fredwu / open_api_spex

Open API Specifications for Elixir Plug applications

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Open API Spex Build Status

Leverage Open Api Specification 3 (swagger) to document, test, validate and explore your Plug and Phoenix APIs.

  • Generate and serve a JSON Open Api Spec document from your code
  • Use the spec to cast request params to well defined schema structs
  • Validate params against schemas, eliminate bad requests before they hit your controllers
  • Validate responses against schemas in tests, ensuring your docs are accurate and reliable
  • Explore the API interactively with with SwaggerUI

Installation

The package can be installed by adding open_api_spex to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:open_api_spex, "~> 1.0"}
  ]
end

Generate Spec

Start by adding an ApiSpec module to your application.

defmodule MyApp.ApiSpec do
  alias OpenApiSpex.{OpenApi, Server, Info, Paths}

  def spec do
    %OpenApi{
      servers: [
        # Populate the Server info from a phoenix endpoint
        Server.from_endpoint(MyAppWeb.Endpoint, otp_app: :my_app)
      ],
      info: %Info{
        title: "My App",
        version: "1.0"
      },
      # populate the paths from a phoenix router
      paths: Paths.from_router(MyAppWeb.Router)
    }
    |> OpenApiSpex.resolve_schema_modules() # discover request/response schemas from path specs
  end
end

For each plug (controller) that will handle api requests, add an open_api_operation callback. It will be passed the plug opts that were declared in the router, this will be the action for a phoenix controller.

defmodule MyApp.UserController do
  alias OpenApiSpex.Operation
  alias MyApp.Schemas.UserResponse

  @spec open_api_operation(any) :: Operation.t
  def open_api_operation(action), do: apply(__MODULE__, :"#{action}_operation", [])

  @spec show_operation() :: Operation.t
  def show_operation() do

    %Operation{
      tags: ["users"],
      summary: "Show user",
      description: "Show a user by ID",
      operationId: "UserController.show",
      parameters: [
        Operation.parameter(:id, :path, :integer, "User ID", example: 123)
      ],
      responses: %{
        200 => Operation.response("User", "application/json", UserResponse)
      }
    }
  end
  def show(conn, %{"id" => id}) do
    {:ok, user} = MyApp.Users.find_by_id(id)
    json(conn, 200, user)
  end
end

Declare the JSON schemas for request/response bodies in a Schemas module: Each module should export a schema/0 function, and may optionally declare a struct, linked to the JSON schema through the x-struct extension property.

defmodule MyApp.Schemas do
  alias OpenApiSpex.Schema

  defmodule User do
    @behaviour OpenApiSpex.Schema
    @derive [Poison.Encoder]
    @schema %Schema{
      title: "User",
      description: "A user of the app",
      type: :object,
      properties: %{
        id: %Schema{type: :integer, description: "User ID"},
        name:  %Schema{type: :string, description: "User name"},
        email: %Schema{type: :string, description: "Email address", format: :email},
        inserted_at: %Schema{type: :string, description: "Creation timestamp", format: :datetime},
        updated_at: %Schema{type: :string, description: "Update timestamp", format: :datetime}
      },
      required: [:name, :email],
      example: {
        "id" => 123,
        "name" => "Joe",
        "email" => "joe@gmail.com"
      }
      "x-struct": __MODULE__
    }
    def schema, do: @schema
    defstruct Map.keys(@schema.properties)
  end

  defmodule UserResponse do
    require OpenApiSpex

    # OpenApiSpex.schema/1 macro can be optionally used to reduce boilerplate code
    OpenApiSpex.schema %{
      title: "UserResponse",
      description: "Response schema for single user",
      type: :object,
      properties: %{
        data: User
      }
    }
  end
end

Now you can create a mix task to write the swagger file to disk:

defmodule Mix.Tasks.MyApp.OpenApiSpec do
  def run([output_file]) do
    json =
      MyApp.ApiSpec.spec()
      |> Poison.encode!(pretty: true)

    :ok = File.write!(output_file, json)
  end
end

Generate the file with: mix myapp.openapispec spec.json

Serve Spec

To serve the API spec from your application, first add the OpenApiSpex.Plug.PutApiSpec plug somewhere in the pipeline.

  pipeline :api do
    plug OpenApiSpex.Plug.PutApiSpec, module: MyApp.ApiSpec
  end

Now the spec will be available for use in downstream plugs. The OpenApiSpex.Plug.RenderSpec plug will render the spec as JSON:

  scope "/api" do
    pipe_through :api
    resources "/users", MyApp.UserController, only: [:create, :index, :show]
    get "/openapi", OpenApiSpex.Plug.RenderSpec, []
  end

Serve Swagger UI

Once your API spec is available through a route, the OpenApiSpex.Plug.SwaggerUI plug can be used to serve a SwaggerUI interface. The path: plug option must be supplied to give the path to the API spec.

All javascript and CSS assets are sourced from cdnjs.cloudflare.com, rather than vendoring into this package.

  scope "/" do
    pipe_through :browser # Use the default browser stack

    get "/", MyAppWeb.PageController, :index
    get "/swaggerui", OpenApiSpex.Plug.SwaggerUI, path: "/api/openapi"
  end

  scope "/api" do
    pipe_through :api

    resources "/users", MyAppWeb.UserController, only: [:create, :index, :show]
    get "/openapi", OpenApiSpex.Plug.RenderSpec, []
  end

Cast Params

Add the OpenApiSpex.Plug.Cast plug to a controller to cast the request parameters to elixir types defined by the operation schema.

plug OpenApiSpex.Plug.Cast, operation_id: "UserController.show"

The operation_id can be inferred when used from a Phoenix controller from the contents of conn.private.

defmodule MyApp.UserController do
  use MyAppWeb, :controller
  alias OpenApiSpex.Operation
  alias MyApp.Schemas.{User, UserRequest, UserResponse}

  plug OpenApiSpex.Plug.Cast

  def open_api_operation(action) do
    apply(__MODULE__, "#{action}_operation", [])
  end

  def create_operation do
    import Operation
    %Operation{
      tags: ["users"],
      summary: "Create user",
      description: "Create a user",
      operationId: "UserController.create",
      parameters: [],
      requestBody: request_body("The user attributes", "application/json", UserRequest),
      responses: %{
        201 => response("User", "application/json", UserResponse)
      }
    }
  end

  def create(conn, %UserRequest{user: %User{name: name, email: email, birthday: birthday = %Date{}}}) do
    # params are cast to UserRequest struct
  end
end

Validate Params

Add both the OpenApiSpex.Plug.Cast and OpenApiSpex.Plug.Validate plugs to your controller / plug:

plug OpenApiSpex.Plug.Cast
plug OpenApiSpex.Plug.Validate

Now the client will receive a 422 response whenever the request fails to meet the validation rules from the api spec.

The response body will include the validation error message:

#/user/name: Value does not match pattern: [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]+

Validate Examples

As schemas evolve, you may want to confirm that the examples given match the schemas. Use the OpenApiSpex.Test.Assertions module to assert on schema validations.

Use ExUnit.Case
import OpenApiSpex.Test.Assertions

test "UsersResponse example matches schema" do
  api_spec = MyApp.ApiSpec.spec()
  schema = MyApp.Schemas.UsersResponse.schema()
  assert_schema(schema.example, "UsersResponse", api_spec)
end

Validate Responses

Api responses can be tested against schemas using OpenApiSpex.Test.Assertions also:

use MyApp.ConnCase
import OpenApiSpex.Test.Assertions

test "UserController produces a UsersResponse", %{conn: conn} do
  api_spec = MyApp.ApiSpec.spec()
  json =
    conn
    |> get(user_path(conn, :index))
    |> json_response(200)

  assert_schema(json, "UsersResponse", api_spec)
end

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Open API Specifications for Elixir Plug applications

License:Mozilla Public License 2.0


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