Fury.js
API Description SDK
Wardaddy: Best job I ever had.
Fury provides uniform interface to API description formats such as
API Blueprint and Swagger.
Note: Fury requires adapters to support parsing and serializing. You will need to install at least one adapter along with Fury. You can find Fury adapters via npm.
Usage
Install
Fury.js is available as an npm module.
$ npm install --save fury
Refract Interface
Fury.js offers an interface based on the Refract Project element specification and makes use of the API description and data structure namespaces. Adapters convert from formats such as API Blueprint into Refract elements and Fury.js exposes these with API-related convenience functionality. For example:
import fury from 'fury';
import apibParser from 'fury-adapter-apib-parser';
const source = 'FORMAT: 1A\n# My API\n...';
fury.use(apibParser);
fury.parse({source}, function(err, result) {
console.log(result.api.title);
});
Once you have a parsed API it is easy to traverse:
api.resourceGroups.forEach(function (resourceGroup) {
console.log(resourceGroup.title);
resourceGroup.resources.forEach(function (resource) {
console.log(resource.title);
resource.transitions.forEach(function (transition) {
console.log(transition.title);
transition.transactions.forEach(function (transaction) {
const request = transaction.request;
const response = transaction.response;
console.log(`${request.method} ${request.href}`);
console.log(`${response.statusCode} (${response.header('Content-Type')})`);
console.log(response.messageBody);
});
});
});
});
It is also possible to do complex document-wide searching and filtering. For example, to print out a listing of HTTP methods and paths for all defined example requests:
function filterFunc(item) {
if (item.element === 'httpRequest' && item.statusCode === 200) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
console.log('All API request URIs:');
api.find(filterFunc).forEach(function (request) {
console.log(`${request.method} ${request.href}`)
});
Reference:
Multiple Fury Instances
There may come a day when you need to have multiple Fury instances with different adapters or other options set up in the same program. This is possible via the Fury
class:
import {Fury} from 'fury';
const fury1 = new Fury();
const fury2 = new Fury();
fury1.parse(...);
Writing an Adapter
Adapters convert from an input format such as API Blueprint into refract elements. This allows a single, consistent interface to be used to interact with multiple input API description formats. Writing your own adapter allows you to add support for new input formats.
Adapters are made up of a name, a list of media types, and up to three optional public functions: detect
, parse
, and serialize
. A simple example might look like this:
export const name = 'my-adapter';
export const mediaTypes = ['text/vnd.my-adapter'];
export function detect(source) {
return source.match(/some-test/i) !== null;
}
export function parse({minim, generateSourceMap, source}, done) {
const Resource = minim.getElementByClass('resource');
done(null, elements);
}
export function serialize({api, minim}, done) {
done(null, outputString);
}
export default {name, mediaTypes, detect, parse, serialize};
Now you can register your adapter with Fury.js:
import fury from 'fury';
import myAdapter from './my-adapter';
fury.use(myAdapter);
fury.parse({source: 'some-test\n...'}, function (err, api) {
console.log(api.title);
});
Development
Building & Testing
Fury is written in ES6 and is transpiled before publishing. All of the build/test/etc commands are run through npm:
npm test
npm run lint
npm run cover
open coverage/lcov-report/index.html