhookRequest
fun SetWebhook(    url: String,     certificate: FileId,     ipAddress: String? = null,     maxAllowedConnections: Int? = null,     allowedUpdates: List<String>? = null,     dropPendingUpdates: Boolean? = null,     secretToken: String? = null): SetWebhook


fun SetWebhook(    url: String,     certificate: InputFile,     ipAddress: String? = null,     maxAllowedConnections: Int? = null,     allowedUpdates: List<String>? = null,     dropPendingUpdates: Boolean? = null,     secretToken: String? = null): SetWebhookRequest
fun SetWebhook(    url: String,     ipAddress: String? = null,     maxAllowedConnections: Int? = null,     allowedUpdates: List<String>? = null,     dropPendingUpdates: Boolean? = null,     secretToken: String? = null): SetWebhook

Use this method to specify a url and receive incoming updates via an outgoing webhook. Whenever there is an update for the bot, we will send an HTTPS POST request to the specified url, containing a JSON-serialized Update.

If you'd like to make sure that the Webhook request comes from Telegram, we recommend using a secret path in the url, e.g. https://www.example.com/. Since nobody else knows your bot's token, you can be pretty sure it's us.