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Convert OpenAPI 3.0 document into a tree of request/response JSON Schemas

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THIS PACKAGE IS NO LONGER MAINTAINED. LOOKING FOR A NEW MAINTAINER.

openapi2schema

Convert OpenAPI 3.0 document into a tree of request/response JSON Schemas. This builds on openapi-schema-to-json-schema to enable request/response validation.

You can use it as a CLI tool or a library. Create your own CLI around the library if the standard one doesn't suit your needs.

Installation

For library

npm install --save openapi2schema

For CLI

npm install -g openapi2schema

Example

Let's say we have an OpenAPI 3.0 file called spec.yaml that looks like the following

openapi: "3.0.0"
info:
  title: Sample API
  version: 0.1.0
paths:
  /data:
    post:
      summary: Post data
      requestBody:
        required: true
        content:
          application/json:
            schema:
              $ref: '#/components/schemas/Data'
              
      responses:
        '200':
          description: OK
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                $ref: '#/components/schemas/DataResp'
        '400':
          description: Bad request
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                properties:
                  status:
                    type: integer
components:
  schemas:
    DataResp:
      properties:
        total:
          type: integer
    Data:
      properties:
        date:
          type: string
          format: date-time
          nullable: true

Let's use the CLI tool on that:

$ openapi2schema -i spec.yaml -p
{
  "/data": {
    "post": {
      "body": {
        "properties": {
          "date": {
            "type": [
              "string",
              "null"
            ],
            "format": "date-time"
          }
        },
        "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#"
      },
      "responses": {
        "200": {
          "properties": {
            "total": {
              "type": "integer"
            }
          },
          "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#"
        },
        "400": {
          "properties": {
            "status": {
              "type": "integer"
            }
          },
          "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

The created JSON consists of the defined paths, in this case only /data, on the root level. Each path consists of body and/or responses object. body has the converted schema of the request body and requests has the response body schemas. Parameters are not currently supported.

Usage

CLI

The CLI tool will print the created JSON to stdout.

$ openapi2schema -h

  Usage: openapi2schema [options]


  Options:

    -i, --input [filepath]  OpenAPI file
    -c, --clean             Clean output from extra methods and endpoints
    -p, --pretty-print      Enable pretty printing
    -d, --date-to-datetime  Convert dates to datetimes
    --pattern-properties    Support patternProperties with x-patternProperties
    --no-responses          Exclude responses
    -h, --help              output usage information openapi2schema --help

Let's walk through the options:

  • -i: path to the OpenAPI file (or root file if it consists of many files)
  • -p: pretty prints the JSON rather than outputting everything in a single line
  • -c:
    • cleans the output so that it won't have any methods or endpoints that don't have content
    • use with --no-responses flag to clean empty get methods from the result (or the whole path if it contains only an empty get method
  • -d
    • if you have types with format: date, change these to format: date-time
    • this parameter goes directly to openapi-schema-to-json-schema, so check out its documentation for more info
  • --pattern-properties
    • Setting this option changes x-patternProperties to patternProperties to enable validation against a pattern. If you have additionalProperties set as well in the same schema, this might do a bit of juggling on that. Scroll down for an example.
    • this parameter goes directly to openapi-schema-to-json-schema, so check out its documentation for more info
  • --no-responses: include only requests in the created JSON

Library

Let's start with an example:

var openapi2schema = require('openapi2schema');

// Async with callback
openapi2schema('test.yaml', function(err, result) {
  if (err) {
    return console.error(err);
  }
  console.log(result);
});

// Sync with return value
var result = openapi2schema('test.yaml', { async: false });
if (result instanceof Error) {
  console.error(result);
} else {
  console.log(result);
}

This prints out the same structure as in the main CLI example, but as an object instead of JSON.

openapi2schema(spec, [options,] [callback])

  • spec (required)
    • either a path to OpenAPI spec file or an object
  • options (optional)
    • includeBodies (boolean, default: true)
      • includes request bodies in the result structure
    • includeResponses (boolean, default: true)
      • includes response bodies in the result structure
    • clean (boolean, default: false)
      • cleans the output from empty methods/endpoints
    • dateToDateTime (boolean, default: false)
      • if you have types with format: date, change these to format: date-time
      • this parameter goes directly to openapi-schema-to-json-schema, so check out its documentation for more info
    • supportPatternProperties:
      • enable regex pattern based properties with x-patternProperties
      • this parameter goes directly to openapi-schema-to-json-schema, so check out its documentation for more info
    • async (boolean, default: true)
      • controls if function called sync with return value or async with callback
  • callback (required at default, not required if async is false)
    • a function that will receive the result

Using patternProperties

Consider the following spec called pattern.yaml:

openapi: "3.0.0"
info:
  title: Sample API
  version: 0.1.0
paths:
  /data:
    get:
      responses:
        200:
          description: OK
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                $ref: '#/components/schemas/Data'
components:
  schemas:
    Data:
      additionalProperties:
        type: string
      x-patternProperties:
        "^[a-z]+$":
          type: string

We will use the CLI tool on that:

$ openapi2schema -i pattern.yaml -p --pattern-properties

{
  "/data": {
    "get": {
      "responses": {
        "200": {
          "additionalProperties": false,
          "patternProperties": {
            "^[a-z]+$": {
              "type": "string"
            }
          },
          "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

What is going on?

OpenAPI 3.0 doesn't support patternProperties. Luckily, OpenAPI supports additional properties starting with x-. We can leverage this feature to enable patternProperties for validation.

Here we set x-patternProperties in the schema, but we also set additionalProperties, because we want to use that in our API documentation. When we use the CLI tool, we set the pattern-properties flag, which changes x-patternProperties to patternProperties.

Notice also that additionalProperties is set to false. This is because if we allow additional string properties in the spec file, we would allow any property of type string. By setting it to false, we restrict additional properties to those defined by the pattern.

If additionalProperties is an object, it will be converted to false if the additionalProperties object is deeply equal to one of the pattern objects in patternProperties.

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