@api-ts/openapi-generator
The api-ts openapi-generator is a command-line utility for converting an io-ts-http
API specification into an OpenAPI specification.
Contents
- Installation
- Usage
- Preparing a types package for reusable codecs
- Defining schemas for custom codecs
- List of supported io-ts primitives
- Generator Reference
- Endpoint documentation
- Schema documentation
1. Install
npm install --save-dev @api-ts/openapi-generator
2. Use
The openapi-generator assumes the io-ts-http apiSpec
is exported in the top level
of the Typescript file passed as an input parameter. The OpenAPI specification will be
written to stdout.
ARGUMENTS:
<file> - API route definition file
OPTIONS:
--name, -n <str> - API name [optional]
--version, -v <str> - API version [optional]
--codec-file, -c <str> - Custom codec definition file [optional]
FLAGS:
--internal, -i - include routes marked private
--help, -h - show help
For example:
npx openapi-generator src/index.ts
3. Preparing a types package for reusable codecs
In order to use types from external io-ts
types packages, you must ensure two things
are done.
- The package source code must be included in the bundle, as the generator is built to
generate specs based from the Typescript AST. It is not set up to work with
transpiled js code. You can do this by modifying your
package.json
to include your
source code in the bundle. For example, if the source code is present in the src/
directory, then add src/
to the files array in the package.json
of your project. - After Step 1, change the
types
field in the package.json
to be the entry point of
the types in the source code. For example, if the entrypoint is src/index.ts
, then
set "types": "src/index.ts"
in the package.json
4. Defining Custom Codecs
When working with openapi-generator
, you may encounter challenges with handling custom
codecs that require JavaScript interpretation or aren't natively supported by the
generator. These issues typically arise with codecs such as new t.Type(...)
and other
primitives that aren't directly supported. However, there are two solutions to address
these challenges effectively. Click here for
the list of supported primitives.
Solution 1: Defining Custom Codec Schemas in the Types Package (recommended)
openapi-generator
now offers the ability to define the schema of custom codecs
directly within the types package that defines them, rather than the downstream package
that uses them. This approach is particularly useful for codecs that are used in many
different types packages. Here’s how you can define schemas for your custom codecs in
the upstream repository:
-
Create a file named openapi-gen.config.js
in the root of your repository.
-
Add the following line to the package.json
of the types package:
"customCodecFile": "openapi-gen.config.js"
You must also add "openapi-gen.config.js"
to the files field in the package.json,
so that it is included in the final bundle.
-
In the openapi-gen.config.js
file, define your custom codecs:
module.exports = (E) => {
return {
SampleCodecDefinition: () =>
E.right({
type: 'string',
default: 'defaultString',
minLength: 1,
}),
};
};
By following these steps, the schemas for your custom codecs will be included in the
generated API docs for any endpoints that use the respective codecs. The input parameter
E
is the namespace import of fp-ts/Either
, and the return type should be a Record
containing AST definitions for external libraries. For more details, see
KNOWN_IMPORTS.
Solution 2: Using a Custom Codec Configuration File
openapi-generator
supports importing codecs from other packages in node_modules
, but
it struggles with io-ts
primitives that need JavaScript interpretation, such as
new t.Type(...)
. To work around this, you can define schemas for these codecs in a
configuration file within your downstream types package (where you generate the API
docs). This allows the generator to understand and use these schemas where necessary.
Follow these steps to create and use a custom codec configuration file:
-
Create a JavaScript file with the following format:
module.exports = (E) => {
return {
'io-ts-bigint': {
BigIntFromString: () => E.right({ type: 'string' }),
NonZeroBigInt: () => E.right({ type: 'number' }),
NonZeroBigIntFromString: () => E.right({ type: 'string' }),
NegativeBigIntFromString: () => E.right({ type: 'string' }),
NonNegativeBigIntFromString: () => E.right({ type: 'string' }),
PositiveBigIntFromString: () => E.right({ type: 'string' }),
},
};
};
-
The input parameter E
is the namespace import of fp-ts/Either
, which avoids
issues with require
. The return type should be a Record
containing AST
definitions for external libraries. For more information on the structure, refer to
KNOWN_IMPORTS.
5. List of supported io-ts primitives
string
number
bigint
boolean
null
nullType
undefined
unknown
any
array
readonlyArray
object
type
partial
exact
strict
record
union
intersection
literal
keyof
brand
UnknownRecord
void
6. Generator Reference
This section will highlight all the features that this generator supports, with examples
to help you add meaningful documentation to your code that will allow clients to use our
APIs with ease.
6.1. Endpoint documentation
Given an endpoint defined using h.httpRoute
, you can add documentation and metadata to
this endpoint through the use of JSDocs. Here are the following list of attributes that
are supported.
6.1.1 Summary
The summary is the first line of the JSDoc. This will be added to the OpenAPI
specification as the endpoints' summary
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.2 Description
The description is the next x
untagged lines of the JSDoc. This will be added to the
OpenAPI specification as the endpoints' description
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.3 Operation IDs
All endpoints must have an operationId
to be identifiable. You can add an operation ID
to the specification using the @operationId
tag in JSDocs. This will add it to the
OpenAPI specification for this route.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.4 Tags
Tags are how we organize endpoints into different groups on dev-portal
. There are many
different tags and tag groups, such as Wallet
, Address
, etc.
Click here
for a full list of tags. You can add a tag to your endpoint using the @tag
JSDoc tag.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.5 Private Routes
There are many instances where you'd want an endpoint to be private, such as admin
or
internal
routes. You can make an endpoint private in documentation by simply adding a
@private
tag to the JSDoc. In the specification, this will add an x-internal: true
field, which marks the field to be stripped out in a preprocessing
step on
dev-portal.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.6 Unstable Routes
If you are working on an endpoint that is unstable, or not completely implemented yet,
you can add the @unstable
tag to ensure that consumers know it is still in development
and may not work as expected.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.7 Examples
You can also add example responses to the top level JSDocs of your endpoint, but as
you'll see in later sections, there are other ways to do this.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.8 Unknown tags
Any other tags that are added to this top-level will be classified as an uknown tag, and
will be placed inside the x-unknown-tags
field in the OpenAPI specification. You can
use this feature to write custom workflows and filtering logic for you full
specification. For example, you could add a @version
tag and have a workflow that
filters endpoints based on the version field in the x-unknown-tags
field.
const route = h.httpRoute({ ... })
6.1.9 Sample output
This is what the OpenAPI specification will look like for the route we have built.
{
"openapi": 3.03,
"paths": {
"/api/v2/sample/route": {
"get": {
"summary": "This is the summary",
"description": "This is description line 1\nThis is description line 2",
"operationId": "v2.sample.route",
"example": {
"object": {
"key": "value"
}
},
"tag": "Wallet",
"x-internal": true,
"x-unstable": true,
"x-unknown-tags": {
"version": 3
}
...parameters,
...requestBody,
...responses
}
}
}
}
6.2. Schema Documentation
In addition to adding JSDocs for top-level routes, you can also add JSDocs to
paremeters, request bodies, and response body schemas.
6.2.1 Descriptions
You can add a description to any schema or field just by adding a JSDoc on top, with a
description.
import * as t from 'io-ts';
const schema = t.type({
field: t.number,
});
6.2.2 Supported OpenAPI Tags
These are the list of OpenAPI tags that you can put in JSDocs, and they will be included
in the generated OpenAPI spec.
@default[value: any]
@example [example: any]
@minLength [length: number]
@maxLength [length: number]
@pattern [pattern: regex]
@minimum [min: number]
@maximum [max: number]
@minItems [minItems: number]
@maxItems [maxItems: number]
@minProperties [min: number]
@maxProperties [max: number]
@exclusiveMinimum
@exclusiveMaximum
@multipleOf [num: number]
@uniqueItems
@readOnly
@writeOnly
@format [format: format]
@title [title: string]
Here is an example schema with all these tags in use. Don't worry about the fields, just
notice the different JSDocs and JSDocs tags for each field. You can also add as many
tags to one field as you want (provided that the tags don't conflict). You may also add
descriptions
include * as t from 'io-ts';
const SampleSchema = t.type({
field1: t.string,
field2: t.string,
field3: t.string,
field4: t.string,
fieldWithId: t.string,
minField: t.number,
maxField: t.number,
minItemsArray: t.array(t.string),
maxItemsArray: t.array(t.string),
,
minPropRecord: t.record(t.string, t.string),
maxPropRecord: t.record(t.string, t.string),
nestedObject: t.partial({
exclMin: t.number,
exclMax: t.number,
multOf: t.number,
arr: t.array(t.string),
readOnlyField: t.unknown,
writeOnlyField: t.unknown,
uuidField: t.string,
titleField: t.string
})
})
6.2.3 Custom Tags
These are some tags that you can use in your schema JSDocs are custom to this generator.
@private
allows you to mark any field as in any schema as private. The final spec
will have x-internal: true
for schemas with the @private
tag.@deprecated
allows to mark any field in any schema as deprecated. The final spec
will include deprecated: true
in the final specificaiton.
import * as t from 'io-ts';
const Schema = t.type({
privateField: t.string,
deprecatedField: t.string,
publicNonDeprecatedField: t.string,
});