Grape is a REST-like API micro-framework for Ruby. It's designed to run on Rack or complement existing web application frameworks such as Rails and Sinatra by providing a simple DSL to easily develop RESTful APIs. It has built-in support for common conventions, including multiple formats, subdomain/prefix restriction, content negotiation, versioning and much more.
You're reading the documentation for the next release of Grape. The current stable release is 0.2.1.
Grape is available as a gem, to install it just install the gem:
gem install grape
If you're using Bundler, add the gem to Gemfile.
gem 'grape'
Run bundle install.
Grape APIs are Rack applications that are created by subclassing Grape::API.
Below is a simple example showing some of the more common features of Grape in
the context of recreating parts of the Twitter API.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  version 'v1', :using => :header, :vendor => 'twitter'
  format :json
  helpers do
    def current_user
      @current_user ||= User.authorize!(env)
    end
    def authenticate!
      error!('401 Unauthorized', 401) unless current_user
    end
  end
  resource :statuses do
  
    desc "Returns a public timeline."
    get :public_timeline do
      Tweet.limit(20)
    end
    desc "Returns a personal timeline."
    get :home_timeline do
      authenticate!
      current_user.home_timeline
    end
    desc "Returns a tweet."
    params do
      requires :id, :type => Integer, :desc => "Tweet id."
    end
    get '/show/:id' do
      Tweet.find(params[:id])
    end
    
    desc "Creates a tweet."
    params do
      requires :status, :type => String, :desc => "Your status."
    end
    post :update do
      authenticate!
      Tweet.create(
        :user => current_user,
        :text => params[:status]
      )
    end
  end
endThe above sample creates a Rack application that can be run from a rackup config.ru file
with rackup:
run Twitter::APIAnd would respond to the following routes:
GET  /statuses/public_timeline(.json)
GET  /statuses/home_timeline(.json)
GET  /statuses/show/:id(.json)
POST /statuses/update(.json)
In a Rails application, modify config/routes:
mount Twitter::API => "/"You can mount multiple API implementations inside another one. These don't have to be different versions, but may be components of the same API.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  mount Twitter::APIv1
  mount Twitter::APIv2
endThere are three strategies in which clients can reach your API's endpoints: :header,
:path and :param. The default strategy is :path.
version 'v1', :using => :header, :vendor => 'twitter'Using this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version in the HTTP Accept head.
curl -H Accept=application/vnd.twitter-v1+json http://localhost:9292/statuses/public_timeline
By default, the first matching version is used when no Accept header is
supplied. This behavior is similar to routing in Rails. To circumvent this default behavior,
one could use the :strict option. When this option is set to true, a 406 Not Acceptable error
is returned when no correct Accept header is supplied.
version 'v1', :using => :pathUsing this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version in the URL.
curl -H http://localhost:9292/v1/statuses/public_timeline
version 'v1', :using => :paramUsing this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version as a request parameter, either in the URL query string or in the request body.
curl -H http://localhost:9292/events?apiver=v1
The default name for the query parameter is 'apiver' but can be specified using the :parameter option.
version 'v1', :using => :param, :parameter => "v"curl -H http://localhost:9292/events?v=v1
You can add a description to API methods and namespaces.
desc "Returns a reticulated spline."
get "spline/:id" do
  Spline.find(params[:id])
endRequest parameters are available through the params hash object. This includes GET and POST parameters,
along with any named parameters you specify in your route strings.
get do
  Article.order(params[:sort_by])
endParameters are also populated from the request body on POST and PUT for JSON and XML content-types.
The Request:
curl -d '{"some_key": "some_value"}' 'http://localhost:9292/json_endpoint' -H Content-Type:application/json -v
The Grape Endpoint:
post '/json_endpoint' do
    params[:some_key]
endYou can define validations and coercion options for your parameters using a params block.
params do
  requires :id, type: Integer
  optional :name, type: String, regexp: /^[a-z]+$/
  group :user do
    requires :first_name
    requires :last_name
  end
end
get ':id' do
  # params[:id] is an Integer
endWhen a type is specified an implicit validation is done after the coercion to ensure the output type is the one declared.
Parameters can be nested using group. In the above example, this means both
params[:user][:first_name] and params[:user][:last_name] are required next to params[:id].
Namespaces allow parameter definitions and apply to every method within the namespace.
namespace :shelves do
  params do
    requires :shelf_id, type: Integer, desc: "A shelf."
  end
  namespace ":shelf_id" do
    desc "Retrieve a book from a shelf."
    params do
      requires :book_id, type: Integer, desc: "A book."
    end
    get ":book_id" do
      # params[:shelf_id] defines a shelf
      # params[:book_id] defines a book
    end
  end
endclass AlphaNumeric < Grape::Validations::Validator
  def validate_param!(attr_name, params)
    unless params[attr_name] =~ /^[[:alnum:]]+$/
      throw :error, :status => 400, :message => "#{attr_name}: must consist of alpha-numeric characters"
    end    
  end
end  params do
  requires :username, :alpha_numeric => true
endYou can also create custom classes that take parameters.
class Length < Grape::Validations::SingleOptionValidator
  def validate_param!(attr_name, params)
    unless params[attr_name].length == @option
      throw :error, :status => 400, :message => "#{attr_name}: must be #{@option} characters long"
    end    
  end
end  params do
  requires :name, :length => 5
endWhen validation and coercion erros occur an exception of type ValidationError is raised.
If the exception goes uncaught it will respond with a status of 400 and an error message.
You can rescue a ValidationError and respond with a custom response.
rescue_from ValidationError do |e|
    Rack::Response.new({
        'status' => e.status,
        'message' => e.message,
        'param' => e.param
    }.to_json, e.status)    
end Headers are available through the header helper or the env hash object.
get do
    content_type = header['Content-type']
    ...
endget do
    error! 'Unauthorized', 401 unless env['HTTP_SECRET_PASSWORD'] == 'swordfish'
    ...
endOptionally, you can define requirements for your named route parameters using regular expressions. The route will match only if all requirements are met.
get '/show/:id', :requirements => { :id => /[0-9]*/ } do
  Tweet.find(params[:id])
endYou can define helper methods that your endpoints can use with the helpers
macro by either giving a block or a module.
module MyHelpers
  def say_hello(user)
    "hey there #{user.name}"
  end
end
class API < Grape::API
  # define helpers with a block
  helpers do
    def current_user
      User.find(params[:user_id])
    end
  end
  # or mix in a module
  helpers MyHelpers
  get '/hello' do
    # helpers available in your endpoint and filters
    say_hello(current_user)
  end
endYou can set, get and delete your cookies very simply using cookies method.
class API < Grape::API
  get '/counter' do
    cookies[:counter] ||= 0
    cookies[:counter] += 1
    { :counter => cookies[:counter] }
  end
  delete '/counter' do
    { :result => cookies.delete(:counter) }
  end
endTo set more than value use hash-based syntax.
cookies[:counter] = {
    :value => 0,
    :expires => Time.tomorrow,
    :domain => '.example.com',
    :path => '/'
}
cookies[:counter][:value] +=1You can redirect to a new url temporarily (302) or permanently (301).
redirect "/new_url"redirect "/new_url", :permanent => trueWhen you add a route for a resource, a route for the HTTP OPTIONS method will also be added. The response to an OPTIONS request will include an Allow header listing the supported methods.
class API < Grape::API
  get '/counter' do
    { :counter => Counter.count }
  end
  params do
    requires :value, :type => Integer, :desc => 'value to add to counter'
  end
  put '/counter' do
    { :counter => Counter.incr(params.value) }
  end
endcurl -v -X OPTIONS http://localhost:3000/counter 
> OPTIONS /counter HTTP/1.1
> 
< HTTP/1.1 204 No Content
< Allow: OPTIONS, GET, PUTIf a request for a resource is made with an unsupported HTTP method, an HTTP 405 (Method Not Allowed) response will be returned.
curl -X DELETE -v http://localhost:3000/counter/
> DELETE /counter/ HTTP/1.1
> Host: localhost:3000
> 
< HTTP/1.1 405 Method Not Allowed
< Allow: OPTIONS, GET, PUTYou can abort the execution of an API method by raising errors with error!.
error!("Access Denied", 401)You can also return JSON formatted objects by raising error! and passing a hash instead of a message.
error!({ "error" => "unexpected error", "detail" => "missing widget" }, 500)Grape can be told to rescue all exceptions and instead return them in txt or json formats.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  rescue_from :all
endYou can also rescue specific exceptions.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  rescue_from ArgumentError, NotImplementedError
endThe error format can be specified using error_format. Available formats are
:json and :txt (default).
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  error_format :json
endYou can rescue all exceptions with a code block. The rack_response wrapper
automatically sets the default error code and content-type.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  rescue_from :all do |e|
    rack_response({ :message => "rescued from #{e.class.name}" })
  end
endYou can also rescue specific exceptions with a code block and handle the Rack response at the lowest level.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  rescue_from :all do |e|
    Rack::Response.new([ e.message ], 500, { "Content-type" => "text/error" }).finish
  end
endOr rescue specific exceptions.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  rescue_from ArgumentError do |e|
    Rack::Response.new([ "ArgumentError: #{e.message}" ], 500)
  end
  rescue_from NotImplementedError do |e|
    Rack::Response.new([ "NotImplementedError: #{e.message}" ], 500)
  end
endGrape::API provides a logger method which by default will return an instance of the Logger
class from Ruby's standard library.
To log messages from within an endpoint, you need to define a helper to make the logger available in the endpoint context.
class API < Grape::API
  helpers do
    def logger
      API.logger
    end
  end
  get '/hello' do
    logger.info "someone said hello"
    "hey there"
  end
endYou can also set your own logger.
class MyLogger
  def warning(message)
    puts "this is a warning: #{message}"
  end
end
class API < Grape::API
  logger MyLogger.new
  helpers do
    def logger
      API.logger
    end
  end
  get '/hello' do
    logger.warning "someone said hello"
    "hey there"
  end
endBy default, Grape supports XML, JSON, Atom, RSS, and text content-types. Serialization takes place automatically.
Your API can declare additional types to support. Response format is determined by the
request's extension, an explicit format parameter in the query string, or Accept header.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  content_type :xls, "application/vnd.ms-excel"
endYou can also set the default format. The order for choosing the format is the following.
- Use the file extension, if specified. If the file is .json, choose the JSON format.
- Use the value of the formatparameter in the query string, if specified.
- Use the format set by the formatoption, if specified.
- Attempt to find an acceptable format from the Acceptheader.
- Use the default format, if specified by the default_formatoption.
- Default to :txtotherwise.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
  format :json
endclass Twitter::API < Grape::API
  default_format :json
endYou can override the content-type by setting the Content-Type header.
class API < Grape::API
  get '/script' do
    content_type "application/javascript"
    "var x = 1;"
  end
endEntities are a reusable means for converting Ruby objects to API responses. Entities can be used to conditionally include fields, nest other entities, and build ever larger responses, using inheritance.
Entities inherit from Grape::Entity, and define a simple DSL. Exposures can use
runtime options to determine which fields should be visible, these options are
available to :if, :unless, and :proc. The option keys :version and :collection
will always be defined. The :version key is defined as api.version. The
:collection key is boolean, and defined as true if the object presented is an
array.
- expose SYMBOLS- define a list of fields which will always be exposed
 
- expose SYMBOLS, HASH- HASH keys include :if,:unless,:proc,:as,:using,:format_with,:documentation- :ifand- :unlessaccept hashes (passed during runtime) or procs (arguments are object and options)
 
 
- HASH keys include 
- expose SYMBOL, { :format_with => :formatter }- expose a value, formatting it first
- :format_withcan only be applied to one exposure at a time
 
- expose SYMBOL, { :as => "alias" }- Expose a value, changing its hash key from SYMBOL to alias
- :ascan only be applied to one exposure at a time
 
- expose SYMBOL BLOCK- block arguments are object and options
- expose the value returned by the block
- block can only be applied to one exposure at a time
 
module API
  module Entities
    class User < Grape::Entity
      expose :first_name, :last_name
      expose :field, :documentation => { :type => "string", :desc => "words go here" }
      expose :email, :if => { :type => :full }
      expose :user_type, user_id, :if => lambda{ |user,options| user.confirmed? }
      expose(:name) { |user,options| [ user.first_name, user.last_name ].join(' ')}
      expose :latest_status, :using => API::Status, :as => :status
    end
  end
end
module API
  module Entities
    class UserDetailed < API::Entities::User
      expose :account_id
    end
  end
endGrape ships with a DSL to easily define entities within the context of an existing class:
class User
  include Grape::Entity::DSL
  entity :name, :email do
    expose :advanced, if: :conditional
  end
endThe above will automatically create a User::Entity class and
define properties on it according to the same rules as above. If
you only want to define simple exposures you don't have to supply
a block and can instead simply supply a list of comma-separated
symbols.
Once an entity is defined, it can be used within endpoints, by calling present. The present
method accepts two arguments, the object to be presented and the options associated with it. The
options hash must always include :with, which defines the entity to expose.
If the entity includes documentation it can be included in an endpoint's description.
module API
  class Users < Grape::API
    version 'v1'
    desc 'User index', {
      :object_fields => API::Entities::User.documentation
    }
    get '/users' do
      @users = User.all
      type = current_user.admin? ? :full : :default
      present @users, with: API::Entities::User, :type => type
    end
  end
endIn addition to separately organizing entities, it may be useful to put them as namespaced classes underneath the model they represent. For example:
class User
  def entity
    Entity.new(self)
  end
  class Entity < Grape::Entity
    expose :name, :email
  end
endIf you organize your entities this way, Grape will automatically
detect the Entity class and use it to present your models. In
this example, if you added present User.new to your endpoint,
Grape would automatically detect that there is a User::Entity
class and use that as the representative entity. This can still
be overridden by using the :with option or an explicit
represents call.
Entities with duplicate exposure names and conditions will silently overwrite one another.
In the following example, when object.check equals "foo", only field_a will be exposed.
However, when object.check equals "bar" both field_b and foo will be exposed.
module API
  module Entities
    class User < Grape::Entity
      expose :field_a, :foo, :if => lambda { |object, options| object.check == "foo" }
      expose :field_b, :foo, :if => lambda { |object, options| object.check == "bar" }
    end
  end
endThis can be problematic, when you have mixed collections. Using respond_to? is safer.
module API
  module Entities
    class User < Grape::Entity
      expose :field_a, :if => lambda { |object, options| object.check == "foo" }
      expose :field_b, :if => lambda { |object, options| object.check == "bar" }
      expose :foo, :if => lambda { |object, options| object.respond_to?(:foo) }
    end
  end
endGrape routes can be reflected at runtime. This can notably be useful for generating documentation.
Grape exposes arrays of API versions and compiled routes. Each route
contains a route_prefix, route_version, route_namespace, route_method,
route_path and route_params. The description and the optional hash that
follows the API path may contain any number of keys and its values are also
accessible via dynamically-generated route_[name] functions.
TwitterAPI::versions # yields [ 'v1', 'v2' ]
TwitterAPI::routes # yields an array of Grape::Route objects
TwitterAPI::routes[0].route_version # yields 'v1'
TwitterAPI::routes[0].route_description # etc.It's possible to retrieve the information about the current route from within an API
call with route.
class MyAPI < Grape::API
  desc "Returns a description of a parameter."
  params do
    requires :id, :type => Integer, :desc => "Identity."
  end
  get "params/:id" do
    route.route_params[params[:id]] # yields the parameter description
  end
endGrape by default anchors all request paths, which means that the request URL
should match from start to end to match, otherwise a 404 Not Found is
returned. However, this is sometimes not what you want, because it is not always
known upfront what can be expected from the call. This is because Rack-mount by
default anchors requests to match from the start to the end, or not at all.
Rails solves this problem by using a :anchor => false option in your routes.
In Grape this option can be used as well when a method is defined.
For instance when you're API needs to get part of an URL, for instance:
class UrlAPI < Grape::API
  namespace :urls do
    get '/(*:url)', :anchor => false do
      some_data
    end
  end
endThis will match all paths starting with '/urls/'. There is one caveat though:
the params[:url] parameter only holds the first part of the request url.
Luckily this can be circumvented by using the described above syntax for path
specification and using the PATH_INFO Rack environment variable, using
env["PATH_INFO"]. This will hold everything that comes after the '/urls/'
part.
You can test a Grape API with RSpec by making HTTP requests and examining the response.
Use rack-test and define your API as app.
require 'spec_helper'
describe Twitter::API do
  include Rack::Test::Methods
  def app
    Twitter::API
  end
  describe Twitter::API do
    describe "GET /api/v1/statuses" do
      it "returns an empty array of statuses" do
        get "/api/v1/statuses"
        last_response.status.should == 200
        JSON.parse(response.body).should == []
      end
    end
    describe "GET /api/v1/statuses/:id" do
      it "returns a status by id" do
        status = Status.create!
        get "/api/v1/statuses/#{status.id}"
        last_response.body.should == status.to_json
      end
    end
  end
endrequire 'spec_helper'
describe Twitter::API do
  describe "GET /api/v1/statuses" do
    it "returns an empty array of statuses" do
      get "/api/v1/statuses"
      response.status.should == 200
      JSON.parse(response.body).should == []
    end
  end
  describe "GET /api/v1/statuses/:id" do
    it "returns a status by id" do
      status = Status.create!
      get "/api/v1/statuses/#{status.id}"
      resonse.body.should == status.to_json
    end
  end
endIn Rails, HTTP request tests would go into the spec/request group. You may want your API code to go into
app/api - you can match that layout under spec by adding the following in spec/spec_helper.rb.
RSpec.configure do |config|
  config.include RSpec::Rails::RequestExampleGroup, :type => :request, :example_group => {
    :file_path => /spec\/api/
  }
endGrape is work of dozens of contributors. You're encouraged to submit pull requests, propose features and discuss issues.
- Fork the project
- Write tests for your new feature or a test that reproduces a bug
- Implement your feature or make a bug fix
- Do not mess with Rakefile, version or history
- Commit, push and make a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
MIT License. See LICENSE for details.
Copyright (c) 2010-2012 Michael Bleigh, and Intridea, Inc.

