JSONAPI::Serializers is a simple library for serializing Ruby objects and their relationships into the JSON:API format.
This library is up-to-date with the finalized v1 JSON API spec.
- Features
- Installation
- Usage
- Relationships
- Rails example
- Sinatra example
- Unfinished business
- Contributing
- Works with any Ruby web framework, including Rails, Sinatra, etc. This is a pure Ruby library.
- Supports the readonly features of the JSON:API spec.
- Full support for compound documents ("side-loading") and the
includeparameter.
- Full support for compound documents ("side-loading") and the
- Similar interface to ActiveModel::Serializers, should provide an easy migration path.
- Intentionally unopinionated and simple, allows you to structure your app however you would like and then serialize the objects at the end. Easy to integrate with your existing authorization systems and service objects.
JSONAPI::Serializers was built as an intentionally simple serialization interface. It makes no assumptions about your database structure or routes and it does not provide controllers or any create/update interface to the objects. It is a library, not a framework. You will probably still need to do work to make your API fully compliant with the nuances of the JSON:API spec, for things like supporting /relationships routes and for supporting write actions like creating or updating objects. If you are looking for a more complete and opinionated framework, see the jsonapi-resources project.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'jsonapi-serializers'Or install directly with gem install jsonapi-serializers.
require 'jsonapi-serializers'
class PostSerializer
include JSONAPI::Serializer
attribute :title
attribute :content
endJSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(post)Returns a hash:
{
"data": {
"id": "1",
"type": "posts",
"attributes": {
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Your first post"
},
"links": {
"self": "/posts/1"
}
}
}JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(posts, is_collection: true)Returns:
{
"data": [
{
"id": "1",
"type": "posts",
"attributes": {
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Your first post"
},
"links": {
"self": "/posts/1"
}
},
{
"id": "2",
"type": "posts",
"attributes": {
"title": "Hello World again",
"content": "Your second post"
},
"links": {
"self": "/posts/2"
}
}
]
}You must always pass is_collection: true when serializing a collection, see Null handling.
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(nil)Returns:
{
"data": null
}And serializing an empty collection:
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize([], is_collection: true)Returns:
{
"data": []
}Note that the JSON:API spec distinguishes in how null/empty is handled for single objects vs. collections, so you must always provide is_collection: true when serializing multiple objects. If you attempt to serialize multiple objects without this flag (or a single object with it on) a JSONAPI::Serializer::AmbiguousCollectionError will be raised.
You could declare multiple attributes at once:
attributes :title, :body, :contentsBy default the serializer looks for the same name of the attribute on the object it is given. You can customize this behavior by providing a block to attribute, has_one, or has_many:
attribute :content do
object.body
end
has_one :comment do
Comment.where(post: object).take!
end
has_many :authors do
Author.where(post: object)
endThe block is evaluated within the serializer instance, so it has access to the object and context instance variables.
Many other formatting and customizations are possible by overriding any of the following instance methods on your serializers.
# Override this to customize the JSON:API "id" for this object.
# Always return a string from this method to conform with the JSON:API spec.
def id
object.id.to_s
end# Override this to customize the JSON:API "type" for this object.
# By default, the type is the object's class name lowercased, pluralized, and dasherized,
# per the spec naming recommendations: http://jsonapi.org/recommendations/#naming
# For example, 'MyApp::LongCommment' will become the 'long-comments' type.
def type
object.class.name.demodulize.tableize.dasherize
end# Override this to customize how attribute names are formatted.
# By default, attribute names are dasherized per the spec naming recommendations:
# http://jsonapi.org/recommendations/#naming
def format_name(attribute_name)
attribute_name.to_s.dasherize
end# The opposite of format_name. Override this if you override format_name.
def unformat_name(attribute_name)
attribute_name.to_s.underscore
end# Override this to provide resource-object metadata.
# http://jsonapi.org/format/#document-structure-resource-objects
def meta
end# Override this to set a base URL (http://example.com) for all links. No trailing slash.
def base_url
@base_url
enddef self_link
"#{base_url}/#{type}/#{id}"
enddef relationship_self_link(attribute_name)
"#{self_link}/links/#{format_name(attribute_name)}"
enddef relationship_related_link(attribute_name)
"#{self_link}/#{format_name(attribute_name)}"
endIf you override self_link, relationship_self_link, or relationship_related_link to return nil, the link will be excluded from the serialized object.
You can override the base_url instance method to set a URL to be used in all links.
class BaseSerializer
include JSONAPI::Serializer
def base_url
'http://example.com'
end
end
class PostSerializer < BaseSerializer
attribute :title
attribute :content
has_one :author
has_many :comments
end
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(post)Returns:
{
"data": {
"id": "1",
"type": "posts",
"attributes": {
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Your first post"
},
"links": {
"self": "http://example.com/posts/1"
},
"relationships": {
"author": {
"links": {
"self": "http://example.com/posts/1/relationships/author",
"related": "http://example.com/posts/1/author"
}
},
"comments": {
"links": {
"self": "http://example.com/posts/1/relationships/comments",
"related": "http://example.com/posts/1/comments"
},
}
}
}
}Alternatively, you can specify base_url as an argument to serialize which allows you to build the URL with different subdomains or other logic from the request:
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(post, base_url: 'http://example.com')Note: if you override self_link in your serializer and leave out base_url, it will not be included.
You can pass a meta argument to specify top-level metadata:
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(post, meta: {copyright: 'Copyright 2015 Example Corp.'})By default, jsonapi-serializers assumes that the serializer class for Namespace::User is Namespace::UserSerializer. You can override this behavior on a per-object basis by implementing the jsonapi_serializer_class_name method.
class User
def jsonapi_serializer_class_name
'SomeOtherNamespace::CustomUserSerializer'
end
endNow, when a User object is serialized, it will use the SomeOtherNamespace::CustomUserSerializer.
You can easily specify relationships with the has_one and has_many directives.
class BaseSerializer
include JSONAPI::Serializer
end
class PostSerializer < BaseSerializer
attribute :title
attribute :content
has_one :author
has_many :comments
end
class UserSerializer < BaseSerializer
attribute :name
end
class CommentSerializer < BaseSerializer
attribute :content
has_one :user
endNote that when serializing a post, the author association will come from the author attribute on the Post instance, no matter what type it is (in this case it is a User). This will work just fine, because JSONAPI::Serializers automatically finds serializer classes by appending Serializer to the object's class name. This behavior can be customized.
Because the full class name is used when discovering serializers, JSONAPI::Serializers works with any custom namespaces you might have, like a Rails Engine or standard Ruby module namespace.
To reduce the number of HTTP requests, servers MAY allow responses that include related resources along with the requested primary resources. Such responses are called "compound documents". JSON:API Compound Documents
JSONAPI::Serializers supports compound documents with a simple include parameter.
For example:
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(post, include: ['author', 'comments', 'comments.user'])Returns:
{
"data": {
"id": "1",
"type": "posts",
"attributes": {
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Your first post"
},
"links": {
"self": "/posts/1"
},
"relationships": {
"author": {
"links": {
"self": "/posts/1/relationships/author",
"related": "/posts/1/author"
},
"data": {
"type": "users",
"id": "1"
}
},
"comments": {
"links": {
"self": "/posts/1/relationships/comments",
"related": "/posts/1/comments"
},
"data": [
{
"type": "comments",
"id": "1"
}
]
}
}
},
"included": [
{
"id": "1",
"type": "users",
"attributes": {
"name": "Post Author"
},
"links": {
"self": "/users/1"
}
},
{
"id": "1",
"type": "comments",
"attributes": {
"content": "Have no fear, sers, your king is safe."
},
"links": {
"self": "/comments/1"
},
"relationships": {
"user": {
"links": {
"self": "/comments/1/relationships/user",
"related": "/comments/1/user"
},
"data": {
"type": "users",
"id": "2"
}
},
"post": {
"links": {
"self": "/comments/1/relationships/post",
"related": "/comments/1/post"
}
}
}
},
{
"id": "2",
"type": "users",
"attributes": {
"name": "Barristan Selmy"
},
"links": {
"self": "/users/2"
}
}
]
}Notice a few things:
-
The primary data relationships now include "linkage" information for each relationship that was included.
-
The related objects themselves are loaded in the top-level
includedmember. -
The related objects also include "linkage" data when a deeper relationship is also present in the compound document. This is a very powerful feature of the JSON:API spec, and allows you to deeply link complicated relationships all in the same document and in a single HTTP response. JSONAPI::Serializers automatically includes the correct linkage data for whatever
includepaths you specify. This conforms to this part of the spec:Note: Full linkage ensures that included resources are related to either the primary data (which could be resource objects or resource identifier objects) or to each other. JSON:API Compound Documents
The include param also accepts a string of relationship paths, ie. include: 'author,comments,comments.user' so you can pass an ?include query param directly through to the serialize method. Be aware that letting users pass arbitrary relationship paths might introduce security issues depending on your authorization setup, where a user could include a relationship they might not be authorized to see directly. Be aware of what you allow API users to include.
# app/serializers/base_serializer.rb
class BaseSerializer
include JSONAPI::Serializer
def self_link
"/api/v1#{super}"
end
end
# app/serializers/post_serializer.rb
class PostSerializer < BaseSerializer
attribute :title
attribute :content
end
# app/controllers/api/v1/base_controller.rb
class Api::V1::BaseController < ActionController::Base
# Convenience methods for serializing models:
def serialize_model(model, options = {})
options[:is_collection] = false
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(model, options)
end
def serialize_models(models, options = {})
options[:is_collection] = true
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(models, options)
end
end
# app/controllers/api/v1/posts_controller.rb
class Api::V1::ReposController < Api::V1::BaseController
def index
posts = Post.all
render json: serialize_models(posts)
end
def show
post = Post.find(params[:id])
render json: serialize_model(post)
end
end
# config/initializers/jsonapi_mimetypes.rb
# Without this mimetype registration, controllers will not automatically parse JSON API params.
module JSONAPI
MIMETYPE = "application/vnd.api+json"
end
Mime::Type.register(JSONAPI::MIMETYPE, :api_json)
# Rails 4
ActionDispatch::ParamsParser::DEFAULT_PARSERS[Mime::Type.lookup(JSONAPI::MIMETYPE)] = lambda do |body|
JSON.parse(body)
end
# Rails 5 moved DEFAULT_PARSERS
ActionDispatch::Http::Parameters::DEFAULT_PARSERS[Mime::Type.lookup(JSONAPI::MIMETYPE)] = lambda do |body|
JSON.parse(body)
endHere's an example using Sinatra and Sequel ORM instead of Rails and ActiveRecord. The important takeaways here are that:
- The
:tactical_eager_loadingplugin will greatly reduce the number of queries performed when sideloading associated records. You can add this plugin to a single model (as demonstrated here), or globally to all models. For more information, please see the Sequel documentation. - The
:skip_collection_checkoption must be set to true in order for JSONAPI::Serializer to be able to serialize a single Sequel::Model instance. - You should call
#allon your Sequel::Dataset instances before passing them to JSONAPI::Serializer to greatly reduce the number of queries performed.
require 'sequel'
require 'sinatra/base'
require 'json/ext'
require 'jsonapi-serializers'
class Post < Sequel::Model
plugin :tactical_eager_loading
one_to_many :comments
end
class Comment < Sequel::Model
many_to_one :post
end
class BaseSerializer
include JSONAPI::Serializer
def self_link
"/api/v1#{super}"
end
end
class PostSerializer < BaseSerializer
attributes :title, :content
has_many :comments
end
class CommentSerializer < BaseSerializer
attributes :username, :content
has_one :post
end
module Api
class V1 < Sinatra::Base
configure do
mime_type :jsonapi, 'application/vnd.api+json'
set :database, Sequel.connect
end
helpers do
# Parse the body of the request depending on its content-type:
def parse_request_body
request.body.rewind
case request.content_type
when /json$/, /javascript$/
JSON.parse(request.body.read, symbolize_names: true)
end
end
# Convenience methods for serializing models:
def serialize_model(model, options = {})
options[:is_collection] = false
options[:skip_collection_check] = true
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(model, options)
end
def serialize_models(models, options = {})
options[:is_collection] = true
JSONAPI::Serializer.serialize(models, options)
end
end
before do
@data = parse_request_body if request.body.size > 0
end
get '/posts', provides: :jsonapi do
posts = Post.all
not_found if posts.empty?
serialize_models(posts).to_json
end
get '/posts/:id', provides: :jsonapi do
post = Post[params[:id]]
not_found if post.nil?
serialize_model(post, include: 'comments').to_json
end
end
end- Support for passing
contextthrough to serializers is partially complete, but needs more work. - Support for the
fieldsspec is planned, would love a PR contribution for this. - Support for pagination/sorting is unlikely to be supported because it would likely involve coupling to ActiveRecord, but please open an issue if you have ideas of how to support this generically.
- v0.6.0: Support for polymorphic collections and inheriting serializer attributes.
- v0.5.0: Support for explicit serializer discovery.
- v0.4.0: Support for declaring multiple
attributes. - v0.3.1: Improve performance of loading included relationships.
- v0.3.0: Add top-level
metasupport. - v0.2.6: Add
base_urlsupport. - v0.2.5: Allow disabling ambiguous collection checks for Sequel support.
- v0.2.4: Improve handling for nil relationship links.
- v0.2.3: Support serializers with no attributes.
- v0.2.2: Compliance fix for excluding empty relationship objects.
- v0.2.1: Compliance fix for self links.
- v0.2.0: Initial release with support for the final v1 JSON API spec.
- Fork it ( https://github.com/fotinakis/jsonapi-serializers/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create a new Pull Request
Throw a ★ on it! :)