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@hackages/restful-client
Advanced tools
restful-client
Inspired by restful-react
restful-client
is able to generate axios client with appropriate type-signatures (TypeScript) from any valid OpenAPI v3 or Swagger v2 specification, either in yaml
or json
formats.
Type-safe data fetchers can be generated from an OpenAPI specification using the following command:
restful-client import --file MY_OPENAPI_SPEC.yaml --output my-awesome-generated-types.tsx
This command can be invoked by either:
restful-client
globally and running it in the terminal: npm i -g restful-client
, orscript
to your package.json
like so: "scripts": {
"start": "webpack-dev-server",
"build": "webpack -p",
+ "generate-fetcher": "restful-client import --file MY_SWAGGER_DOCS.json --output FETCHERS.tsx"
}
Your client can then be generated by running npm run generate-fetcher
. Optionally, we recommend linting/prettifying the output for readability like so:
"scripts": {
"start": "webpack-dev-server",
"build": "webpack -p",
"generate-fetcher": "restful-client import --file MY_SWAGGER_DOCS.json --output FETCHERS.tsx",
+ "postgenerate-fetcher": "prettier FETCHERS.d.tsx --write"
}
To enforce the best quality as possible of specification, we have integrated the amazing OpenAPI linter from IBM. We strongly encourage you to setup your custom rules with a .validaterc
file, you can find all useful information about this configuration here.
To activate this, add a --validation
flag to your restful-client
call.
Adding the --github
flag to restful-client import
instead of using the --file
flag allows us to create your client from an OpenAPI spec remotely hosted on GitHub. (how is this real life 🔥 )
To generate components from remote specifications, you'll need to follow the following steps:
Visit your GitHub settings.
Click Generate New Token and choose the following:
Token Description: (enter anything)
Scopes:
[X] repo
[X] repo:status
[X] repo_deployment
[X] public_repo
[X] repo:invite
Click Generate token.
Copy the generated string.
Open a terminal and run restful-client import --github username:repo:branch:path/to/openapi.yaml --output MY_FETCHERS.tsx
, substituting things where necessary.
You will be prompted for a token.
Paste your token.
You will be asked if you'd like to save it for later. This is entirely up to you and completely safe: it is saved in your node_modules
folder and not committed to version control or sent to us or anything: the source code of this whole thing is public so you're safe.
Caveat: Since your token is stored in node_modules
, your token will be removed on each npm install
of restful-client
.
You're done! 🎉
In some cases, you might need to augment an existing OpenAPI specification on the fly, for code-generation purposes. Our CLI makes this quite straightforward:
restful-client import --file myspec.yaml --output mybettercomponents.tsx --transformer path/to/my-transformer.js
The function specified in --transformer
is pure: it imports your --file
, transforms it, and passes the augmented OpenAPI specification to restful-client
's generator. Here's how it can be used:
// /path/to/my-transformer.js
/**
* Transformer function for restful-client.
*
* @param {OpenAPIObject} schema
* @return {OpenAPIObject}
*/
module.exports = inputSchema => ({
...inputSchema,
// Place your augmentations here
paths: Object.entries(schema.paths).reduce(
(mem, [path, pathItem]) => ({
...mem,
[path]: Object.entries(pathItem).reduce(
(pathItemMem, [verb, operation]) => ({
...pathItemMem,
[verb]: {
...fixOperationId(path, verb, operation),
},
}),
{},
),
}),
{},
),
});
restful-client
supports the concept of "schema stitching" in a RESTful ecosystem as well. We are able to tie multiple backends together and generate code using a single configuration file, restful-client.config.js
To activate this "advanced mode", replace all flags from your restful-client
call with the config flag: --config restful-client.config.js
(or any filename that you want).
⚠️ Note: using a config file makes use of all of the options contained therein, and ignores all other CLI flags.
interface RestfulClientConfig {
[backend: string]: {
// classic configuration
output: string;
file?: string;
github?: string;
transformer?: string;
validation?: boolean;
// advanced configuration
customImport?: string;
customProps?: {
base?: string;
};
};
}
// restful-client.config.js
module.exports = {
myFirstBackend: {
output: 'src/queries/myFirstBackend.tsx',
file: 'specs/my-first-backend.yaml',
customProps: {
base: `"http://my-first-backend.com"`,
},
},
configurableBackend: {
output: 'src/queries/configurableBackend.tsx',
github: 'contiamo:restful-client:master:docs/swagger.json',
},
};
// package.json
{
"scripts": {
"gen": "restful-client import --config restful-client.config.js",
"gen-first": "restful-client import --config restful-client.config.js myFirstBackend"
}
}
FAQs
A swagger client generator for typescript
The npm package @hackages/restful-client receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, @hackages/restful-client popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @hackages/restful-client demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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