OpenAPI Specification: Difference between revisions
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Header parameters are key value pairs that can be used to configure the behavior of the API. | Header parameters are key value pairs that can be used to configure the behavior of the API. | ||
==Cookie Parameters== | ==Cookie Parameters== | ||
=Examples= | |||
==<tt>GET</tt> with Empty Response Body== | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'> | |||
paths: | |||
/a: | |||
get: | |||
parameters: | |||
- name: test | |||
in: query | |||
type: string | |||
responses: | |||
200: | |||
schema: | |||
$ref: '#/definitions/Empty' | |||
definitions: | |||
Empty: | |||
type: object | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
=TODEPLETE= | =TODEPLETE= |
Revision as of 23:13, 25 January 2024
External
- OpenAPI 3.1.0 Specification https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md
- https://swagger.io/specification/
Internal
Overview
OpenAPI Specification (OAS), formerly Swagger Specification, is an API description format and a specification standard for HTTP REST APIs. The specification for an API can be expressed in a single file, which provides the source of truth for the API, starting with the API design phase, then continuing with client and server code generation, documentation and testing. The specification format is programming language agnostic, it is machine-readable and it can be used to generate code in different languages. API specifications are typically written in YAML or JSON. The latest version at the time of this writing is OpenAPI 3.1.0.
The OpenAPI specification describes endpoints and operations for each endpoint, input and output parameters for each operation, authentication methods, contact information, licenses, etc.
Specification Elements
Endpoint
An endpoint is exposed in the OpenAPI specification by its relative path, declared in the paths
map.
Refactor this.
Resource
Refactor this.
Document Structure
openapi: 3.1.0 info: [...] servers: [...] paths: [...] components: [...] webhooks: [...] security: [...] tags: [...]
openapi
The string following the openapi
element is the version number of the OpenAPI specification this document uses.
info
info: title: OpenAPI Example version: 0.2.0 summary: An OpenAPI example application description: termsOfService: contact: license:
title
Required element. Represents the title of the API. When imported in AWS API Gateway, the title provides the API name, unless the AWS::ApiGateway::RestApi resource explicitly specifies a title, in which case the title specified by AWS::ApiGateway::RestApi will take priority.
version
Required element. Represents the version of the API document. It is different from openapi
version string.
summary
A short summary of the API.
description
A description of the API. CommonMark syntax may be used for rich text representation.
servers
paths
paths: /a: summary: description: get: [...] put: [...] post: [...] delete: [...] options: [...] head: [...] patch: [...] trace: [...] servers: parameters: /b: [...] /c: [...]
Contains a map of relative paths to individual endpoints.
Each path name must start with a forward slash "/". The path is appended to the expanded URL from the server object url
field in order to construct the full URL. Path templating is allowed. Each path accepts zero or more of the available operations (get
, put
, post
, delete
, options
, head
, patch
, trace
) and parameters
, which is a list of parameters that are applicable for all the operations described under this path. These parameters can be overridden at operation level but cannot be removed there. A unique parameter is defined by a combination of a name and a location.
components
webhooks
A map of path item objects or reference objects.
security
tags
Path Templating
Operations
An operation represents a single HTTP operation on a path.
get|put|post|delete|options|head|patch|trace: summary: description: parameters: responses: tags: operationId: requestBody: callbacks: security: servers: deprecated:
Responses
RequestBody
Parameters
get: [...] parameters: - name: id in: path|query|header|cookie description: required: true|false deprecated: true|false allowEmptyValue: true|false - [...]
An operation accepts multiple parameters.
A unique parameter is defined by a combination of its name, defined as value of the name
field, and its location, defined as value of the in
field. The name
value is required and case sensitive.
There are four possible parameter locations: "query", "header", "path", "cookie".
Path Parameters
A path parameter is declared as in: path
in the OpenAPI specification file, and is a URL fragment at the left side of the question mark in the URL. For "path" parameters, the parameter name must correspond to a template expression occurring in the path
field. Also, the required
property is required and the value must be true
.
Query Parameters
A query parameter is declared as in: query
in the OpenAPI specification file, and it is an URL fragment that follows the question mark in the full URL.
allowEmptyValue
field is valid only for query parameters and allows sending a parameter with an empty value. The default value is false
. Use of this property is not recommended and it is likely to be removed in a later revision.
Header Parameters
Header parameters are key value pairs that can be used to configure the behavior of the API.
Cookie Parameters
Examples
GET with Empty Response Body
paths:
/a:
get:
parameters:
- name: test
in: query
type: string
responses:
200:
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/Empty'
definitions:
Empty:
type: object
TODEPLETE
Operation
paths: /a: get: parameters: - name: 'test' in: query type: 'string' responses: 200: schema: $ref: '#/definitions/Empty' definitions: Empty: type: object
Also see:
Valid operation keys:
- get
- put
- post
- delete
- options
- head
- patch
parameters
Contains a list of in-line declaration of parameters (parameter objects) and references.
responses
A required element that list all possible responses that are returned from executing this operations. The element must contain at least one response code. The container maps a HTTP response code to the expected response. The definition is not expected to cover all possible HTTP response codes, because they may not be known in advance. However, the definition should cover a successful operation response and any known errors. The "default" map key may be used as a default response object for all HTTP codes that are not covered individually in the definition.
paths: /a: get: responses: 200: ... default: ...
produces
Contains a list of media types this operation can respond with. The list specified at operation level overrides the list specified on global level. Document that.
paths: /a: get: produces: - application/json
Note that Swagger Core Operation.getProduces() may return null.
consumes
Note that Swagger Core Operation.getConsumes() may return null.
tags
Each API operation can be annotated with a list of tags. Tagged operations may be handled differently by tools and libraries. Optionally, each tag can get a "description" and an "externalDocs" in the global "tags" section on the root level. The tag names here should match those used in operations. The tag order in the global tags section also controls the default sorting in the UI - at least, for Swagger UI. It is possible to use a tag at operation level even if it is not specified on the root level.
tags: -name: tag-a description: Something that would shed light on tag-a semantics externalDocs: url: http://example.com/my-docs/tag-a.html paths: /a: get: tags: - tag-a - other-tag
Path Templating
Path templating refers to the usage of curly braces ({}) to mark a section of a URL path as replaceable using path parameters.
Parameter
There are five parameter types: path, query, request header, request body and form parameters. All parameters use the following fields in their declaration:
- name
- in
- required
- description
- type. If "in" is any value other than "body", the type is required, and it is limited to simple types, not object. The value must be one of the following: "string", "number", "integer", "boolean", "array" or "file".
Path Parameter
Path parameters are used together with path templating where the parameter value is actually part of the operation's URL. This does not include the host or base path of the API. A path parameter is required. Example:
/query/{id}
Representation:
paths: /query/{id}: operation: parameters: - name: id in: path type: string required: true description: "some description"
Also see:
Query Parameter
Also see:
Request Header
Also see:
Request Body
Also see:
Form
Response
A response is defined by its HTTP status code and the data returned in the response body and/or headers.
200:
description: 200 response
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/Empty'
originalRef: '#/definitions/Empty'
headers:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin:
type: 'string'
Access-Control-Allow-Methods:
type: 'string'
Access-Control-Allow-Headers:
type: 'string'
description
The description is required. Represents a short description of the response.
Response Body
schema
The schema keyword is used to describe the response body. A schema may define:
- a primitive type such as "string" or "number", used for plain text responses. Note that Amazon API Gateway warns if it encounters a primitive type.
- an object
- an array – typically used with JSON and XML APIs
- a file
- a reference - the schema can be defined in-line or defined at the root level of the document and referenced via $ref. This is useful if multiple responses share the same schema.
For reference models (RefModel
), model.setReference("RefName") puts the model in the correct state to refer to:
definitions:
RefName:
type: ...
In-line schema:
responses:
200:
description: something
schema:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: integer
description: The user ID.
username:
type: string
description: The user name.
This is an example that uses references:
responses:
200:
description: something
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/User'
...
definitions:
User:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: integer
description: The user ID.
username:
type: string
description: The user name.
"responseSchema" is sometimes used, but that seems to be deprecated.
Empty Response Body
For responses that have no body, like 204 No Content, no "schema" should be specified. This is conventionally treated as no-body response.
Response Headers
Responses can include custom headers, or headers that implement a protocol like CORS.
headers
The custom headers must be declared, under the "headers" section of the response. For OpenAPI 2.0, there is no way in Swagger to define common response headers for different response codes or different API operations. You need to define the headers for each response individually. "headers" is aA container that maps a header name to its definition. The header names are case insensitive. If a header is specified by the an extension, such as x-amazon-apigateway-integration, it has to be declared in the headers section for the corresponding response, otherwise a template error is generated.
200:
description: 200 response
...
headers:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin:
type: 'string'
Access-Control-Allow-Methods:
type: 'string'
Access-Control-Allow-Headers:
type: 'string'
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/Empty'
originalRef: '#/definitions/Empty'
Reference Object
$ref
Data Types
Basic Types
string
number
integer
boolean
array
object
CORS
More:
Organizatorium
x-nullable
Appears in automatically generated Swagger files, as such:
definitions: LibraryAccount: type: object required: - name properties: name: type: string x-nullable: true
definitions: A: type: string title: A x-nullable: true
When used for an API Gateway import, it errors out as:
Unable to create model for 'LibraryAccount': Invalid model specified: Validation Result: warnings : [], errors : [Invalid model schema specified. Unsupported keyword(s): ["x-nullable"]]