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@hey-api/openapi-ts

Turn your OpenAPI specification into a beautiful TypeScript client

  • 0.33.2
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OpenAPI TypeScript 👋

✨ Turn your OpenAPI specification into a beautiful TypeScript client

Table of Contents

  • Table of Contents
  • About
  • Features
  • Quick Start
  • Installation
  • Configuration
  • Interceptors
  • Migrating
  • Contributing

About

openapi-ts started as a fork of openapi-typescript-codegen. We created it after the original project became unmaintained to add support for OpenAPI v3.1. We plan to resolve the most pressing issues in the original project – open an issue if you'd like to prioritise your use case!

Features

  • generate TypeScript clients from OpenAPI v2.0, v3.0, and v3.1 specifications
  • support JSON or YAML input files
  • handle external references using JSON Schema $Ref Parser
  • generate Fetch, Node-Fetch, Axios, Angular, or XHR HTTP clients
  • can be used with CLI, Node.js, or npx
  • abortable requests through cancellable promise pattern

Quick Start

The fastest way to use openapi-ts is via npx

npx @hey-api/openapi-ts -i path/to/openapi.json -o src/client

Congratulations on creating your first client! 🎉

Installation

npm install @hey-api/openapi-ts --save-dev

or

yarn add @hey-api/openapi-ts -D

If you want to use openapi-ts with CLI, add a script to your package.json file

"scripts": {
  "openapi-ts": "openapi-ts"
}

You can also generate your client programmatically by importing openapi-ts in a .ts file.

import { createClient } from '@hey-api/openapi-ts'

createClient({
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
})

⚠️ You need to be running Node.js v18 or newer

Configuration

openapi-ts supports loading configuration from a file inside your project root directory. You can either create a openapi-ts.config.cjs file

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
module.exports = {
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

or openapi-ts.config.mjs

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

Alternatively, you can use openapi-ts.config.js and configure the export statement depending on your project setup.

Clients

By default, openapi-ts will try to guess your client based on your project dependencies. If we don't get it right, you can specify the desired client

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  client: 'fetch',
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

We support these clients:

We also support the legacy Node.js and XHR clients:

⚠️ You might not need a node client. Fetch API is experimental in Node.js v18 and stable in Node.js v21. We recommend upgrading to the latest Node.js version.

Formatting

By default, openapi-ts will automatically format your client according to your project configuration. To disable automatic formatting, set format to false

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  format: false,
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

You can also prevent your client from being processed by formatters by adding your output path to the tool's ignore file (e.g. .prettierignore).

Linting

For performance reasons, openapi-ts does not automatically lint your client. To enable this feature, set lint to true

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  lint: true,
  output: 'src/client',
}

You can also prevent your client from being processed by linters by adding your output path to the tool's ignore file (e.g. .eslintignore).

Enums

If you need to iterate through possible field values without manually typing arrays, you can export enums with

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  enums: 'javascript',
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

This will export enums as plain JavaScript objects. For example, Foo would become

export const FooEnum = {
  FOO: 'foo',
  BAR: 'bar',
} as const;

We discourage generating TypeScript enums because they are not standard JavaScript and pose typing challenges. If you really need TypeScript enums, you can export them with

/** @type {import('@hey-api/openapi-ts').UserConfig} */
export default {
  enums: 'typescript',
  input: 'path/to/openapi.json',
  output: 'src/client',
}

Config API

You can view the complete list of options in the UserConfig interface.

Interceptors

Interceptors (middleware) can be used to modify requests before they're sent or responses before they're returned to the rest of your application. Below is an example request interceptor

OpenAPI.interceptors.request.use((request) => {
  doSomethingWithRequest(request)
  return request // <-- must return request
})

and an example response interceptor

OpenAPI.interceptors.response.use(async (response) => {
  await doSomethingWithResponse(response) // async
  return response // <-- must return response
})

If you need to remove an interceptor, pass the same function to OpenAPI.interceptors.request.eject() or OpenAPI.interceptors.response.eject().

⚠️ Angular client does not currently support request interceptors.

Migrating

While we try to avoid breaking changes, sometimes it's unavoidable in order to offer you the latest features.

v0.27.38

useOptions: true

By default, generated clients will use a single object argument to pass values to API calls. This is a significant change from the previous default of unspecified array of arguments. If migrating your application in one go isn't feasible, we recommend deprecating your old client and generating a new client.

import { DefaultService } from 'client' // <-- old client with array arguments

import { DefaultService } from 'client_v2' // <-- new client with options argument

This way, you can gradually switch over to the new syntax as you update parts of your code. Once you've removed all instances of client imports, you can safely delete the old client folder and find and replace all client_v2 calls to client.

Contributing

Please refer to the contributing guide for how to install the project for development purposes.

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Package last updated on 02 Apr 2024

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