Scalar CLI
Command-line interface to work with OpenAPI files
Features
- Format & validate OpenAPI files
- Upload your OpenAPI files to Scalar
- Get a fully mocked API for testing purposes
- Preview your API reference
- Bundle multiple OpenAPI files
Quickstart
npx @scalar/cli help
Installation
If you really want to become friends you should install the CLI:
npm -g install @scalar/cli
Otherwise just prefix all commands with npx @scalar/cli
instead of scalar
. That’s fine, too.
Commands
format
The given JSON file will be formatted with Prettier.
scalar format
scalar format openapi.json --output openapi.yaml
scalar format https://example.com/openapi.json --output openapi.json
validate
To check whether your OpenAPI file adheres to the Swagger 2.0, OpenAPI 3.0 or OpenAPI 3.1 specification, run the following command:
scalar validate
scalar validate openapi.json
scalar validate https://example.com/openapi.json
share
To quickly share an OpenAPI file or reference with someone, you can use the share command:
scalar share
scalar share openapi.json
This will upload your OpenAPI file to the Scalar Sandbox to give you a public reference URL and a public URL to your OpenAPI JSON file.
reference
You can quickly spin up a local server with an API reference based on your OpenAPI file.
scalar reference
scalar reference openapi.json
scalar reference openapi.json --port 1234
scalar reference openapi.json --watch
scalar reference https://example.com/openapi.json --watch
mock
We can even mock your API, and it’s just one command:
scalar mock
This will boot up a server on port 3000 which gives you an API returning the dummy data according to your schema.
If you’d like to watch for file changes (to the OpenAPI file), do it like this:
scalar mock openapi.json --watch
You can also change the port like this:
scalar mock openapi.json --watch --port 8080
And it even works with URLs:
scalar mock https://example.com/openapi.json --watch
bundle
Warning! The bundle command isn’t ready for production yet. Circular dependencies are not supported yet.
Some OpenAPI files reference other files from the file system or an URL. You can bundle those files and make them a single file:
scalar bundle openapi.json --output bundle.json
If you don’t provide an output
file name, the input file will be overwritten.
init
If you’re tired of passing the file name again and again, just configure it once:
scalar init
This will create a scalar.config.json
file for you. All commands will use the configured OpenAPI file by default.
Options
--version
If you want to check which version of the CLI is installed, just run this:
scalar --version
--help
scalar --help
GitHub Actions
To validate your OpenAPI file in GitHub Actions, add this workflow:
name: Validate OpenAPI File
on:
push:
branches:
- main
pull_request:
branches:
- main
jobs:
validate:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Use Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: 20
- name: Validate OpenAPI File
run: npx @scalar/cli validate ./my-openapi-file.json
Development
Set up the development environment:
pnpm install
pnpm @scalar/cli --version
To symlink the package and use it globally on your machine:
pnpm cli:link
scalar --version