This is the Swagger Parser project, which parses OpenAPI definitions in JSON or YAML format into swagger-core representation as Java POJO, returning any validation warnings/errors.
It also provides a simple framework to add additional converters from different formats into the Swagger objects, making the entire toolchain available.
Usage
Using the Swagger Parser is simple. Once included in your project, you can read a OpenAPI Specification from any location:
importio.swagger.parser.OpenAPIParser;
importio.swagger.v3.parser.OpenAPIV3Parser;
importio.swagger.v3.parser.core.models.SwaggerParseResult;
importio.swagger.v3.oas.models.OpenAPI;
// ... your code// parse a swagger description from the petstore and get the resultSwaggerParseResultresult = newOpenAPIParser().readLocation("https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3/openapi.json", null, null);
// or from a file// SwaggerParseResult result = new OpenAPIParser().readLocation("./path/to/openapi.yaml", null, null);// the parsed POJOOpenAPIopenAPI = result.getOpenAPI();
if (result.getMessages() != null) result.getMessages().forEach(System.err::println); // validation errors and warningsif (openAPI != null) {
...
}
or from a string:
importio.swagger.parser.OpenAPIParser;
importio.swagger.v3.parser.OpenAPIV3Parser;
importio.swagger.v3.parser.core.models.SwaggerParseResult;
importio.swagger.v3.oas.models.OpenAPI;
// ... your code// parse a swagger description from the petstore and get the resultSwaggerParseResultresult = newOpenAPIParser().readContents("https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3/openapi.json", null, null);
// or from a file// SwaggerParseResult result = new OpenAPIParser().readContents("./path/to/openapi.yaml", null, null);// the parsed POJOOpenAPIopenAPI = result.getOpenAPI();
if (result.getMessages() != null) result.getMessages().forEach(System.err::println); // validation errors and warningsif (openAPI != null) {
...
}
If you are providing a Swagger/OpenAPI 2.0 document to the parser , e.g.:
the Swagger/OpenAPI 2.0 document will be first converted into a comparable OpenAPI 3.0 one.
You can also directly use OpenAPIV3Parser which only handles OpenAPI 3.0 documents, and provides a convenience method to get directly the parsed `OpenAPI object:
importio.swagger.v3.parser.OpenAPIV3Parser;
importio.swagger.v3.oas.models.OpenAPI;
// ... your code// read a swagger description from the petstoreOpenAPIopenAPI = newOpenAPIV3Parser().read("https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3/openapi.json");
Adding to your project
You can include this library from Sonatype OSS for SNAPSHOTS, or Maven central for releases. In your dependencies:
After cloning the project, you can build it from source with this command:
mvn package
Authentication
If your OpenAPI definition is protected, you can pass headers in the request:
importio.swagger.v3.parser.core.models.AuthorizationValue;
// ... your code// build a authorization valueAuthorizationValuemySpecialHeader = newAuthorizationValue()
.keyName("x-special-access") // the name of the authorization to pass
.value("i-am-special") // the value of the authorization
.type("header"); // the location, as either `header` or `query`// or in a single constructorAuthorizationValueapiKey = newAuthorizationValue("api_key", "special-key", "header");
OpenAPIopenAPI = newOpenAPIV3Parser().readWithInfo(
"https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3/openapi.json",
Arrays.asList(mySpecialHeader, apiKey)
);
Dealing with self-signed SSL certificates
If you're dealing with self-signed SSL certificates, or those signed by GoDaddy, you'll need to disable SSL Trust
Manager. That's done by setting a system environment variable as such:
export TRUST_ALL=true
And then the Swagger Parser will ignore invalid certificates. Of course this is generally a bad idea, but if you're
working inside a firewall or really know what you're doing, well, there's your rope.
Dealing with Let's Encrypt
Depending on the version of Java that you use, certificates signed by the Let's Encrypt certificate authority may not work by default. If you are using any version of Java prior to 1.8u101, you most likely must install an additional CA in your
JVM. Also note that 1.8u101 may not be sufficient on it's own. Some users have reported that certain operating systems are
not accepting Let's Encrypt signed certificates.
Your options include:
Accepting all certificates per above
Installing the certificate manually in your JVM using the keystore using the keytool command
Configuring the JVM on startup to load your certificate
But... this is all standard SSL configuration stuff and is well documented across the web.
Options
Parser uses options as a way to customize the behavior while parsing:
In some scenarios, after references are resolved (with resolve, see above), you might need to have all local references removed replacing the reference with the content of the referenced element. This is for example used in Swagger Inflector. Be aware that the result could be more heavy/long due to duplication
Original document:
a.yaml
openapi: 3.0.1
paths:
"/newPerson":
post:
summary: Create new person
description: Create new person
responses:
'200':
description: ok
content:
"*/*":
schema:
"$ref": "./ref-without-component/b.yaml#/components/schemas/CustomerType"
b.yaml
openapi: 3.0.1
components:
schemas:
CustomerType:
type: string
example: Example value
Serialized result after parsing with option resolveFully(true)
a.yaml
openapi: 3.0.1
servers:
- url: /
paths:
/newPerson:
post:
summary: Create new person
description: Create new person
responses:
200:
description: ok
content:
'*/*':
schema:
type: string
example: Example value
components:
schemas:
CustomerType:
type: string
example: Example value
This is kind of the opposite of resolveFully, limited to defined schemas.
In some scenarios, you might need to have all schemas defined inline (e.g. a response schema) moved to the components/schemas section and replaced with a reference to the newly added schema within components/schemas. This is for example used in Swagger Codegen.
Original document:
flatten.yaml
openapi: 3.0.0
info:
version: 1.0.0
title: Swagger Petstore
license:
name: MIT
paths:
/pets:
get:
summary: List all pets
operationId: listPets
responses:
'200':
description: An paged array of pets
headers:
x-next:
description: A link to the next page of responses
schema:
type: string
content:
application/json:
schema:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: integer
format: int64
name:
type: string
tag:
type: string
Serialized result after parsing with option flatten(true)
openapi: 3.0.0
info:
title: Swagger Petstore
license:
name: MIT
version: 1.0.0
servers:
- url: /
paths:
/pets:
get:
tags:
- pets
summary: List all pets
responses:
200:
description: An paged array of pets
headers:
x-next:
description: A link to the next page of responses
style: simple
explode: false
schema:
type: string
content:
application/json:
schema:
$ref: '#/components/schemas/inline_response_200'
components:
schemas:
inline_response_200:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: integer
format: int64
name:
type: string
tag:
type: string
This option (only available with resolveFully = true) allows to customize behaviour related to allOf/anyOf/oneOf (composed schemas) processing. With option set to true (default), composed schemas are transformed into "non composed" ones, by having all properties merged into a single resulting schema (see example below).
If option is set to false, the resulting schema will instead maintain its "composed" nature, keeping properties within e.g. the allOf members.
openapi: 3.0.1
info:
title: testing source file
description: This is a sample server Petstore
termsOfService: http://swagger.io/terms/
version: 1.0.0
servers:
- url: http://petstore.swagger.io/api
paths:
/withInvalidComposedModel:
post:
operationId: withInvalidComposedModel
requestBody:
content:
application/json:
schema:
required:
- gps
- street
type: object
properties:
street:
type: string
example: 12345 El Monte Road
city:
type: string
example: Los Altos Hills
state:
type: string
example: CA
zip:
type: string
example: "94022"
gps:
type: string
required: false
responses:
200:
description: success!
components:
schemas:
ExtendedAddress:
type: object
allOf:
- $ref: '#/components/schemas/Address'
- required:
- gps
type: object
properties:
gps:
type: string
Address:
required:
- street
type: object
properties:
street:
type: string
example: 12345 El Monte Road
city:
type: string
example: Los Altos Hills
state:
type: string
example: CA
zip:
type: string
example: "94022"
resolvedCombinator = false - Test case
@Test
public void resolveAllOfWithoutAggregatingParameters(@Injectable final List<AuthorizationValue> auths) {
ParseOptions options = new ParseOptions();
options.setResolveFully(true);
options.setResolveCombinators(false);
// Testing components/schemas
OpenAPI openAPI = new OpenAPIV3Parser().readLocation("src/test/resources/composed.yaml",auths,options).getOpenAPI();
ComposedSchema allOf = (ComposedSchema) openAPI.getComponents().getSchemas().get("ExtendedAddress");
assertEquals(allOf.getAllOf().size(), 2);
assertTrue(allOf.getAllOf().get(0).getProperties().containsKey("street"));
assertTrue(allOf.getAllOf().get(1).getProperties().containsKey("gps"));
// Testing path item
ComposedSchema schema = (ComposedSchema) openAPI.getPaths().get("/withInvalidComposedModel").getPost().getRequestBody().getContent().get("application/json").getSchema();
// In fact the schema resolved previously is the same of /withInvalidComposedModel
assertEquals(schema, allOf);
assertEquals(schema.getAllOf().size(), 2);
assertTrue(schema.getAllOf().get(0).getProperties().containsKey("street"));
assertTrue(schema.getAllOf().get(1).getProperties().containsKey("gps"));
}
resolvedCombinator = false - Resolved Yaml
openapi: 3.0.1
info:
title: testing source file
description: This is a sample server Petstore
termsOfService: http://swagger.io/terms/
version: 1.0.0
servers:
- url: http://petstore.swagger.io/api
paths:
/withInvalidComposedModel:
post:
operationId: withInvalidComposedModel
requestBody:
content:
application/json:
schema:
type: object
allOf:
- required:
- street
type: object
properties:
street:
type: string
example: 12345 El Monte Road
city:
type: string
example: Los Altos Hills
state:
type: string
example: CA
zip:
type: string
example: "94022"
- required:
- gps
type: object
properties:
gps:
type: string
required: false
responses:
200:
description: success!
components:
schemas:
ExtendedAddress:
type: object
allOf:
- required:
- street
type: object
properties:
street:
type: string
example: 12345 El Monte Road
city:
type: string
example: Los Altos Hills
state:
type: string
example: CA
zip:
type: string
example: "94022"
- required:
- gps
type: object
properties:
gps:
type: string
Address:
required:
- street
type: object
properties:
street:
type: string
example: 12345 El Monte Road
city:
type: string
example: Los Altos Hills
state:
type: string
example: CA
zip:
type: string
example: "94022"
Extensions
This project has a core artifact--swagger-parser, which uses Java Service Provider Interface (SPI) so additional extensions can be added.
To build your own extension, you simply need to create a src/main/resources/META-INF/services/io.swagger.v3.parser.core.extensions.SwaggerParserExtension file with the full classname of your implementation. Your class must also implement the io.swagger.v3.parser.core.extensions.SwaggerParserExtension interface. Then, including your library with the swagger-parser module will cause it to be triggered automatically.
Security contact
Please disclose any security-related issues or vulnerabilities by emailing [email protected], instead of using the public issue tracker.
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