This package scans your laravel project's routes and auto generates a Swagger 2.0 documentation for you. If you inject Form Request classes in your controller's actions as request validation, it will also generate the parameters for each request that has them. It will take into account wether the request is a GET/HEAD/DELETE or a POST/PUT/PATCH request and make its best guess as to the type of parameter object it should generate. It will also generate the path parameters if you route contains them.
The package can easily be installed by running composer require vigneshc91/laravel-swagger
in your project's root folder.
If you are running a version of Laravel < 5.5 also make sure you add Vigneshc91\LaravelSwagger\SwaggerServiceProvider::class
to the providers
array in config/app.php
.
This will register the artisan command that will be available to you.
You can also override the default config provided by the application by running php artisan vendor:publish --provider "LaravelSwagger\SwaggerServiceProvider"
in your projects root and change the configuration in the new config/laravel-swagger.php
file created.
Generating the swagger documentation is easy, simply run php artisan laravel-swagger:generate
in your project root. Keep in mind the command will simply print out the output in your console. If you want the docs saved in a file you can reroute the output like so: php artisan laravel-swagger:generate > swagger.json
If you wish to generate docs for a subset of your routes, you can pass a filter using --filter
, for example: php artisan laravel-swagger:generate --filter="/api"
If you want to change the change the host name, you can pass a host using --host
,
for example: php artisan laravel-swagger:generate --host="localhost/laravel"
If you want to apply authentication(currently supports only jwt), you can pass a auth using --auth
,
for example: php artisan laravel-swagger:generate --auth="jwt"
By default, laravel-swagger prints out the documentation in json format, if you want it in YAML format you can override the format using the --format
flag. Make sure to have the yaml extension installed if you choose to do so.
Format options are:
json
yaml
Say you have a route /api/users/{id}
that maps to UserController@show
Your sample controller might look like this:
class UserController extends Controller
{
public function show(UserShowRequest $request, $id)
{
return User::find($id);
}
}
And the FormRequest class might look like this:
class UserShowRequest extends FormRequest
{
public function rules()
{
return [
'fields' => 'array'
'show_relationships' => 'boolean|required'
];
}
}
Running php artisan laravel-swagger:generate > swagger.json
will generate the following file:
{
"swagger": "2.0",
"info": {
"title": "Laravel",
"description": "Test",
"version": "1.0.1"
},
"host": "http:\/\/localhost",
"basePath": "\/",
"paths": {
"\/api\/user\/{id}": {
"get": {
"description": "GET \/api\/user\/{id}",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "OK"
}
},
"parameters": [
{
"in": "path",
"name": "id",
"type": "integer",
"required": true,
"description": ""
},
{
"in": "query",
"name": "fields",
"type": "array",
"required": false,
"description": ""
},
{
"in": "query",
"name": "show_relationships",
"type": "boolean",
"required": true,
"description": ""
}
]
},
...
}
}
}