The JSON discoverer is a tool that allows you to get the implicit schema of your JSON documents. The tool also supports the discovery of composition links among the elements of the schemas of several APIs.
These are currently the main functionalities provided:
Simple discovery, which discovers the schema of a given set of JSON documents returned by a single service.
Advanced discovery, which discovers the schema from a set of JSON-based services. First, the schema of each JSON-based service is discovered (by using the simple discoverer), then the resulting schemas are composed to obtain a general one.
API Composer, which takes a set of API schemas, looks for composition links (i.e., common concepts or attributes) and generates a composition graph. The result is used to help developers to compose APIs. The tool currently incoporates a sequence diagram generator to visualize API compositions.
Our tool draws schema information as UML class diagrams, including concepts (i.e., classes) and their properties (i.e., attributes and associations linking the different concepts). Potential API compositions are represented by means of UML sequence diagrams showing the possible sequence of API calls.
This video summarizes the main features of the tool:
So far, these are the projects (all of them developed as Eclipse plugins):
jsonDiscoverer. Includes the core implementation of the discoverers to get schemas (and data models) out of JSON documents. Schemas are represented as Ecore files while data models are XMI files conforming to the Ecore ones. This therefore means that the tool depends on Eclipse Modeling Framework.
jsonDiscoverer.coverage. EMF-generated Java Code from an Ecore model to represent coverage models. Coverage models are used to specify which parts in a global Ecore model are covered by smaller Ecore models.
jsonDiscoverer.docs. The javadoc documentation generated out of the classes of the other projects. Also available here.
jsonDiscoverer.web. Web project including (1) an angularJS-based client-side application and (2) a servlet-based server-side application to provide access to the discoverers. Servlets are basically the facade to the discoverers implemented in the jsonDiscoverer project.
jsonDiscoverer.tests. Includes some JUnit-based classes to test the discoverers.
jsonDiscoverer.examples. Includes some code examples to launch the discoverers from Java. The project also includes some generation examples for the discoverers (see folder exampleData in the project).
jsonDiscoverer.zoo. Some JSON documents collected from several Web APIs to test the discoverers. The project depends on EMF2GV.
Additionally, the projects use the GSON library to parse JSON documents.
Documentation
You can find further details about how the tool works in the Inner Workings section of the webpage.
Accesing the tool website. The easiest way to use our tool is to access to the webpage of the project. Once in the landing page you can use the menus on the top bar to access to the different functionalities.
In Java. We recommend you to download all the Eclipse projects included in this GitHub project and import them in your Eclipse instalation. The project dependencies require your Eclipse to include: EMF and EMF2GV
You can directly use the Java implementation of the discoverers provided in the jsonDiscoverer and jsonDiscoverer.coverage projects. You will also find the corresponding jar files in the root of these projects (you need both jars if you want to integrate our tool in your projects). You can build the jars by using the Ant build file located at the root of the projects. The build.xml file defines a default target that will build the JAR file automatically.
We also recomment you to have a look at the project jsonDiscoverer.examples, where you will find some Java examples to use the discoverers and the toolset.
As Web application. The web application can be deployed as a WAR container file in your Tomcat (currently tested in Tomcat 7). We provide two ways in this option: (1) using a pre-compiled WAR or (2) create your own WAR file.
The pre-compiled version of the WAR has to be configured as follows.
Download the jsonDiscoverer.web project
Locate the file jsonDiscoverer.war on the root of the project
Open the file with any container manager (e.g., WinRAR, WinZIP, etc...)
Go to WebContent/WEB-INFfolder and edit the file config.properties. Each line in this file has been commented to help you configure the tool. Please, pay special attention to those variables regarding configuration folders (e.g., workingDir) and the path to the DOT executable (e.g., dotExePath), which is required to generate the pictures.
Close the WAR file in your container manager
Deploy the file in your Tomcat.
If this option does not work, follow the indications provided below to build your own WAR.
Download the jsonDiscoverer.web project
Go to WebContent/WEB-INFfolder
Open and configure the config.properties.server file. Each line in this file has been commented to help you configure the tool. Please, pay special attention to those variables regarding configuration folders (e.g., workingDir) and the path to the DOT executable (e.g., dotExePath), which is required to generate the pictures.
Once you have edited the configuration, you can build the WAR by using the Ant build file located at the root of the project. The build.xml file defines a default target that will build the WAR file automatically
Take the generated WAR and copy to the webapps folder of your Tomcat instalation.
Can I collaborate?
Absolutely!. You can follow the typical GitHub contribution flow to ask/contribute:
For bugs or feature requests you can directly create an issue.
For implementing new features or directly address any issue, please fork the project, perform the patch and send us a pull request.
Whatever your contribution is, you will have an answer from us in less than 7 days.
You can find our (simple) governance rules in this file.
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