Generate pretty API docs for your Rails APIs.
Check out a sample.
Please see the wiki for latest changes.
Add rspec_api_documentation to your Gemfile
gem 'rspec_api_documentation'
Bundle it!
$ bundle install
Set up specs.
$ mkdir spec/acceptance
$ vim spec/acceptance/orders_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
require 'rspec_api_documentation/dsl'
resource "Orders" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
do_request
status.should == 200
end
end
end
Generate the docs!
$ rake docs:generate
$ open doc/api/index.html
Consider adding a viewer to enhance the generated documentation. By itself rspec_api_documentation will generate very simple HTML. All viewers use the generated JSON.
gem 'raddocs'
RspecApiDocumentation.configure do |config|
config.format = :json
end
See the example
folder for a sample Rails app that has been documented.
# Values listed are the default values
RspecApiDocumentation.configure do |config|
# Set the application that Rack::Test uses
config.app = Rails.application
# Output folder
config.docs_dir = Rails.root.join("doc", "api")
# An array of output format(s).
# Possible values are :json, :html, :combined_text, :combined_json,
# :json_iodocs, :textile, :append_json
config.format = [:html]
# Location of templates
config.template_path = "inside of the gem"
# Filter by example document type
config.filter = :all
# Filter by example document type
config.exclusion_filter = nil
# Used when adding a cURL output to the docs
config.curl_host = nil
# Used when adding a cURL output to the docs
# Allows you to filter out headers that are not needed in the cURL request,
# such as "Host" and "Cookie". Set as an array.
config.curl_headers_to_filter = nil
# By default examples and resources are ordered by description. Set to true keep
# the source order.
config.keep_source_order = false
# Change the name of the API on index pages
config.api_name = "API Documentation"
# Redefine what method the DSL thinks is the client
# This is useful if you need to `let` your own client, most likely a model.
config.client_method = :client
# Change the IODocs writer protocol
config.io_docs_protocol = "http"
# You can define documentation groups as well. A group allows you generate multiple
# sets of documentation.
config.define_group :public do |config|
# By default the group's doc_dir is a subfolder under the parent group, based
# on the group's name.
config.docs_dir = Rails.root.join("doc", "api", "public")
# Change the filter to only include :public examples
config.filter = :public
end
end
- json: Generates an index file and example files in JSON.
- html: Generates an index file and example files in HTML.
- combined_text: Generates a single file for each resource. Used by Raddocs for command line docs.
- combined_json: Generates a single file for all examples.
- json_iodocs: Generates I/O Docs style documentation.
- textile: Generates an index file and example files in Textile.
- append_json: Lets you selectively run specs without destroying current documentation. See section below.
This format cannot be run with other formats as they will delete the entire documentation folder upon each run. This format appends new examples to the index file, and writes all run examples in the correct folder.
Below is a rake task that allows this format to be used easily.
RSpec::Core::RakeTask.new('docs:generate:append', :spec_file) do |t, task_args|
if spec_file = task_args[:spec_file]
ENV["DOC_FORMAT"] = "append_json"
end
t.pattern = spec_file || 'spec/acceptance/**/*_spec.rb'
t.rspec_opts = ["--format RspecApiDocumentation::ApiFormatter"]
end
And in your spec/spec_helper.rb
:
ENV["DOC_FORMAT"] ||= "json"
RspecApiDocumentation.configure do |config|
config.format = ENV["DOC_FORMAT"]
end
rake docs:generate:append[spec/acceptance/orders_spec.rb]
This will update the current index's examples to include any in the orders_spec.rb
file. Any examples inside will be rewritten.
rspec_api_documentation lets you determine which examples get outputted into the final documentation.
All filtering is done via the :document
metadata key.
You tag examples with either a single symbol or an array of symbols.
:document
can also be false, which will make sure it does not get outputted.
resource "Account" do
get "/accounts" do
parameter :page, "Page to view"
# default :document is :all
example "Get a list of all accounts" do
do_request
status.should == 200
end
# Don't actually document this example, purely for testing purposes
example "Get a list on page 2", :document => false do
do_request(:page => 2)
status.should == 404
end
# With example_request, you can't change the :document
example_request "Get a list on page 3", :page => 3 do
status.should == 404
end
end
post "/accounts" do
parameter :email, "User email"
example "Creating an account", :document => :private do
do_request(:email => "eric@example.com")
status.should == 201
end
example "Creating an account - errors", :document => [:private, :developers] do
do_request
status.should == 422
end
end
end
# All documents will be generated into the top folder, :document => false
# examples will never be generated.
RspecApiDocumentation.configure do |config|
# Exclude only document examples marked as 'private'
config.define_group :non_private do |config|
config.exclusion_filter = :private
end
# Only document examples marked as 'public'
config.define_group :public do |config|
config.filter = :public
end
# Only document examples marked as 'developer'
config.define_group :developers do |config|
config.filter = :developers
end
end
At the beginning of each acceptance/*_spec.rb file, make sure to require the following to pull in the DSL definitions:
require 'rspec_api_documentation/dsl'
Create a set of documentation examples that go together. Acts as a describe block.
resource "Orders" do
end
The method that will be sent along with the url.
resource "Orders" do
post "/orders" do
end
get "/orders" do
end
head "/orders" do
end
put "/orders/:id" do
let(:id) { order.id }
example "Get an order" do
path.should == "/orders/1" # `:id` is replaced with the value of `id`
end
end
delete "/orders/:id" do
end
patch "/orders/:id" do
end
end
This is just RSpec's built in example method, we hook into the metadata surrounding it. it
could also be used.
resource "Orders" do
post "/orders" do
example "Creating an order" do
do_request
# make assertions
end
end
end
The same as example, except it calls do_request
as the first step. Only assertions are required in the block.
Similar to do_request
you can pass in a hash as the last parameter that will be passed along to do_request
as extra parameters. These will not become metadata like with example
.
resource "Orders" do
parameter :name, "Order name"
post "/orders" do
example_request "Creating an order", :name => "Other name" do
# make assertions
end
end
end
This method takes the header name and value. The value can be a string or a symbol. If it is a symbol it will send
the symbol, allowing you to let
header values.
resource "Orders" do
header "Accept", "application/json"
header "X-Custom", :custom_header
let(:custom_header) { "dynamic" }
get "/orders" do
example_request "Headers" do
headers.should == { "Accept" => "application/json", "X-Custom" => "dynamic" }
end
end
end
This method takes the parameter name, a description, and an optional hash of extra metadata that can be displayed in Raddocs as extra columns. If a method with the parameter name exists, e.g. a let
, it will send the returned value up to the server as URL encoded data.
Special values:
:required => true
Will display a red '*' to show it's required:scope => :the_scope
Will scope parameters in the hash. See example
resource "Orders" do
parameter :auth_token, "Authentication Token"
let(:auth_token) { user.authentication_token }
post "/orders" do
parameter :name, "Order Name", :required => true, :scope => :order
let(:name) { "My Order" }
example "Creating an order" do
params.should == { :order => { :name => "My Order" }, :auth_token => auth_token }
end
end
end
This is complicated, see relish docs.
Pass this method a block which, when evaluated, will cause the application to make a request to callback_url
.
Defines the destination of the callback.
For an example, see relish docs.
Returns the test client which makes requests and documents the responses.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
# Create an order via the API instead of via factories
client.post "/orders", order_hash
do_request
status.should == 200
end
end
end
This will evaluate the block passed to trigger_callback
, which should cause the application under test to make a callback request. See relish docs.
Sends the request to the app with any parameters and headers defined.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
do_request
status.should == 200
end
end
end
If you wish to make a request via the client that should not be included in your documentation, do it inside of a no_doc block.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
no_doc do
# Create an order via the API instead of via factories, don't document it
client.post "/orders", order_hash
end
do_request
status.should == 200
end
end
end
Get a hash of parameters that will be sent. See parameter
documentation for an example.
This method takes the header name and value.
resource "Orders" do
before do
header "Accept", "application/json"
end
get "/orders" do
example_request "Headers" do
headers.should == { "Accept" => "application/json" }
end
end
end
This returns the headers that were sent as the request. See header
documentation for an example.
Returns a string containing the response body from the previous request.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
do_request
response_body.should == [{ :name => "Order 1" }].to_json
end
end
end
Returns a hash of the response headers from the previous request.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
do_request
response_headers["Content-Type"].should == "application/json"
end
end
end
Returns the numeric status code from the response, eg. 200. response_status
is an alias to status because status is commonly a parameter.
resource "Order" do
get "/orders" do
example "Listing orders" do
do_request
status.should == 200
response_status.should == 200
end
end
end
Data that will be sent as a query string instead of post data. Used in GET requests.
resource "Orders" do
parameter :name
let(:name) { "My Order" }
get "/orders" do
example "List orders" do
query_string.should == "name=My+Orders"
end
end
end
You can completely override what gets sent as parameters by let
-ing raw_post
.
resource "Orders" do
header "Content-Type", "application/json"
parameter :name
let(:name) { "My Order" }
post "/orders" do
let(:raw_post) { params.to_json }
example_request "Create new order" do
# params get sent as JSON
end
end
end
The gem contains a Railtie that defines a rake task for generating docs easily with Rails.
It loads all files in spec/acceptance/**/*_spec.rb
.
$ rake docs:generate
If you are not using Rails, you can use Rake with the following Task:
require 'rspec/core/rake_task'
desc 'Generate API request documentation from API specs'
RSpec::Core::RakeTask.new('docs:generate') do |t|
t.pattern = 'spec/acceptance/**/*_spec.rb'
t.rspec_opts = ["--format RspecApiDocumentation::ApiFormatter"]
end
or
require 'rspec_api_documentation'
load 'tasks/docs.rake'
If you are not using Rake:
$ rspec spec/acceptance --format RspecApiDocumentation::ApiFormatter
- rspec_api_documentation relies on a variable
client
to be the test client. If you define your ownclient
please configure rspec_api_documentation to use another one, see Configuration above. - We make heavy use of RSpec metadata, you can actually use the entire gem without the DSL if you hand write the metadata.