OpenAPI Specification Path

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Internal

Overview

The top level paths keyword introduce a map of paths, keyed by their path value:

[...]
paths:
 /a:
   [...]
 /b:
   [...]
 /c:
   [...]
[...]

Path

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:
  [...]
  summary:
  description:
  get: [...]
  put: [...]
  post: [...]
  delete: [...]
  options: [...]
  head: [...]
  patch: [...]
  trace: [...]
  parameters: [...]
  servers:

Path Templating

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#pathTemplating

Path templating refers to the usage of curly braces {} to mark a section of a URL path as replaceable using path parameters.

Operations

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#operationObject

An operation represents a single HTTP operation on a path.

Valid operations:

  • get
  • put
  • post
  • delete
  • options
  • head
  • patch
  • trace

get|put|post|delete|options|head|patch|trace:
  summary: |
     A short description of the operation.
  operationId: GetPets
  description:  '...'
  parameters: [...]
  responses: [...]
  tags: [...]
  requestBody:
  callbacks:
  security:
  servers:
  deprecated:

Server Code Generation for Path/Operation Combinations

For each path/operation combination, oapi-codegen will generate a Go handler method in the ServerInterface interface object. The name of the methods will be given by operationId value, with the first character uppercased.

operationId

A unique string, among all operations described by this API, used to identify the operation. The operationId value is case-sensitive. Tools and libraries may use operationId to uniquely identify an operation, therefore, it is recommended to follow common programming naming conventions.

oapi-codegen uses operationId as a base for a various function and struct names in client and server generated code. All names get their first character upper-cased, making them exported, regardless of whether the first character of the operationId is lower or upper case. For:

paths:
  /pets:
    get:
      operationId: GetPets
      [...]

oapi-codegen generates:

[...]

// The interface specification for the client above.
type ClientInterface interface {
	// GetPets request
	GetPets(ctx context.Context, params *GetPetsParams, reqEditors ...RequestEditorFn) (*http.Response, error)
}

[...]

// ServerInterface represents all server handlers.
type ServerInterface interface {
	// (GET /pets)
	GetPets(ctx echo.Context, params GetPetsParams) error
}

[...]

summary

Surfaces in the generated code, as the generated server interface method comment.

description

responses

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#responses-object

The responses field is required and lists all possible HTTP responses that may result from executing this operation.

Response

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#responseObject

The element must contain at least one response code. 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:
  /pets:
    get:
      [...]
      responses:
        200:
          description: Return all the pets the user has access to, as a list.
          headers: [...]
          links: [...]
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                type: array
                items:
                  $ref: '#/components/schemas/Pet'
        default:
          description: Unexpected error.
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                $ref: '#/components/schemas/Error'

An empty response:

paths:
  /a:
    get:
      [...]
      responses:
        200:
          schema:
            $ref: '#/components/schemas/Empty'

The Empty type is declared in the /components/schemas as such:

Empty

headers

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#headerObject

The header object follows the structure of a parameter object, with the exceptions that name must not be specified, it is given in the corresponding headers map, and in must not be specified, it is implicitly in header. headers is a 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. Responses can include custom headers, or headers that implement a protocol like CORS.

200:
  [...]
  headers:
    Access-Control-Allow-Origin:
      description: some description
      schema:
        type: string
    Access-Control-Allow-Methods:
      description: some description
      schema:
        type: string
    Access-Control-Allow-Headers:
      description: some description
      schema:
        type: string

requestBody

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#request-body-object

Also see:

REST Request Body

tags

Each 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. 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: https://example.com/my-docs/tag-a.html
paths:
  /a:
    get:
      tags:
        - tag-a
        - other-tag

Parameters

https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/main/versions/3.1.0.md#parameterObject

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". An operation accepts multiple parameters, which should be specified as an array.

get:
  [...]
  parameters:
    - name: Color
      in: path|query|header|cookie
      description:
      required: true|false
      style: form
      schema: [...]
      deprecated: true|false
      allowEmptyValue: true|false
    - [...]

Parameter Locations

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. The parameter value is actually part of the operation's URL. Also, the required property is required and the value must be true.

 /query/{id}

paths:
 /query/{id}:
   get:
     - name: id
       in: path
       required: true
       [...]

Also see:

REST Path Parameters

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.

Also see:

REST Query Parameters

Header Parameters

Header parameters are key value pairs that can be used to configure the behavior of the API.

Also see:

REST Request Headers

Cookie Parameters

Parameter Schema

paths:
  /pets:
    get:
      parameters:
        - name: tags
          [...]
          schema:
            type: array
            items:
              type: string

Examples

Create an Item

Get All Items

Get One Item

Update an Item

Delete an Item