Install Rust : https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install.
And then install codegenr
cargo install codegenr
or install the development version
cargo install --git https://github.com/eventuallyconsultant/codegenr --branch dev
codegenr documentation on docs.rs
Here is a simple folders/files Tree we're gonna use in example
|- _specs
|- openapi.yaml
|- ...
|- _templates
|- rest-tests
|- mytemplate.hbs
|- ...
|- _rest-calls
|- generated
|- file1
|- ...
flowchart LR
L[Load] --> R{Is it?}
R --> |$ref| L
R[Resolve] --> |All resolved| RE
RE[Render] --> PP
PP[Process]
To generate your files, you need to define these parameters :
[section_name]
: A unique name reprensting each sectionsource
: The file.yaml with the data you want to use for the generationtemplates
: the folders containing handlebar templates (.hbs
) you're using. Only one file in those folders must not be prefixed by_
and then is considered as themain
template. The other ones are prefixed like_partial.hbs
are consideredpartial
templates.output
: Theroot folder
where the files will be generated. All files output path write will be computed from this root.custom_helpers
: A place you can put.rhai
file, each file is loaded as a custom helper, usable from the.hbs
templatesintermediate
: (Optionnal) if set,codegenr
will output intermediate files for debug purposeglobal_parameters
: (Optionnal) Some values you want to use with theglobal_parameter
helper.
[api_section]
source = "./_specs/openapi.yaml"
templates = [ "./_templates/misc/rest-tests" ]
output = "./_rest-calls"
custom_helpers = [ "./_templates/_custom_helpers" ]
intermediate = "codegenr"
global_parameters = { apiName = "MyFirstApi", apiRoot = "/v1/api" }
The load
step will read the source
file and turn it to json
- if it's a
json
file, it's quite easy - if it's a
yaml
file, it's not that hard - if it's a
graphql
sdl file, it's lead to some structure changes
If you look closely to example below, you can see that $ref: "#/components/schemas/GetMeResponse"
refer to a specific path composed in 3 parts:
- The
#
part is refering to thesame
document (Also:file.yaml#...
would be referring to the documentfile.yaml
) /components/schemas/
is the pathin
the fileGetMeResponse
is the object we're looking for, here is just a simple example with a propertyusername
which contains a description and a type.
# `some_openapi_file.yaml` example
openapi: 3.0.3
info:
title: Example openapi
description: "Openapi specifications"
version: 1.0.0
servers:
- url: http://localhost:8000
paths:
/me:
get:
tags:
- user
summary: Get current users informations
operationId: get_current_user
responses:
"200":
description: Successful operation
content:
application/json:
schema:
$ref: "#/components/schemas/GetMeResponse"
# ...
# ...
components:
schemas:
GetMeResponse:
type: object
required:
- username
properties:
username:
type: string
description: a username/handle
example: just_a_username
for more information : https://swagger.io/docs/specification/using-ref/
this is where the resolve
step comes in the game :
If the file contains from json references ($ref: "..."
), the resolver will replace the reference by the value pointed at by the reference. If the reference point at another file, it'll be loaded (previous step). Then it will continue to resolve references in the value, and so on, recursively, until all $ref
s are replaced.
In this example, the loader finds a $ref
in the source.yaml
which is redirecting in the other.yaml
, the loader will then load the other.yaml
and resolve the reference that the $ref
is pointing.
# source.yaml
openapi: 3.0.3
info:
title: Example
description: "Just an example"
version: 1.0.0
servers:
- url: http://localhost:8000
paths:
/user:
get:
tags:
- user
summary: Get current users informations
operationId: get_current_user
responses:
"200":
description: Successful operation
content:
application/json:
schema:
$ref: "other.yaml#/components/schemas/UserResponse"
# other.yaml
components:
schemas:
UserResponse:
type: object
required:
- username
properties:
username:
type: string
description: a username/handle
example: just_a_username
// all resolved & changed to json
{
"openapi": "3.0.3",
"info": {
"title": "Example",
"description": "Just an example",
"version": "1.0.0"
},
"servers": [
{
"url": "http://localhost:8000"
}
],
"paths": {
"/user": {
"get": {
"tags": ["user"],
"summary": "Get current users informations",
"operationId": "get_current_user",
"responses": {
"200": {
"description": "Successful operation",
"content": {
"application/json": {
"schema": {
"UserResponse": {
"type": "object",
"required": ["username"],
"properties": {
"username": {
"type": "string",
"description": "a username/handle",
"example": "just_a_username"
}
},
"x-fromRef": "other.yaml#/components/schemas/UserResponse",
"x-refName": "UserResponse"
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
flowchart LR
L[Load] --> F
F[source.yaml] --> |All Resolved/No $ref| Rend
F --> |$ref: other.yaml| L2
Res[Resolve] --> F2
F2[other.yaml] --> |No other $ref| Rend
L2[Load] --> Res
Rend[Render] --> PP
PP[Process]
Finally, when all the refs are resolved and all necessary files loaded, the render and process will do their job.
Here is our handlebar example file named mytemplate.hbs
which is in the ./_templates/misc/rest-tests
folder.
The goal of this template will be to ouptut a .rest
file named after the apiName
, that contains ready to use
one click examples from the swagger documentation. (usage with Rest Client VsCode extension)
This step will use the template folder you defined (./_templates/misc/rest-tests
in the example above) to find all handlebars files (mytemplate.hbs
, ...)
and render the ONE .bhs
main file (the one with no _underscore
) using the load & resolve
result as source, and the parameters defined in the global_parameters
if there are some.
for more information about the handlebar syntax : https://handlebarsjs.com/guide/
Here is what our render output will look at the end.
@host = localhost
@port = 8080
@api_root = /v1/api
# get_me
# --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
get http://{{host}}:{{port}}{{api_root}}/user HTTP/1.1
#### --- --- --- ---
Handlebars is a pretty limited language, but it's extended with helpers
:
- it has some standard helpers (
eq
,ne
,gt
,gte
,lt
,lte
,and
,or
,not
...), provided by the rust handlebars implementation : https://docs.rs/handlebars/latest/handlebars/#built-in-helpers codegenr
bundles thehandlebars_misc_helpers
to have more helpers : https://github.com/davidB/handlebars_misc_helperscodegenr
also provides some more home backed helpers : https://docs.rs/codegenr/latest/codegenr/helpers/index.html- Finally
you
can add your own helpers using the rhai embedded scripting language- any
__myhelper__.rhai
file in the custom_helpers folder will be available as amyhelper
handlebars inline helper, usable from the .hbs templates.
- any
Here is a simple example and what it is used for:
This yaml fragment is the definition of a response in your file.yaml
, you can see that we defined for the userCount
property the type and the format.
This property is also marked as required
in the required array.
DisplayUserCount:
description: Display the number of user
type: object
required:
- userCount
properties:
userCount:
type: integer
format: uint64
Now imagine you want to generate some dart client
for this api, you now have to convert this property type to a type in Dart
.
In this case, we can use the rhai file to perform this complex mapping : dart_type_convert.rhai
It will define a helper with 3 parameters :
type
: we'll provide the type value ("integer"
here)format
: we'll provide the format value ("uint64"
here)optional
: we'll need to use theis_oapi3_property_required
codegenr helper and negate it withnot
to passtrue
is the parameter is not found in therequired
array.
will output
int
Thanks to this custom rhai
helper :
// dart_type_convert.rhai
let type = params[0];
let format = params[1];
let optional = if params.len() > 2 { params[2] } else { false };
// For more information about the data types, check the swagger doc
// https://swagger.io/docs/specification/data-models/data-types/
let type_name = switch [type, format] {
["string", ""] => "String",
["integer", "uint32"] => "int",
["integer", "uint64"] => "int",
["number", "float"] => "double",
["number", "double"] => "double",
_ => {
throw `UNKNOWN TYPE ${type} - ${format}`;
()
}
};
if optional {
`${type_name}?`
}else{
type_name
}
The process
step is where the render
output is took from memory to files or console ...
Files will written by following the instructions defined in handlebars template between ### FILE
and ### /FILE
.
Some very simple example here :
# source.yaml
fileName: test
shell output
World !
text.txt
Hello
You can also open the repository in GitPod with this button
In the command line you can :
cargo test
to launch all the unit testscargo doc --open
to compile and open the local documentation
cargo doc --open
compile and open the documentationcargo install --path codegenr
installs codegenr command line from sourcescargo install --git https://github.com/eventuallyconsultant/codegenr --branch dev
installs codegenr command line from the latest githubdev
branch
This tool is based on the design of a precedent one written in C#
: CodegenUP.
-
Load a yaml or json to serde::json
-
Resolve
$ref
tags -
Pass all the resulting document to an handlebar template
-
Implement some default helper (and make some doc tests about them)
-
A plugin system
-
Migrate C# custom helpers to this new plugin system
-
A this point, we could use
codegenr
in place ofCodegenUP
, just by calling some commands -
Rename
codegenr-cli
tocodegenr
&codegenr
tocodegenr-lib
-
Publish on
crates.io
-
Be able to have a
codegenr.toml
on a workspace root to describe all the templates to execute around the workspace -
Better Errors (typed ones)
-
Resolved Json Cache optimisation
-
all tests passing on windows too
-
Verbose/Tracing? mode
-
Be able to output some flowchart (mermaid?) of the codegenr section (source.yaml + templates + helpers => files in folders)
-
Be able to relate all sections in the same flowchart ... some target files can be source for other steps !!
-
Better examples
-
Smol strings optimisation ?
-
Watch mode for the file changes
-
Make a VSCode extension about all of this to make it live / super user friendly for
everyone
-
Allow multiple swagger2 documents merging
-
Allow multiple swagger3 documents merging
-
Transform the json to an OpenApi Generator model, and be able to use all the
OpenApi Generator
templates ?