RSpec Rails Swagger
This gem helps you generate Swagger docs by using RSpec to document the paths.
You execute a command to run the tests and generate the .yaml
or .json
output.
Running the tests ensures that your API and docs are in agreement, and generates
output that can be saved as response examples.
The design of this was heavily influenced by the awesome swagger_rails gem.
Setup
Add the gem to your Rails app's Gemfile
:
group :development, :test do
gem 'rspec-rails-swagger'
end
Update your bundle:
bundle install
If you don't have a spec/rails_helper.rb
file:
rails generate rspec:install
Create the spec/swagger_helper.rb
file:
rails generate rspec:swagger_install
Documenting Your API
Now you can edit spec/swagger_helper.rb
and start filling in the top level
Swagger documentation, e.g. basePath, definitions,
parameters,
tags, etc.
You can use the generator to create a spec to documentation a controller:
rails generate rspec:swagger PostsController
That will create a spec/requests/posts_spec.rb
file with the paths, operations
and some default requests filled in. With the structure in place you should only
need to add before
calls to create records and then update the let
s to
return the appropriate values.
Generate the JSON or YAML
To create the Swagger files use the rake task:
bundle exec rake swagger
Now you can use Swagger UI or the renderer of your choice to display the formatted documentation. swagger_engine works pretty well and supports multiple documents.
RSpec DSL
The DSL follows the hierarchy of the Swagger Schema:
- Paths Object
- Path Item Object
- Parameter Objects (Optional)
- Operation Object
- Parameter Objects (Optional)
- Responses Object
- Response Object
- Example Objects (Optional)
- Response Object
- Path Item Object
Here's an example of a spec with comments to for the corresponding objects:
require 'swagger_helper'
# Paths Object
RSpec.describe "Posts Controller", type: :request do
before { Post.new.save }
# Path Item Object
path '/posts' do
# Operation Object
operation "GET", summary: "fetch list" do
# Response Object
response 200, description: "successful"
end
end
# Path Object
path '/posts/{post_id}' do
# Parameter Object
parameter "post_id", { in: :path, type: :integer }
let(:post_id) { 1 }
# Operation Object
get summary: "fetch item" do
# Response Object
response 200, description: "success"
end
end
# Path Post Object
path '/posts/' do
# Parameter Object for content type could be defined like:
consumes 'application/json'
# or:
parameter 'Content-Type', { in: :header, type: :string }
let(:'Content-Type') { 'application/json' }
# one of them would be considered
# authorization token in the header:
parameter 'Authorization', { in: :header, type: :string }
let(:'Authorization') { 'Bearer <token-here>' }
# Parameter Object
parameter "post_id", { in: :path, type: :integer }
let(:post_id) { 1 }
# Parameter Object for Body
parameter "body", { in: :body, required: true, schema: {
type: :object,
properties: {
title: { type: :string },
author_email: { type: :email }
}
}
let (:body) {
{ post:
{ title: 'my example',
author_email: 'me@example.com' }
}
}
}
# checkout http://swagger.io/specification/#parameter-object-44 for more information, options and details
# Operation Object
post summary: "update an item" do
# Response Object
response 200, description: "success"
end
# ...
end
Paths Object
These methods are available inside of an RSpec contexts with the type: :request
tag.
path(template, attributes = {}, &block)
Defines a new Path Item.
The attributes
parameter accepts:
swagger_doc
a key inRSpec.configuration.swagger_docs
that determines which file the path belongs in.tags
with an array of tags that will be applied to the child Operations.
You can also provide a default file and tags by setting them on a parent RSpec context block:
RSpec.describe "Sample Requests", type: :request do
# The swagger_doc will be used as a default for the paths defined within the
# context block. Similarly, the tags will be merged with those set on paths
# defined within them.
context "setting defaults", swagger_doc: 'default_document.json', tags: [:context_tag] do
path '/posts', swagger_doc: 'overridden_document.yaml' tags: ['path_tag'] do
operation "GET", summary: "fetch list" do
produces 'application/json'
tags 'operation_tag'
response(200, { description: "successful" })
end
end
end
end
The GET /posts
operation in this example will be saved in the 'overridden_document.yaml'
file and tagged with ["context_tag", "path_tag", "operation_tag"]
.
Path Item Object
These methods are available inside of blocks passed to the path
method.
operation(method, attributes = {}, &block)
Defines a new Operation Object. The method
is case insensitive.
The attributes
parameter accepts:
tags
with an array of tags. These will be merged with tags passed to the Path Item ortags
method inside the Operation's block.
delete(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:delete, attributes, block)
.
get(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:get, attributes, block)
.
head(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:head, attributes, block)
.
options(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:options, attributes, block)
.
patch(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:patch, attributes, block)
.
post(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:post, attributes, block)
.
put(attributes = {}, &block)
Alias for operation(:put, attributes, block)
.
Parameters
These methods are available inside of blocks passed to the path
or operation
method.
parameter(name, attributes = {})
Defines a new Parameter Object. You can define the parameter inline:
parameter :callback_url, in: :query, type: :string, required: true
Or, via reference:
parameter ref: "#/parameters/site_id"
Values for the parameters are set using let
:
post summary: "create" do
parameter "body", in: :body, schema: { foo: :bar }
let(:body) { { post: { title: 'asdf', body: "blah" } } }
# ...
end
Operation Object
These methods are available inside of blocks passed to the operation
method.
consumes(*mime_types)
Use this to add MIME types that are specific to the operation. They will be merged with the Swagger Object's consumes field.
consumes 'application/json', 'application/xml'
produces(*mime_types)
Use this to add MIME types that are specific to the operation. They will be merged with the Swagger Object's consumes field.
produces 'application/json', 'application/xml'
response(status_code, attributes = {}, &block)
Defines a new Response Object. status_code
must be between 1 and 599. attributes
must include a description
.
tags(*tags)
Adds operation specific tags.
tags :accounts, :pets
You can also provide tags through the RSpec context block and/or path
method:
RSpec.describe "Sample Requests", type: :request, tags: [:context_tag] do
path '/posts', tags: ['path_tag'] do
operation "GET", summary: "fetch list" do
produces 'application/json'
tags 'operation_tag'
response(200, { description: "successful" })
end
end
end
These tags will be merged with those of the operation. The GET /posts
operation
in this example will be tagged with ["context_tag", "path_tag", "operation_tag"]
.
Response Object
These methods are available inside of blocks passed to the response
method.
capture_example()
This method will capture the response body from the test and create an Example Object for the Response.
You could also set this in an RSpec context block if you'd like examples for multiple operations or paths:
describe 'Connections', type: :request, capture_examples: true do
# Any requests in this block will capture example responses
end
schema(definition)
Sets the schema field for the Response Object. You can define it inline:
schema(
type: :array,
items: {
type: :object,
properties: {
id: { type: :string },
name: { type: :string },
},
}
)
Or, by reference:
schema ref: '#/definitions/Account'