aicra/doc
Adrien Marquès be1ceb07a2 merge 2018-10-03 18:39:47 +02:00
..
README.md merge 2018-10-03 18:39:47 +02:00

README.md

module: api
version: 1.2

For developers

I. Overview

II. Usage

III. Configuration

IV. Implementation

V. Type Checker

VI. Documentation

For clients

I. Simple request

II. Usage

I. Overview

1 Introduction & features

The api package (v1.2) allows you to easily create and manage a REST API for your applications.

The aim of this package is to make your life easier working with APIs and internal delegation. The only things you have to do is to implement your controllers, middle-wares and write 2 configuration files, the package will do the rest.

Things you have to do :

  • write the project configuration file (cf. project configuration)
  • write the API definition file (cf. api definition)
  • implement your middle-wares to manage authentication, csrf, etc (cf. AuthSystem)
  • implement your controllers (cf. ???)
  • implement additional project-specific type checkers (cf. ???)

Things you don't have to do :

  • check the input variables (cf. Checker)
  • multiple permission management
  • optional or required input
  • Form data type : x-www-urlencoded, multipart, or file upload
  • URL variables (slash separated at the end of the route, like standard uri)
  • and a lot more ...

2 Basic knowledge

The API uses the routes defined in the api.json configuration to export your code (in compiled go or other language). Middle-wares are executed when receiving a new request, then the controllers will be loaded according to the URI.

Example:

  • the module article contains methods:
    • GET to get article data
    • POST to post a new article
    • PUT to edit an existing article
    • DELETE to delete an exisint article

Note that these are all the available methods handled by aicra

III. Project Configuration

The documentation consists of directions for how to compile and run the project controllers, middle-wares and type checkers.

1 - configuration format

{
	"root": "<project-root>",
    "driver": "<driver>",
    "types": {
        "default": true,
		"folder": "<custom-types-folder>"
    },
    "controllers": {
        "folder": "<controllers-folder"
    },
    "middlewares": {
        "folder": "<middlewares-folder"
    }
}

Note: The following fields are optional :

  • types.default is by default "types"

III. API Definition

The documentation consists of a list of URIs each one can contain several HTTP method specifications.

1 - configuration format

The configuration is a set of uri paths that can contain up to 4 method types: POST, DELETE, PUT, GET or the / field to define sub URIs (recursive).

For instance the 4 methods directly inside /.uri1 will be triggered when the calling URI is /uri1, the ones directly inside uri2 will be triggered when calling /uri1/uri2 and so on..

You can also set full paths if you don't need transitional methods, for instance the path /.uri5./.uri6./.uri7 will be triggered by the url /uri5/uri6/uri7.

Example: The example file loaded with the default configuration can be found here.

{

	"/": {
        "uri1" : {
            "GET":    method.definition,
            "POST":   method.definition,
            "PUT":    method.definition,
            "DELETE": method.definition,

            "/": {
                "uri2": {
                    "GET":    method.definition,
                    "POST":   method.definition,
                    "PUT":    method.definition,
                    "DELETE": method.definition
                }
            }
        },
        "uri5":
        	"/": {
        		"uri6": {
        			"/": {
        				"uri7": {
                            "GET":    method.definition,
                            "POST":   method.definition,
                            "PUT":    method.definition,
                            "DELETE": method.definition
    					}
					}
				}
			}
		}
	}
}

Note: It is possible to trigger the root uri (/), so you can set methods directly at the root of the JSON file.

2 - method.definition

{
	"info":  method.description,
	"scope": method.permissions,
	"in":    method.parameters,
	"out":  method.output_format
}

2.1 - method.description

The description field must be a string containing the human-readable description of what the method does.

2.2 - method.permissions

The permissions field must be an array. You can manage OR and AND permission combinations.

  • OR is applied between each 0-depth array
  • AND is applied between each 1-depth array

For instance the following permission [ [a,b], [c] ] means you need the permissions a and b combined or only the permission c.

2.3 - method.parameters

The parameters field must be an object containing each required or optional parameter needed for the implementation.

"parameter.name": {
	"info":    parameter.description,
	"type":    parameter.checker_type,
	"name":    parameter.rename,
	"default": parameter.default_value,
}

parameter.name

The name field must be a string containing variable name that will be asked for the caller.

Note that you can set any string for body parameters, but you can also catch :

  • URI parameters by prefixing your variable name with URL# and followed by a number which is the index in the URL (starts with 0). For instance the first URI parameter received from /path/to/controller/some_value has to be named URL#0 inside this configuration. It is a good practice to rename these parameters for better access in your code.

  • GET parameters by prefixing your variable name with GET@. For instance the get parameter somevar received from /host/uri?somevar=some_value has to be named GET@somevar inside this configuration.

parameter.description

The description field must be a string containing the human-readable description of what the parameter is or must be.

parameter.checker_type

The checker_type field must be a string corresponding to a \api\core\Checker type that will be checked before calling the implementation.

parameter.is_optional

If the parameter is optional and can be ignored by clients, you must prefix parameter.checker_type with a question mark. For instance a number variable will have a type of number, if the variable is optional, the type will then be ?number.

Note : it is recommended to add a default value for optional parameters.

parameter.rename

The name field must be a string corresponding to the wanted variable name that will be passed to the controller. It is mainly useful for URI parameters because their name is not explicit at all.

If omitted, by default, parameter.name will be used.

parameter.default_value

The default_value field must be of compliant to the variable type checker, it will be used only for optional parameters when omitted by the client.

By default, each optional parameter will exist and will be set to null to the implementation.

2.4 - method.output_format

The output_format field must have the same format as method.parameters but will only be used to generate a documentation or to tell other developers what the method returns if no error occurs. It allows better overview of an API without looking at the code.

IV. Implementation

1 - middle-wares

Each middle-ware must implement the driver.Middleware interface.

The Inspect(http.Request, *[]string) method gives you the actual http request. And you must edit the string list to add scope elements. After all middle-wares are executed, the final scope is used to check the method.permission field to decide whether the controller can be accessed.

example

For instance here, we check if a token is sent inside the Authorization HTTP header. The token if valid defines scope permissions.

package main

import (
	"git.xdrm.io/aicra/driver"
    "net/http"
)

// for the API code to export our middle-ware
func Export() driver.Middleware { return new(TokenManager) }

// mockup type to implement the driver.Middleware interface
type TokenManager interface{}

func (tm TokenManager) Inspect(req http.Request, scope *[]string) {
    token := req.Header.Get("Authorization")
    if !isTokenValid(token) {
        return
    }

    scope = append(scope, getTokenPermissions(token)...)
}

Note: Functions isTokenValid() and getTokenPermissions() do not exist, it was in order for all to understand the example.

2 - controller

Each controller must implement the driver.Controller interface.

The Get(response.Arguments) response.Response method defines the controller implementation for the GET method. Other methods are Post, Put, and Delete. Each controller will be given the arguments according to the api definition.

example

For instance here, we implement a simple user controller.

package main

import (
	"git.xdrm.io/aicra/driver"
	"git.xdrm.io/aicra/response"
	"git.xdrm.io/aicra/err"
)

// for the API code to export our middle-ware
func Export() driver.Controller { return new(UserController) }

// mockup type to implement the driver.Controller interface
type UserController interface{}

func (ctl UserController) Get(args response.Arguments) response.Response {
    res := response.New()

    // extract user ID argument
    user_id, ok := args["user_id"].(float64)
    if !ok {
        res.Err = e.Failure
        return *res
    }

    // fetch user data
    res.Set("user", getUserData(user_id))
    return res
}

func (ctl UserController) Post(args response.Arguments) response.Response {
    res := response.New()

    // extract user ID argument
    username, ok := args["username"].(string)
    password, ok1 := args["password"].(string)

    if !ok || !ok1 {
        res.Err = e.Failure
        return *res
    }

    // store user data
    res.Set("created", storeUser(username, password))
    return res
}

Note: Functions getUserData(int) map[string]string and storeUser(string,string) bool do not exist, it was in order for all to understand the example.

V. Type Checker

Each type checker checks http request extracted values according to the type given in the api definition.

The default types below are available in the $GOPATH/src/git.xdrm.io/go/aicra/internal/checker/default, they are loaded by default in any project. You can choose not to load them by settings types.default to false in the project configuration. To add custom types you must implement the driver.Checker interface and export it in order for aicra to dynamically load it.

1 - Default types

Warning : All received values are extracted using JSON format if possible, else values are considered raw strings.

  • 2, -3.2 are extracted as floats
  • true and false are stored as booleans
  • null is stored as null
  • [x, y, z] is stored as an array containing x, y, and z that can be themselves JSON-decoded if possible.
  • { "a": x } is stored as a map containing x at the key "a", x can be itself JSON-decoded if possible.
  • "some string" is stored as a string
  • some string here, the decoding will fail (it is no valid JSON) so it will be stored as a string
Type Example Description
any [9,"a"], "a" Any data (can be simple or complex)
id 10, 23 Positive integer number
int -10, 23 Any integer number
float -10.2, 23.5 Any float
string "Hello!" String that can be of any length (even empty)
digest(L) "4612473aa81f93a878..." String with a length of L, containing only hexadecimal lowercase characters.
array [], [1, "a"] Any array
bool true, false Boolean
varchar(a,b) "Hello!" String with a length between a and b (included)

2 - Complex types

Type Sub-Type Description
array<a> a Array containing only entries matching the type a
FILE _a raw file send in multipart/form-data A raw file sent by multipart/form-data

Note: It is possible to chain array type as many as needed.

Ex.: array<array<id>> - Will only match an array containing arrays that only contains id entries.

VI. Documentation

With the all-in-config method, we can generate a consistent documentation or other documents from the /config/modules.json file.

1 - API accessible documentation

You can request the API for information about the current URI by using the OPTIONS HTTP method.

====

I. Simple request

1 - URL

format

The uri format is as defined: {base}/{path}/{GET_parameters}, where

  • {base} is the server's API base uri (ex: https://example.com/api/v1 or https://api.exampl.com)
  • {path} is the effective path you want to access (ex: article/author)
  • {GET_parameters} is a set of slash-separated values (ex: val0/val1/val2//val4)

Note: GET parameters are not used as usual (?var1=val1&var2=val2...), instead the position in the URL gives them an implicit name which is URL#, where # is the index in the uri (beginning with 0).

example 1

If you want to edit an article with the server's REST API, it could be defined as following:

http: PUT
path: article/{id_article}
input:
  body: new content of the article
output:
  updated: the updated article data

Let's take the example where you want to update the article which id is 23 and set its body to "blabla new content"

HTTP REQUEST

PUT article/23 HTTP/1.0

body=blabla+new+content

HTTP RESPONSE

HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
	"error": 0,
	"ErrorDescription": "all right",

	"updated": {
		"id_article": 23,
		"title": "article 23",
		"body":  "blabla new content"
	}

}

example 2

If you want to get a specific article line, the request could be defined as following

http: GET
path: article/line/{id_article}/{no_line}
input: -
output:
  articles: the list of matching lines

Let's take the example where you want to get all articles because id_article is set to optional, but you only want the first line of each so you have to give only the second parameter set to 1 (first line).

Solution: The position in the uri where id_article must be, have to be left empty: it will result of 2 slashes (//).

HTTP REQUEST

GET article/line//1 HTTP/1.0

HTTP RESPONSE

HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
	"error": 0,
	"ErrorDescription": "all right",

	"articles": [
		{
			"id_article": 23,
			"line": [ 0: "blabla new content"
		},{
			"id_article": 25,
			"line": [ 0: "some article"
		}
	]

}