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@lyra-network/openapi-dev-tool

v9.8.2

Published

OpenAPI Development tool

Downloads

467

Readme

OpenAPI Dev Tool

License

Build Status

npm package npm downloads

Sponsor

openapi-dev-tool is a tool developed by Lyra Network

What is OpenAPI?

OpenAPI specification is an API description format for REST APIs where you can describe your entire API, including:

  • Available endpoints (/users) and operations on each endpoint (GET /users, POST /users)
  • Operations input and output parameters
  • Authentication methods
  • Contact information, license, terms of use and other information

Aim

Although using OpenAPI comes with a lot of advantages (documentation and code generation, faster API publishing, teams collaboration promotion...), industrializing it remains complicated due to certain shortcomings. Using a single OpenAPI file for several contexts (public and private usage for example) is not supported by the current release of OpenAPI. Using the external references to design your API from several files to facilitate the maintainability is still required. Painlessly publish your specifications into a software repository to be able to reuse it (to generate client or server code). Etc. Also, the OpenAPI ecosystem is very large (https://openapi.tools/) with a lot of tools with different quality levels. Consequently, to set up a complete development environment, many tools have to be installed and upgraded regularly.

OpenAPI Dev Tool fixes all these issues by offering to developers a unique tool to address development and industrialization needs!

From openapi-dev-tool command-line interface, you can:

  • design your OpenAPI specifications for several contexts of uses (without any copy-paste) ;
  • write your OpenAPI specifications by using several files (to avoid having a unique large and unmaintainable file) ;
  • easily publish your OpenAPI files and reuse them to generate your client or your server ;
  • view documentation in real-time ;
  • validate your OpenAPI specifications and your examples automatically ;
  • etc.

presentation

Standard support

OpenAPI Dev Tool supports this following standards version:

Installation

  1. Install Node.JS (https://nodejs.org/)

  2. Install OpenAPI Dev Tool tool

    • With npm

      npm i -g @lyra-network/openapi-dev-tool

    • With yarn

      yarn global add @lyra-network/openapi-dev-tool

  3. Show usage

    openapi-dev-tool help

Features

Serving

Overview

Develop your specifications!

  • Serve one or several OpenAPI files specified in configuration file and written in YAML or JSON
  • Live reloading to view dynamically your changes in your browser in real-time
  • Bundle OpenAPI files to merge all the files before serving. By using OpenAPI remote reference, you can work on several files. It improves the maintainability and avoids having a large OpenAPI file!
  • Several documentation viewers embedded with the possibility to override the templates used:
    • Redoc (http://localhost:3000)
    • Swagger UI (http://localhost:3000/swagger-ui)
  • x-tags vendor extension in Info object to be able to tag OpenAPI files. OpenAPI doesn't support specifications tags and only supports operations tags (for organization purposes). With the x-tags vendor extension and for Redoc viewer, it is now possible to categorize and organize specifications.

For example, declare a private and a public specifications:

presentation

  • Validate your specifications and your examples automatically
  • Static files can be exposed in addition of your openapi documentation
  • Context uses: it is possible to serve a same specification in several contexts (internal, public, etc.)
  • Viewers up-to-date you can use the latest releases of viewers directly by declaring it from your package.json (swagger-ui-dist & redoc). openapi-dev-tool will automatically use the viewers defined in your app.

Usage

Usage can be displayed by typing the command

openapi-dev-tool help serve

openapi-dev-tool serve

  Serve one or serveral OpenAPI specification files in YAML or JSON
  format

Command Options

  -b, --skipBundle               Skips bundle openapi files into one before serving or publishing, default is
                                 false
  -p, --port number              Port to use, default is 3000
  -u, --contextPath string       Context used to expose openapi documentations. Has to be start with '/', default is '/'
  -e, --viewsFolder string       Folder that contains views in EJS to override defaults
                                 - "api.ejs": for API List page
                                 - "redoc.ejs": for Redoc page
                                 - "swagger-ui.ejs": for Swagger UI page
  -s, --staticFolders string[]   Exposes a static folder in addition of openapi documentation, for example, if
                                 you want expose general documentation (migration, API overview,...)
                                 Has to be a map like :
                                 /<path1>:<folder1> where path1 and folder1 have to [a-zA-Z0-9_-]+
                                 openapi-dev-tool will create a path "/path1" where static files of folder
                                 "folder1" will be exposed
  -x, --skipValidation           Skips OpenAPI validation process, default is false

Global Options

  -c, --config string                Configuration file in JSON or YAML format where specifications are defined,
                                     default is config.json
  -v, --verbose                      Verbose mode, default is false
  -a, --urlDownloadTemplate string   Rather to use specs from local FS, you can specify remote specs (using
                                     'artifact' config property) which will be downloaded by using this url. From
                                     this url template '[ARTIFACT_ID]', '[GROUP_ID]' and '[VERSION]' will be
                                     replaced.

Publishing

Overview

Publish your specifications! Use the version and title of your specifications to publish them directly in your software repository server!

  • Publish one or several OpenAPI files specified in configuration file and written in YAML or JSON
  • Bundle OpenAPI files to merge all the files before publishing. By using (OpenAPI remote reference)[https://swagger.io/docs/specification/using-ref/], you can work on several files. It improves the maintainability and avoid having a large OpenAPI file!
  • Context uses: it is possible to publish a same specification in several contexts (internal, public, etc.)

Usage

Usage can be displayed by typing the command

openapi-dev-tool help publish

openapi-dev-tool publish

  Publish into a software repository server (like Sonatype Nexus) one or serveral OpenAPI specifications
  files. The repo can be a Maven repository or a npm repository.

Command Options

  -b, --skipBundle               Skips bundle openapi files into one before serving or publishing, default is
                                 false
  -t, --repoType string          Repository server type. maven or npm are possible, default is maven
  -g, --groupId string           GroupId used in repo server, default is com.openapi for maven repo and @myCompany for npm repo
  -s, --repoServer string        Repository server url to store OpenAPI specification files
  --repoSnapshotsServer string   Repository server url to store OpenAPI snapshots specification files. If specified,
                                 --repoServer will be used to store OpenAPI releases specification files
  -u, --repoUser string          Repository server username. Authentication by using user/password
  -p, --repoPassword string      Repository server password. Authentication by using user/password
  --repoToken string             Repository server token. Authentication by using token. For npm repo only
  -x, --skipValidation           Skips OpenAPI validation process, default is false

Global Options

  -c, --config string                Configuration file in JSON or YAML format where specifications are defined,
                                     default is config.json
  -v, --verbose                      Verbose mode, default is false
  -a, --urlDownloadTemplate string   Rather to use specs from local FS, you can specify remote specs (using
                                     'artifact' config property) which will be downloaded by using this url. From
                                     this url template '[ARTIFACT_ID]', '[GROUP_ID]' and '[VERSION]' will be
                                     replaced.

Publishing Locally

Usage

Warning

Publishing locally is only possible to publish in local Maven repository and it uses the mvn command from PATH.

Usage can be displayed by typing the command

openapi-dev-tool help publish-local

openapi-dev-tool publish-local

  Publish into the local Maven repository

Command Options

  -b, --skipBundle               Skips bundle openapi files into one before serving or publishing, default is
                                 false
  -g, --groupId string           GroupId used in repo server, default is com.openapi
  -x, --skipValidation           Skips OpenAPI validation process, default is false

Global Options

  -c, --config string                Configuration file in JSON or YAML format where specifications are defined,
                                     default is config.json
  -v, --verbose                      Verbose mode, default is false
  -a, --urlDownloadTemplate string   Rather to use specs from local FS, you can specify remote specs (using
                                     'artifact' config property) which will be downloaded by using this url. From
                                     this url template '[ARTIFACT_ID]', '[GROUP_ID]' and '[VERSION]' will be
                                     replaced.

Warning

openapi-dev-tool is going to determinate local repository path automatically from mvn command. So, for this to work, mvn command has to be available in PATH.

Merging

Overview

Merge your specification! To debug, it can be interesting to get the merge result used by publish, publish-local and serve command.

  • Merge split OpenAPI specification files i.e. components specific files, paths specific files, info, etc. that can be written in YAML or JSON into a single file (per OpenAPI specification)

Usage

Usage can be displayed by typing the command

openapi-dev-tool help merge

openapi-dev-tool merge

  Merge split OpenAPI specification (components, paths, info, etc.) into a bundled specification file

Command Options

  -o, --output string            Merged file output directory

Global Options

  -c, --config string                Configuration file in JSON or YAML format where specifications are defined,
                                     default is config.json
  -v, --verbose                      Verbose mode, default is false
  -a, --urlDownloadTemplate string   Rather to use specs from local FS, you can specify remote specs (using
                                     'artifact' config property) which will be downloaded by using this url. From
                                     this url template '[ARTIFACT_ID]', '[GROUP_ID]' and '[VERSION]' will be
                                     replaced.

Configuration file

Configuration file is the main item to execute openapi-dev-tool. Written in JSON or YAML format, this configuration file contains the specifications list that have to be served, published or merged. It also describes additional parameters used by specific commands (as described above).

{
    "specs": [                                       // Array of specifications (several specifications can be exposed)
        {                                            // First specification file
            "file": "./petstore.yaml",               // Relative path of the specification main file (or from artifact archive). It has to be an OpenAPI file in YAML or JSON.
            "artifact": "groupId:artifactId:version" // Artifact of spec downloaded rather to be referenced locally
            "vFolders": "myFolder",                  // Virtual folders to organize specs documentation into several folder. vFolders can be a string or an array of strings
            "enabled": true,                         // Enable or not specification file to avoid to serve / publish / merge some specification file (default is true) --> can be an environment variable
            "context": {                             // Object used for template generation (see Template usage chapter below)
              ...
            }
        },
        {                                            // Second specification file
            "file": "./petstore2.yaml",
            ...
        }
    ],
    "html-injector": []                              // To change render of pages of serve command you can provide your own template files but you can also use this HTML injector where each lines will be injected into HTML
}

Advanced usage

Command options from RC File

It is possible to specify the whole of command options of publish, publish-local, serve, merge commands by using a rc file (in JSON) rather to specify these from command-line. For example:

cat .openapi-dev-toolrc

{
     "repoServer": "https://myServer/repository/openapi",
     "repoUser": "admin",
     "repoPassword": "admin",
     "groupId": "com.myCompany.openapi"
}

Templates override

By default, the serve feature renders HTML content by parsing EJS templates defined in openapi-dev-tool module:

  • api.ejs: for API List page. This page lists all the available APIs before accessing it with Redoc viewer
  • redoc.ejs: for Redoc page. This page loads Redoc viewer.
  • swagger-ui.ejs: for Swagger UI page. This page loads Redoc viewer.

From viewsFolder command option of serve command, you can specify a folder where your own EJS templates are defined the change the HTML generated.

For example, api.ejs:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
  <head>
    <title>My Company</title>
  <head>
  <body>
  <% specs.forEach(function(spec){ %>
    <a href="/redoc?specName=<%=spec.name%>"><%=spec.name%></a>
  <% }); %>
  </body>
</html>

For each template, the following objects are loaded in EJS context:

  • api.ejs
    • specs: array of OpenAPI specifications where each spec item contains the following attributes:
      • name: name of specification
      • version: version of specification
      • description: description converted in HTML (from Markdown)
      • url: url where specs can be viewed
      • file: file of specification
      • context: current context
      • tags: tags loaded by using the x-tags vendor extension
  • redoc.ejs
    • spec: object with only url attribute
  • swagger-ui.ejs
    • specs: array of OpenAPI specifications where each spec item contains the following attributes:
      • name: name of specification
      • url: url where specs can be viewed

Context usage

It is possible to serve, publish and merge a same API for several contexts. For example, for some use-cases a same API should be used in several contexts: from customers (public access) and from internal systems (private access). The API is exactly the same, only the authentication layer could be different. To avoid duplicating your OpenAPI specification, you can use the same API executed in two contexts (public and private).

To do that, you can use EJS template directly in your OpenAPI files to specify different behaviors where context specified in Configuration file will be used for rendering. For example for public access, we want to add a security layer which doesn't exist for internal access:

specs.yaml

openapi: 3.0.0
...

components:
<%if (public) { %>
  securitySchemes:
    basicAuth:
      type: http
      scheme: basic
<% } %>

...

<%if (public) { %>
security:
- basicAuth: []
<% } %>
...

This specification could be used in several contexts (public or internal):

config.json

{
  "specs": [
    {
      "file": "./specs/specs.yaml",
      "context": {
        "public": false
      }
    },
    {
      "file": "./specs/specs.yaml",
      "context": {
        "public": true
      }
    }
  ]
}

Tags usage

In OpenAPI specifications, it is possible to use a Tag object to group operations in several categories. It is great to organize our specifications but it is not usable to tag all the OpenAPI files. For example, to indicate that the current specification is public, internal, etc.

To cover this need, we use an OpenAPI vendor extension x-tags in Info object. This new field is a string array that contains tags of the current specification.

For example: specs.yaml

openapi: 3.0.0

info:
  version: 1.0.0
  x-tags:
    - public

These tags are displayed in API pages (before Redoc page).

License

Apache 2.0 License