Build PHP classes from JSON schemas automatically.
Consider a simple JSON schema (ironically stored in YAML format), stored in a file example.yaml
:
required:
- givenName
- familyName
properties:
givenName:
type: string
familyName:
type: string
hobbies:
type: array
items:
type: string
location:
properties:
country:
type: string
city:
type: string
Using this converter, you can automatically generate PHP classes from this schema with accessor and conversion functions:
$ vendor/bin/s2c generate:fromschema --class User ./example.yaml src/Target
This command will automatically try to infer a PHP target namespace from your composer.json
file and automatically create the appropriate PHP classes:
$ find src/Target
src/Target
src/Target/User.php
src/Target/UserLocation.php
Then, use the classes in your code:
$userData = json_decode("user.json", true);
$user = \MyNamespace\Target\User::buildFromInput($userData);
echo "Hello, " . $user->getGivenName() . "\n";
This tool requires PHP 7.4 or newer to run.
The generated code can be backwards-compatible up until PHP 5.6. Use the --target-php
flag to set the desired PHP version that the generated code should be compatible with. When using a configuration file, use the targetPHPVersion
property.
The generated classes have these features:
- The class namespace can either be specified via command-line (
--target-namespace
), specification file (targetNamespace
). If neither is specified, the generator will inspect thecomposer.json
of your project, look for any PSR-4 configuration and infer the namespace from there. - The main object's name is defined by the command-line (
--class
) or the specification file. - Sub-object's names are taken from the property name.
- Array items are suffixed 'Item'.
OneOf
alternatives are suffixed 'AlternativeX', withX
being an incremented integer.- The constructor has arguments for all required properties in the schema.
- All properties are private, with getter methods for access, and explicit type declarations for the return value (in PHP5 mode, only PHPDoc is used).
- Static function
buildFromInput(array $data)
accepts an array (usingjson_decode('{}', true)
), validates it according to the schema and creates the full object tree as return value. An additional mapping step is not required. - Function
toJson()
returns a plain array ready forjson_encode()
. - Writing to any object's properties is done immutably by using
withX()
(orwithoutX()
for optional values). This will return a new instance of that object with the value changed.
As an example, a shortened version with all comments removed, from the above schema shows the location, only containing the city (country is behaving the same, but with a different name)
class UserLocation
{
private static array $schema = array(
'properties' => array(
'city' => array(
'type' => 'string',
),
),
);
private ?string $country = null;
private ?string $city = null;
public function __construct()
{
}
public function getCity() : ?string
{
return $this->city;
}
public function withCity(string $city) : self
{
$validator = new \JsonSchema\Validator();
$validator->validate($city, static::$schema['properties']['city']);
if (!$validator->isValid()) {
throw new \InvalidArgumentException($validator->getErrors()[0]['message']);
}
$clone = clone $this;
$clone->city = $city;
return $clone;
}
public function withoutCity() : self
{
$clone = clone $this;
unset($clone->city);
return $clone;
}
public static function buildFromInput(array $input) : UserLocation
{
static::validateInput($input);
$city = null;
if (isset($input['city'])) {
$city = $input['city'];
}
$obj = new static();
$obj->city = $city;
return $obj;
}
public function toJson() : array
{
$output = [];
if (isset($this->city)) {
$output['city'] = $this->city;
}
return $output;
}
public static function validateInput(array $input, bool $return = false) : bool
{
$validator = new \JsonSchema\Validator();
$validator->validate($input, static::$schema);
if (!$validator->isValid() && !$return) {
$errors = array_map(function($e) {
return $e["property"] . ": " . $e["message"];
}, $validator->getErrors());
throw new \InvalidArgumentException(join(", ", $errors));
}
return $validator->isValid();
}
public function __clone()
{
}
}
Install using Composer:
$ composer require --dev helmich/schema2class
In many projects, you're going to want to keep an evolving JSON schema in sync with the generated PHP classes continuously. For this reason, S2C allows you to create a configuration file .s2c.yaml
that stores the most common conversion options:
targetPHPVersion: "7.4"
files:
- input: src/Spec/Spec.yaml
className: Specification
targetDirectory: src/Spec
You can store your local configuration in this yaml file and start the generation process by calling
s2c generate:fromspec
This will scan for .s2c.yaml
in the current directory and use it's parameters. If you need to have different files for multiple schemas, you can provide a config file as a parameter.