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swaggerize-express

Lead Maintainer: Trevor Livingston

Build Status
NPM version

swaggerize-express is a design-driven approach to building RESTful apis with Swagger and Express.

swaggerize-express provides the following features:

  • API schema validation.
  • Routes based on the Swagger document.
  • API documentation route.
  • Input validation.

See also:

Why "Design Driven"

There are already a number of modules that help build RESTful APIs for node with swagger. However, these modules tend to focus on building the documentation or specification as a side effect of writing the application business logic.

swaggerize-express begins with the swagger document first. This facilitates writing APIs that are easier to design, review, and test.

Quick Start with a Generator

This guide will let you go from an api.json to a service project in no time flat.

First install generator-swaggerize (and yo if you haven't already):

$ npm install -g yo
$ npm install -g generator-swaggerize

Now run the generator.

$ mkdir petstore && cd $_
$ yo swaggerize

Follow the prompts (note: make sure to choose express as your framework choice).

When asked for a swagger document, you can try this one:

https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wordnik/swagger-spec/master/examples/v2.0/json/petstore.json

You now have a working api and can use something like Swagger UI to explore it.

Manual Usage

var swaggerize = require('swaggerize-express');

app.use(swaggerize({
    api: require('./api.json'),
    docspath: '/api-docs',
    handlers: './handlers'
}));

Options:

  • api - a valid Swagger 2.0 document.
  • docspath - the path to expose api docs for swagger-ui, etc. Defaults to /.
  • handlers - either a directory structure for route handlers or a premade object (see Handlers Object below).
  • express - express settings overrides.

After using this middleware, a new property will be available on the app called swagger, containing the following properties:

  • api - the api document.
  • routes - the route definitions based on the api document.

Example:

var http = require('http');
var express = require('express');
var swaggerize = require('swaggerize-express');

app = express();

var server = http.createServer(app);

app.use(swaggerize({
    api: require('./api.json'),
    docspath: '/api-docs',
    handlers: './handlers'
}));

server.listen(port, 'localhost', function () {
    app.swagger.api.host = server.address().address + ':' + server.address().port;
});

Mount Path

Api path values will be prefixed with the swagger document's basePath value.

Handlers Directory

The options.handlers option specifies a directory to scan for handlers. These handlers are bound to the api paths defined in the swagger document.

handlers
  |--foo
  |    |--bar.js
  |--foo.js
  |--baz.js

Will route as:

foo.js => /foo
foo/bar.js => /foo/bar
baz.js => /baz

Path Parameters

The file and directory names in the handlers directory can also represent path parameters.

For example, to represent the path /users/{id}:

handlers
  |--users
  |    |--{id}.js

This works with directory names as well:

handlers
  |--users
  |    |--{id}.js
  |    |--{id}
  |        |--foo.js

To represent /users/{id}/foo.

Handlers File

Each provided javascript file should export an object containing functions with HTTP verbs as keys.

Example:

module.exports = {
    get: function (req, res) { ... },
    put: function (req, res) { ... },
    ...
}

Handler Middleware

Handlers can also specify middleware chains by providing an array of handler functions under the verb:

module.exports = {
    get: [
        function m1(req, res, next) { ... },
        function m2(req, res, next) { ... },
        function handler(req, res)  { ... }
    ],
    ...
}

Handlers Object

The directory generation will yield this object, but it can be provided directly as options.handlers.

Note that if you are programatically constructing a handlers obj this way, you must namespace HTTP verbs with $ to avoid conflicts with path names. These keys should also be lowercase.

Example:

{
    'foo': {
        '$get': function (req, res) { ... },
        'bar': {
            '$get': function (req, res) { ... },
            '$post': function (req, res) { ... }
        }
    }
    ...
}

Handler keys in files do not have to be namespaced in this way.

Security Middleware

If a security definition exists for a path in the swagger API definition, and an appropriate authorize function exists (defined using x-authorize in the securityDefinitions as per swaggerize-routes), then it will be used as middleware for that path.

In addition, a requiredScopes property will be injected onto the request object to check against.

For example:

Swagger API definition:

    .
    .
    .

    //A route with security object.
    "security": [
        {
            "petstore_auth": [
                "write_pets",
                "read_pets"
            ]
        }
    ]
    .
    .
    .
    //securityDefinitions
    "securityDefinitions": {
        "petstore_auth": {
            "x-authorize": "lib/auth_oauth.js", // This path has to be relative to the project root.
            "scopes": {
                "write_pets": "modify pets in your account",
                "read_pets": "read your pets"
            }
        }
    },

Sample x-authorize code - lib/auth_oauth.js :

//x-authorize: auth_oauth.js
function authorize(req, res, next) {
    validate(req, function (error, availablescopes) {
        /*
         * `req.requiredScopes` is set by the `swaggerize-express` module to help
         * with the scope and security validation.
         *
         */
        if (!error) {
            for (var i = 0; i < req.requiredScopes.length; i++) {
                if (availablescopes.indexOf(req.requiredScopes[i]) > -1) {
                    next();
                    return;
                }
            }

            error = new Error('Do not have the required scopes.');
            error.status = 403;

            next(error);
            return;
        }

        next(error);
    });
}

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Design-driven apis with swagger 2.0 and express.

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