🎾 openapi-fetch
Ultra-fast fetching for TypeScript generated automatically from your OpenAPI schema. Weighs in at 1 kb and has virtually zero runtime. Works with React, Vue, Svelte, or vanilla JS.
Library | Size (min) |
---|
openapi-fetch | 1 kB |
openapi-typescript-fetch | 4 kB |
openapi-typescript-codegen | 345 kB * |
* Note: codegen depends on the scope of your API: the larger it is, the larger your client weight. This is the actual weight of GitHub’s REST API client.
The syntax is inspired by popular libraries like react-query or Apollo client, but without all the bells and whistles and in a 1 kb package.
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
const { get, post } = createClient<paths>();
await post('/create-post', {
body: {
title: 'My New Post',
},
});
const { data, error } = await get('/post/my-blog-post');
console.log(data.title);
console.log(error.message);
console.log(data?.foo);
Notice there are no generics, and no manual typing. Your endpoint’s exact request & response was inferred automatically off the URL. This makes a big difference in the type safety of your endpoints! This eliminates all of the following:
- ✅ No malformed URLs
- ✅ Always using the correct method
- ✅ All parameters are fully type-checked and matched the schema
- ✅ For POST and PATCH, etc., all request bodies are fully type-checked as well
- ✅ No chance the wrong type was manually imported
- ✅ No chance typing was bypassed altogether
- ✅ All of this in a 1 kB client package 🎉
🔧 Setup
First, install this package and openapi-typescript from npm:
npm i openapi-fetch
npm i -D openapi-typescript
Next, generate TypeScript types from your OpenAPI schema using openapi-typescript:
npx openapi-typescript ./path/to/api/v1.yaml -o ./src/lib/api/v1.d.ts
Note: be sure to validate your schema first! openapi-typescript will err on invalid schemas.
Lastly, create the client while configuring default options:
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
const { get, post, put, patch, del } = createClient<paths>({
baseUrl: 'https://myserver.com/api/v1/',
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${import.meta.env.VITE_AUTH_TOKEN}`,
},
});
🏓 Usage
Using openapi-fetch is as easy as reading your schema! For example, given the following schema:
paths:
/post/{post_id}:
get:
parameters:
- in: path
name: post_id
required: true
- in: query
name: version
responses:
200:
404:
/create-post:
post:
requestBody:
required: true
schema:
content:
application/json:
type: object
properties:
title:
type: string
body:
type: string
publish_date:
type: number
required:
- title
- body
- publish_date
responses:
200:
500:
Here’s how you’d query either endpoint:
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
const { get, post } = createClient<paths>();
const { data, error } = await get('/post/{post_id}', {
params: {
path: { post_id: 'my-post' },
query: { version: 2 },
},
});
const { data, error } = await post('/create-post', {
body: {
title: 'New Post',
body: '<p>New post body</p>',
publish_date: new Date('2023-03-01T12:00:00Z').getTime(),
},
});
Note in the get()
example, the URL was actually /post/{post_id}
, not /post/my-post
. The URL matched the OpenAPI schema definition rather than the final URL. This library will replace the path param correctly for you, automatically.
🔀 Parameter Serialization
In the spirit of being lightweight, this library only uses URLSearchParams to serialize parameters. So for complex query param types (e.g. arrays) you’ll need to provide your own querySerializer()
method that transforms query params into a URL-safe string:
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
const { get, post } = createClient<paths>();
const { data, error } = await get('/post/{post_id}', {
params: {
path: { post_id: 'my-post' },
query: { version: 2 },
},
querySerializer: (q) => `v=${q.version}`,
});
🔒 Handling Auth
Authentication often requires some reactivity dependent on a token. Since this library is so low-level, there are myriad ways to handle it:
Nano Stores
Here’s how it can be handled using nanostores, a tiny (334 b), universal signals store:
import { atom, computed } from 'nanostores';
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
export const authToken = atom<string | undefined>();
someAuthMethod().then((newToken) => authToken.set(newToken));
export const client = computed(authToken, (currentToken) =>
createClient<paths>({
headers: currentToken ? { Authorization: `Bearer ${currentToken}` } : {},
})
);
import { client } from './lib/api';
const { get, post } = client.get();
get('/some-authenticated-url', {
});
Vanilla JS Proxies
You can also use proxies which are now supported in all modern browsers:
import createClient from 'openapi-fetch';
import { paths } from './v1';
let authToken: string | undefined = undefined;
someAuthMethod().then((newToken) => (authToken = newToken));
const baseClient = createClient<paths>();
export default new Proxy(baseClient, {
get(_, key: keyof typeof baseClient) {
const newClient = createClient<paths>({ headers: authToken ? { Authorization: `Bearer ${authToken}` } : {} });
return newClient[key];
},
});
import client from './lib/api';
client.get('/some-authenticated-url', {
});
🎛️ Config
createClient()
accepts the following options, which set the default settings for all subsequent fetch calls.
Name | Type | Description |
---|
baseUrl | string | Prefix all fetch URLs with this option. |
In addition, you may pass any other fetch options such as headers
, mode
, credentials
, redirect
, etc. (docs).
🎯 Project Goals
- Infer types automatically from OpenAPI schemas without generics (or, only the absolute minimum needed)
- Respect the native
fetch()
API while reducing boilerplate (such as await res.json()
) - Be as small and light as possible
🧙♀️ Advanced
Caching
By default, this library does NO caching of any kind (it’s 1 kb, remember?). However, this library can be easily wrapped using any method of your choice, while still providing strong typechecking for endpoints.
Differences from openapi-typescript-fetch
This library is identical in purpose to openapi-typescript-fetch, but has the following differences:
- This library has a built-in
error
type for 3xx
/4xx
/5xx
errors whereas openapi-typescript-fetch throws exceptions (requiring you to wrap things in try/catch
) - This library has a more terse syntax (
get(…)
) wheras openapi-typescript-fetch requires chaining (.path(…).method(…).create()
) - openapi-typescript-fetch supports middleware whereas this library doesn’t