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swagger2openapi
Advanced tools
The swagger2openapi npm package is designed to convert Swagger 2.0 definitions into OpenAPI 3.0.x, facilitating the transition to the newer OpenAPI specification. It supports both command-line and programmatic usage, making it a versatile tool for developers working with API documentation and specifications.
Conversion of Swagger 2.0 to OpenAPI 3.0
This feature allows users to programmatically convert Swagger 2.0 API definitions to OpenAPI 3.0 specifications. The code sample demonstrates how to load a Swagger 2.0 JSON file, convert it, and then log the resulting OpenAPI 3.0 specification.
const converter = require('swagger2openapi');
const swagger = require('./swagger.json');
converter.convertObj(swagger, {}, (err, options) => {
if (err) {
console.error(err);
} else {
console.log(options.openapi);
}
});
Validation of converted OpenAPI 3.0 definitions
Beyond conversion, the package also offers validation of the resulting OpenAPI 3.0 definitions. This ensures that the conversion process not only translates the specification but also checks for any inconsistencies or errors in the new format.
const converter = require('swagger2openapi');
const swagger = require('./swagger.json');
converter.convertObj(swagger, {validate: true}, (err, options) => {
if (err) {
console.error('Validation error:', err);
} else {
console.log('Validation successful. OpenAPI 3.0 output:', options.openapi);
}
});
Command-line conversion
For users preferring command-line tools, swagger2openapi provides a straightforward way to convert Swagger 2.0 files to OpenAPI 3.0 by specifying the input and output files directly in the terminal.
swagger2openapi swagger.json -o openapi.json
Swagger Parser is a package that can validate and dereference Swagger files. While it primarily focuses on Swagger 2.0, it also supports OpenAPI 3.0 to some extent. Compared to swagger2openapi, Swagger Parser offers validation and dereferencing but not direct conversion between the two specifications.
openapi3-ts provides TypeScript definitions for OpenAPI 3.0. While it doesn't offer conversion capabilities, it's a useful tool for developers working with OpenAPI 3.0 in TypeScript projects, complementing swagger2openapi by providing type checking and autocompletion.
Convert Swagger 2.0 definitions into OpenApi 3.0.x
Currently tracking v3.0.0
If you are using Node.js 4 - please use the --harmony flag
Usage:
swagger2openapi [options] [filename|url]
Options:
--warnProperty Property name to use for warning extensions
[string] [default: "x-s2o-warning"]
--version Show version number [boolean]
-c, --components output information to unresolve a definition [boolean]
-d, --debug enable debug mode, adds specification-extensions [boolean]
-e, --encoding encoding for input/output files [string] [default: "utf8"]
-h, --help Show help [boolean]
-i, --indent JSON indent to use, defaults to 4 spaces [string]
-o, --outfile the output file to write to [string]
-p, --patch fix up small errors in the source definition [boolean]
-r, --resolve resolve external references [boolean]
-u, --url url of original spec, creates x-origin entry [string]
-v, --verbose increase verbosity [count]
-w, --warnOnly Do not throw on non-patchable errors, add warning extensions
[boolean]
-y, --yaml read and write YAML, default JSON [boolean]
or use the APIs:
var converter = require('swagger2openapi');
var options = {};
//options.patch = true; // fix up small errors in the source definition
//options.warnOnly = true; // Do not throw on non-patchable errors
converter.convertObj(swagger, options, function(err, options){
// options.openapi contains the converted definition
});
// also available are asynchronous convertFile, convertUrl, convertStr and convertStream functions
// if you omit the callback parameter, you will instead receive a Promise
var validator = require('swagger2openapi/validate.js');
var options = {};
validator.validate(openapi, options, function(err, options){
// options.valid contains the result of the validation
// options.context now contains a stack (array) of JSON-Pointer strings
});
// also available is a synchronous validateSync method which returns a boolean
See here for complete documentation of the options
object.
Or use the online version which also includes its own API.
The testRunner
harness can also be used as a simple validator if given one or more existing OpenAPI 3.x definitions. The validator (however it is called) uses WHATWG URL parsing if available (node 7.x and above). The testRunner can have a linting mode enabled with the --lint
option. Rules are defined here. Contributions of rules and rule actions for the linter are very much appreciated.
swagger2openapi preserves almost all $ref
JSON references in your API definition, and does not dereference
every item, as with some model-based parsers. The exception is internal references within externally referenced documents.
Swagger2openapi will automatically 'repair' a number of problems where non-compliant Swagger 2.0 schemas have been used. It will attempt to transform JSON schemas (used incorrectly) into OpenAPI 3.0.x Schema objects.
swagger2openapi has support for a limited number of real-world specification extensions which have a direct bearing on the conversion. All other specification extensions are left untouched. swagger2openapi is swaggerplusplus-compatible.
It is expected to be able to configure the process of specification-extension modification using options or a plugin mechanism in a future release.
To run a test-suite:
node testRunner [-f {path-to-expected-failures}]... [{path-to-APIs|single-file...}]
The test harness currently expects files with a .json
or .yaml
extension, or a single named file, and has been tested on Node.js versions 4.x, 6.x and 8.x LTS (it is not recommended to run the test suite under Node.js versions >=7.0.0 and <8.7.0 because of this bug) against
Additionally swagger2openapi has been tested on a corpus of 34,679 real-world valid Swagger 2.0 definitions from GitHub and SwaggerHub. However, if you have a definition which causes errors in the converter or does not pass validation, please do not hesitate to raise an issue.
Regression tests (thanks @domharrington) live in the /test
directory and can be run with npx mocha
. Each sub-directory should contain an input swagger.yaml
file, an expected output openapi.yaml
file and an optional options.yaml
file. You can put private test cases in sub-directories starting with an underscore character.
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.
FAQs
Convert Swagger 2.0 definitions to OpenApi 3.0 and validate
The npm package swagger2openapi receives a total of 1,149,690 weekly downloads. As such, swagger2openapi popularity was classified as popular.
We found that swagger2openapi demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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