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Ruby HTTP client generator for APIs represented with JSON schema.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'heroics'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install heroics
Usage
Configuration File
If you don't want to pass config to the CLI, you can provide a Ruby config file to the heroics-generate script as a single parameter.
The form of this configuration file is shown below.
require'heroics'Heroics.default_configurationdo |config|
config.base_url='https://example.com'config.module_name='ExampleClient'config.schema_filepath='schema.json'config.headers={'Accept'=>'application/vnd.example+json; version=1'}# Note: Don't use doublequotes below -- we want to interpolate at runtime,# not when the client is generatedconfig.cache_path='#{Dir.home}/.heroics/example'end
Optional configuration
base_url, module_name, and schema_filepath are required for a proper configuration.
The following keys are optional:
headers
cache_path
ruby_name_replacements a hash of replacement patterns for converting endpoint paths to Ruby method names, such as:
{ /[\s-]+/ => '_' }
For further details on config file usage, see the example/ directory in this repo.
Generating a client
Heroics generates an HTTP client from a JSON schema that describes your API.
Look at prmd for tooling to help write a
JSON schema. When you have a JSON schema prepared you can generate a client
for your API:
Pass multiple -H options if you need more than one custom header.
Client-side caching
The generated client sends and caches ETags received from the server. By
default, this data is cached in memory and is only used during the lifetime of
a single instance. You can specify a directory for cache data:
~ will automatically be expanded to the user's home directory. Be sure to
wrap such paths in quotes to avoid the shell expanding it to the directory you
built the client in.
Generating API documentation
The generated client has Yard-compatible docstrings.
You can generate documentation using yardoc:
yard doc -m markdown client.rb
This will generate HTML in the docs directory. Note that Yard creates an
_index.html page won't be served by Jekyll on GitHub Pages. Add a
.nojekyll file to your project to prevent GitHub from passing the content
through Jekyll.
Handling failures
The client uses Excon under the hood and
raises Excon errors when failures occur.