Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

speccy

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
18
Versions
52
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

speccy

Your friendly OpenAPI v3.0 #WellActually CLI assistant.

  • 0.8.0-dev1
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
19K
decreased by-5.81%
Maintainers
18
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

speccy

CircleCI Coverage Status Known Vulnerabilities

Make sure your OpenAPI 3.0 specifications are more than just valid, make sure they're useful!

Taking off from where Mike Ralphson started with linting in swagger2openapi, Speccy aims to become the rubocop or eslint of OpenAPI.

Requirements

  • NodeJS: v8 - v10

OpenAPI Specification

Currently tracking v3.0.0

If you want to run speccy on OpenAPI (f.k.a Swagger) v2.0 specs, run it through swagger2openapi first and speccy can give advice on the output.

Usage

Usage: speccy <command>

Options:

  -V, --version  output the version number
  -h, --help     output usage information

Commands:

  lint [options] <file-or-url>     ensure specs are not just valid OpenAPI, but lint against specified rules
  resolve [options] <file-or-url>  pull in external $ref files to create one mega-file
  serve [options] <file-or-url>    view specifications in beautiful human readable documentation

Lint Command

The goal here is to sniff your files for potentially bad things. "Bad" is subjective, but you'll see validation errors, along with special rules for making your APIs better..

Usage: lint [options] <file-or-url>

ensure specs are not just valid OpenAPI, but lint against specified rules

Options:

  -q, --quiet             reduce verbosity
  -r, --rules [ruleFile]  provide multiple rules files
  -s, --skip [ruleName]   provide multiple rules to skip
  -j, --json-schema       treat $ref like JSON Schema and convert to OpenAPI Schema Objects
  -v, --verbose           increase verbosity
  -h, --help              output usage information

You'll see output such as:

#/info  R: info-contact  D: info object should contain contact object

expected Object {
  version: '5.0',
  title: 'Foo API'
} to have property contact

There are going to be different things people are interested in, so the default rules suggest things we think everyone should do; adding descriptions to parameters and operations, and having some sort of contact info.

There are strict rules which demand more contact details, "real" domains, a license, and requires tags have a description!

Rules

Rule actions from the default rules will be used if no rules file is specified. Right now there are only the three bundled options, but supporting custom rules files via local path and URL is on the roadmap.

Contributions of rules and rule actions for the linter are very much appreciated.

Resolve Command

Resolving $ref is the art of taking multiple files and squashing them all down into one big OpenAPI file. By default it will output to stdout, but you can pass -o with a file name to write the file locally.

Usage: resolve [options] <file-or-url>

pull in external $ref files to create one mega-file

Options:

  -o, --output <file>  file to output to
  -q, --quiet          reduce verbosity
  -j, --json-schema    treat $ref like JSON Schema and convert to OpenAPI Schema Objects
  -v, --verbose        increase verbosity
  -h, --help           output usage information

Starting with the fantastic resolver logic form swagger2openapi, speccy has one of the most robust resolvers out there. It avoid cyclical dependencies (when A has a property that $refs A, which in turn destroys your CPU), and all sorts of other things.

Thanks to the --json-schema switch, you can have an OpenAPI file which $refs JSON Schema files (not just OpenAPI-flavoured JSON Schema), then resolve them all into one real OpenAPI file, thanks to wework/json-schema-to-openapi-schema.

Serve Command

Using ReDoc, speccy can offer a preview of your specifications, in human-readable format. In the future we'll have speccy outlining improvements right in here, but one thing at a time.

Usage: serve [options] <file-or-url>

view specifications in beautiful human readable documentation

Options:

  -p, --port [value]  port on which the server will listen (default: 5000)
  -q, --quiet         reduce verbosity
  -j, --json-schema   treat $ref like JSON Schema and convert to OpenAPI Schema Objects
  -v, --verbose       increase verbosity
  -h, --help          output usage information

Calling Speccy from Code

Not just a command line tool, speccy can be used to normalize machine-readable specifications.

The loader object will return a promise that resolves to an object containing the specification. For example:

const loader = require('speccy/lib/loader');

const options = {
  resolve: true,   // Resolve external references
  jsonSchema: true // Treat $ref like JSON Schema and convert to OpenAPI Schema Objects
};

loader
  .loadSpec('path/to/my/spec', options)            // Load the spec...
  .then(spec => console.log(JSON.stringify(spec)); // ...and print it out.

If options.resolve is truthy, speccy will resolve external references.

Tests

To run the test-suite:

npm test

Credits

License

BSD-3-Clause except the openapi-3.0.json schema, which is taken from the OpenAPI-Specification and the alternative gnostic-3.0.json schema, which is originally from Google Gnostic. Both of these are licensed under the Apache-2 license.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 28 Jun 2018

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc