Swagger Code Generator
Overview
This is the swagger codegen project, which allows generation of client libraries automatically from a Swagger-compliant server.
What's Swagger?
The goal of Swagger™ is to define a standard, language-agnostic interface to REST APIs which allows both humans and computers to discover and understand the capabilities of the service without access to source code, documentation, or through network traffic inspection. When properly defined via Swagger, a consumer can understand and interact with the remote service with a minimal amount of implementation logic. Similar to what interfaces have done for lower-level programming, Swagger removes the guesswork in calling the service.
Check out Swagger-Spec for additional information about the Swagger project, including additional libraries with support for other languages and more.
Compatibility
The Swagger Specification has undergone 3 revisions since initial creation in 2010. The swagger-codegen project has the following compatibilities with the swagger specification:
Swagger Codegen Version | Release Date | Swagger Spec compatibility | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2.1.2-M1 (master) | 2015-02-23 | 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 2.0 | tag v2.1.0-M1 |
2.0.17 | 2014-08-22 | 1.1, 1.2 | tag v2.0.17 |
1.0.4 | 2012-04-12 | 1.0, 1.1 | tag v1.0.4 |
Prerequisites
You need the following installed and available in your $PATH:
After cloning the project, you can build it from source with this command:
mvn package
To generate a sample client library
You can build a client against the swagger sample petstore API as follows:
./bin/java-petstore.sh
This will run the generator with this command:
java -jar modules/swagger-codegen-distribution/target/swagger-codegen-distribution-2.1.2-M1.jar \
-i http://petstore.swagger.io/v2/swagger.json \
-l java \
-o samples/client/petstore/java
With a number of options. You can get the options with the -h flag:
usage: Codegen
-a,--auth addes authorization headers when fetching the
swagger definitions remotely. Pass in a
URL-encoded string of name:header with a comma
separating multiple values
-d,--debug-info prints additional info for debugging
-h,--help shows this message
-i,--input-spec <arg> location of the swagger spec, as URL or file
-l,--lang <arg> client language to generate.
Available languages include:
[android, java, jaxrs, nodejs, objc, scalatra,
scala, dynamic-html, html, swagger, tizen, php,
python]
-o,--output <arg> where to write the generated files
-t,--template-dir <arg> folder containing the template files
You can then compile and run the client, as well as unit tests against it:
cd samples/client/petstore/java
mvn package
Other languages have petstore samples, too:
./bin/android-petstore.sh
./bin/java-petstore.sh
./bin/objc-petstore.sh
Generating libraries from your server
It's just as easy--just use the -i
flag to point to either a server or file.
Modifying the client library format
Don't like the default swagger client syntax? Want a different language supported? No problem! Swagger codegen processes mustache templates with the jmustache engine. You can modify our templates or make your own.
You can look at modules/swagger-codegen/src/main/resources/${your-language}
for examples. To make your own templates, create your own files and use the -t
flag to specify your tempalte folder. It actually is that easy.
Where is Javascript???
See our javascript library--it's completely dynamic and doesn't require static code generation. There is a third-party component called swagger-js-codegen that can generate angularjs or nodejs source code from a swagger specification.
Generating a client from flat files (i.e. no remote server calls)
If you don't want to call your server, you can save the swagger spec files into a directory and pass an argument to the code generator like this:
-i ./modules/swagger-codegen/src/test/resources/2_0/petstore.json
Great for creating libraries on your ci server, from the Swagger Editor... or while coding on an airplane.
Customizing the generator
There are different aspects of customizing the code generator beyond just creating or modifying templates. Each language has a supporting configuration file to handle different type mappings, etc:
$ ls -1 modules/swagger-codegen/src/main/java/com/wordnik/swagger/codegen/languages/
AndroidClientCodegen.java
JavaClientCodegen.java
JaxRSServerCodegen.java
NodeJSServerCodegen.java
ObjcClientCodegen.java
PhpClientCodegen.java
PythonClientCodegen.java
ScalaClientCodegen.java
ScalatraServerCodegen.java
StaticDocCodegen.java
StaticHtmlGenerator.java
SwaggerGenerator.java
TizenClientCodegen.java
Each of these files creates reasonable defaults so you can get running quickly. But if you want to configure package names, prefixes, model folders, etc., you may want to extend these.
To change, for example, the prefix for the Objective-C generated files, simply subclass the ObjcClientCodegen.java:
package com.mycompany.swagger.codegen;
import com.wordnik.swagger.codegen.languages.*;
public class MyObjcCodegen extends ObjcClientCodegen {
static {
PREFIX = "HELO";
}
}
and specify the classname
when running the generator:
-l com.mycompany.swagger.codegen.MyObjcCodegen
Your subclass will now be loaded and overrides the PREFIX
value in the superclass.
Validating your swagger spec
You have options. The easiest is to use our online validator which not only will let you validate your spec, but with the debug flag, you can see what's wrong with your spec. For example:
http://online.swagger.io/validator/debug?url=http://petstore.swagger.io/v2/swagger.json
Generating dynamic html api documentation
To do so, just use the -l dynamic-html
flag when reading a spec file. This creates HTML documentation that is available as a single-page application with AJAX. To view the documentation:
cd samples/dynamic-html/
npm install
node .
Which launches a node.js server so the AJAX calls have a place to go.
Generating static html api documentation
To do so, just use the -l html
flag when reading a spec file. This creates a single, simple HTML file with embedded css so you can ship it as an email attachment, or load it from your filesystem:
cd samples/html/
open index.html
To build a server stub
You can also use the codegen to generate a server for a couple different frameworks. Take a look here:
node.js
java -jar modules/swagger-codegen-distribution/target/swagger-codegen-distribution-2.1.2-M1.jar \
-i http://petstore.swagger.io/v2/swagger.json \
-l nodejs \
-o samples/server/petstore/nodejs
rails-grape
Not yet migrated to this branch
scala scalatra
java -jar modules/swagger-codegen-distribution/target/swagger-codegen-distribution-2.1.2-M1.jar \
-i http://petstore.swagger.io/v2/swagger.json \
-l scalatra \
-o samples/server/petstore/scalatra
java jax-rs
java -jar modules/swagger-codegen-distribution/target/swagger-codegen-distribution-2.1.2-M1.jar \
-i http://petstore.swagger.io/v2/swagger.json \
-l jaxrs \
-o samples/server/petstore/jaxrs
To build the codegen library
This will create the swagger-codegen library from source.
mvn package
Note! The templates are included in the library generated. If you want to modify the templates, you'll need to either repackage the library OR specify a path to your scripts
License
Copyright 2015 Reverb Technologies, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.