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author | Andreas Baumann <mail@andreasbaumann.cc> | 2019-11-17 20:45:02 +0100 |
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committer | Andreas Baumann <mail@andreasbaumann.cc> | 2019-11-17 20:45:02 +0100 |
commit | 8df3db566a3a937b45ebf11adb90d265e6f5e2d4 (patch) | |
tree | 4d541098d751d5a9acf8c12f6fb9f308ace066ac /vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/guzzle-service-descriptions.rst | |
download | flyspray-8df3db566a3a937b45ebf11adb90d265e6f5e2d4.tar.xz |
initial checking of customized version 1.0rc9
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diff --git a/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/guzzle-service-descriptions.rst b/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/guzzle-service-descriptions.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad6070b --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/guzzle-service-descriptions.rst @@ -0,0 +1,619 @@ +=========================== +Guzzle service descriptions +=========================== + +Guzzle allows you to serialize HTTP requests and parse HTTP responses using a DSL called a service descriptions. +Service descriptions define web service APIs by documenting each operation, the operation's parameters, validation +options for each parameter, an operation's response, how the response is parsed, and any errors that can be raised for +an operation. Writing a service description for a web service allows you to more quickly consume a web service than +writing concrete commands for each web service operation. + +Guzzle service descriptions can be representing using a PHP array or JSON document. Guzzle's service descriptions are +heavily inspired by `Swagger <http://swagger.wordnik.com/>`_. + +Service description schema +========================== + +A Guzzle Service description must match the following JSON schema document. This document can also serve as a guide when +implementing a Guzzle service description. + +Download the schema here: :download:`Guzzle JSON schema document </_downloads/guzzle-schema-1.0.json>` + +.. class:: overflow-height-500px + + .. literalinclude:: ../_downloads/guzzle-schema-1.0.json + :language: json + +Top-level attributes +-------------------- + +Service descriptions are comprised of the following top-level attributes: + +.. code-block:: json + + { + "name": "string", + "apiVersion": "string|number", + "baseUrl": "string", + "description": "string", + "operations": {}, + "models": {}, + "includes": ["string.php", "string.json"] + } + ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Property Name | Value | Description | ++=========================================+=========================+=======================================================================================================================+ +| name | string | Name of the web service | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| apiVersion | string|number | Version identifier that the service description is compatible with | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| baseUrl or basePath | string | Base URL of the web service. Any relative URI specified in an operation will be merged with the baseUrl using the | +| | | process defined in RFC 2396. Some clients require custom logic to determine the baseUrl. In those cases, it is best | +| | | to not include a baseUrl in the service description, but rather allow the factory method of the client to configure | +| | | the client’s baseUrl. | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| description | string | Short summary of the web service | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| operations | object containing | Operations of the service. The key is the name of the operation and value is the attributes of the operation. | +| | :ref:`operation-schema` | | +| | | | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| models | object containing | Schema models that can be referenced throughout the service description. Models can be used to define how an HTTP | +| | :ref:`model-schema` | response is parsed into a ``Guzzle\Service\Resource\Model`` object when an operation uses a ``model`` ``responseType``| ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| includes | array of .js, | Service description files to include and extend from (can be a .json, .js, or .php file) | +| | .json, or .php | | +| | files. | | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| (any additional properties) | mixed | Any additional properties specified as top-level attributes are allowed and will be treated as arbitrary data | ++-----------------------------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +.. _operation-schema: + +Operations +---------- + +Operations are the actions that can be taken on a service. Each operation is given a unique name and has a distinct +endpoint and HTTP method. If an API has a ``DELETE /users/:id`` operation, a satisfactory operation name might be +``DeleteUser`` with a parameter of ``id`` that is inserted into the URI. + +.. class:: overflow-height-250px + + .. code-block:: json + + { + "operations": { + "operationName": { + "extends": "string", + "httpMethod": "GET|POST|PUT|DELETE|PATCH|string", + "uri": "string", + "summary": "string", + "class": "string", + "responseClass": "string", + "responseNotes": "string", + "type": "string", + "description": "string", + "responseType": "primitive|class|(model by name)|documentation|(string)", + "deprecated": false, + "errorResponses": [ + { + "code": 500, + "reason": "Unexpected Error", + "class": "string" + } + ], + "data": { + "foo": "bar", + "baz": "bam" + }, + "parameters": {} + } + } + } + +.. csv-table:: + :header: "Property Name", "Value", "Description" + :widths: 20, 15, 65 + + "extends", "string", "Extend from another operation by name. The parent operation must be defined before the child." + "httpMethod", "string", "HTTP method used with the operation (e.g. GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, PATCH, etc)" + "uri", "string", "URI of the operation. The uri attribute can contain URI templates. The variables of the URI template are parameters of the operation with a location value of uri" + "summary", "string", "Short summary of what the operation does" + "class", "string", "Custom class to instantiate instead of the default Guzzle\\Service\\Command\\OperationCommand. Using this attribute allows you to define an operation using a service description, but allows more customized logic to be implemented in user-land code." + "responseClass", "string", "Defined what is returned from the method. Can be a primitive, class name, or model name. You can specify the name of a class to return a more customized result from the operation (for example, a domain model object). When using the name of a PHP class, the class must implement ``Guzzle\Service\Command\ResponseClassInterface``." + "responseNotes", "string", "A description of the response returned by the operation" + "responseType", "string", "The type of response that the operation creates: one of primitive, class, model, or documentation. If not specified, this value will be automatically inferred based on whether or not there is a model matching the name, if a matching class name is found, or set to 'primitive' by default." + "deprecated", "boolean", "Whether or not the operation is deprecated" + "errorResponses", "array", "Errors that could occur while executing the operation. Each item of the array is an object that can contain a 'code' (HTTP response status code of the error), 'reason' (reason phrase or description of the error), and 'class' (an exception class that will be raised when this error is encountered)" + "data", "object", "Any arbitrary data to associate with the operation" + "parameters", "object containing :ref:`parameter-schema` objects", "Parameters of the operation. Parameters are used to define how input data is serialized into a HTTP request." + "additionalParameters", "A single :ref:`parameter-schema` object", "Validation and serialization rules for any parameter supplied to the operation that was not explicitly defined." + +additionalParameters +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +When a webservice offers a large number of parameters that all are set in the same location (for example the query +string or a JSON document), defining each parameter individually can require a lot of time and repetition. Furthermore, +some web services allow for completely arbitrary parameters to be supplied for an operation. The +``additionalParameters`` attribute can be used to solve both of these issues. + +As an example, we can define a Twitter API operation quite easily using ``additionalParameters``. The +GetMentions operation accepts a large number of query string parameters. Defining each of these parameters +is ideal because it provide much more introspection for the client and opens the possibility to use the description with +other tools (e.g. a documentation generator). However, you can very quickly provide a "catch-all" serialization rule +that will place any custom parameters supplied to an operation the generated request's query string parameters. + +.. class:: overflow-height-250px + + .. code-block:: json + + { + "name": "Twitter", + "apiVersion": "1.1", + "baseUrl": "https://api.twitter.com/1.1", + "operations": { + "GetMentions": { + "httpMethod": "GET", + "uri": "statuses/mentions_timeline.json", + "responseClass": "GetMentionsOutput", + "additionalParameters": { + "location": "query" + } + } + }, + "models": { + "GetMentionsOutput": { + "type": "object", + "additionalProperties": { + "location": "json" + } + } + } + } + +responseClass +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``responseClass`` attribute is used to define the return value of an operation (what is returned by calling the +``getResult()`` method of a command object). The value set in the responseClass attribute can be one of "primitive" +(meaning the result with be primitive type like a string), a class name meaning the result will be an instance of a +specific user-land class, or a model name meaning the result will be a ``Guzzle\Service\Resource\Model`` object that +uses a :ref:`model schema <model-schema>` to define how the HTTP response is parsed. + +.. note:: + + Using a class name with a ``responseClass`` will only work if it is supported by the ``class`` that is instantiated + for the operation. Keep this in mind when specifying a custom ``class`` attribute that points to a custom + ``Guzzle\Service\Command\CommandInterface`` class. The default ``class``, + ``Guzzle\Service\Command\OperationCommand``, does support setting custom ``class`` attributes. + +You can specify the name of a class to return a more customized result from the operation (for example, a domain model +object). When using the name of a PHP class, the class must implement ``Guzzle\Service\Command\ResponseClassInterface``. +Here's a very simple example of implementing a custom responseClass object. + +.. code-block:: json + + { + "operations": { + "test": { + "responseClass": "MyApplication\\User" + } + } + } + +.. code-block:: php + + namespace MyApplication; + + use Guzzle\Service\Command\ResponseClassInterface; + use Guzzle\Service\Command\OperationCommand; + + class User implements ResponseClassInterface + { + protected $name; + + public static function fromCommand(OperationCommand $command) + { + $response = $command->getResponse(); + $xml = $response->xml(); + + return new self((string) $xml->name); + } + + public function __construct($name) + { + $this->name = $name; + } + } + +errorResponses +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +``errorResponses`` is an array containing objects that define the errors that could occur while executing the +operation. Each item of the array is an object that can contain a 'code' (HTTP response status code of the error), +'reason' (reason phrase or description of the error), and 'class' (an exception class that will be raised when this +error is encountered). + +ErrorResponsePlugin +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Error responses are by default only used for documentation. If you don't need very complex exception logic for your web +service errors, then you can use the ``Guzzle\Plugin\ErrorResponse\ErrorResponsePlugin`` to automatically throw defined +exceptions when one of the ``errorResponse`` rules are matched. The error response plugin will listen for the +``request.complete`` event of a request created by a command object. Every response (including a successful response) is +checked against the list of error responses for an exact match using the following order of checks: + +1. Does the errorResponse have a defined ``class``? +2. Is the errorResponse ``code`` equal to the status code of the response? +3. Is the errorResponse ``reason`` equal to the reason phrase of the response? +4. Throw the exception stored in the ``class`` attribute of the errorResponse. + +The ``class`` attribute must point to a class that implements +``Guzzle\Plugin\ErrorResponse\ErrorResponseExceptionInterface``. This interface requires that an error response class +implements ``public static function fromCommand(CommandInterface $command, Response $response)``. This method must +return an object that extends from ``\Exception``. After an exception is returned, it is thrown by the plugin. + +.. _parameter-schema: + +Parameter schema +---------------- + +Parameters in both operations and models are represented using the +`JSON schema <http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-zyp-json-schema-04.html>`_ syntax. + +.. csv-table:: + :header: "Property Name", "Value", "Description" + :widths: 20, 15, 65 + + "name", "string", "Unique name of the parameter" + "type", "string|array", "Type of variable (string, number, integer, boolean, object, array, numeric, null, any). Types are using for validation and determining the structure of a parameter. You can use a union type by providing an array of simple types. If one of the union types matches the provided value, then the value is valid." + "instanceOf", "string", "When the type is an object, you can specify the class that the object must implement" + "required", "boolean", "Whether or not the parameter is required" + "default", "mixed", "Default value to use if no value is supplied" + "static", "boolean", "Set to true to specify that the parameter value cannot be changed from the default setting" + "description", "string", "Documentation of the parameter" + "location", "string", "The location of a request used to apply a parameter. Custom locations can be registered with a command, but the defaults are uri, query, statusCode, reasonPhrase, header, body, json, xml, postField, postFile, responseBody" + "sentAs", "string", "Specifies how the data being modeled is sent over the wire. For example, you may wish to include certain headers in a response model that have a normalized casing of FooBar, but the actual header is x-foo-bar. In this case, sentAs would be set to x-foo-bar." + "filters", "array", "Array of functions to to run a parameter value through." + +filters +~~~~~~~ + +Each value in the array must be a string containing the full class path to a static method or an array of complex +filter information. You can specify static methods of classes using the full namespace class name followed by +"::" (e.g. ``FooBar::baz()``). Some filters require arguments in order to properly filter a value. For complex filters, +use an object containing a ``method`` attribute pointing to a function, and an ``args`` attribute containing an +array of positional arguments to pass to the function. Arguments can contain keywords that are replaced when filtering +a value: ``@value`` is replaced with the value being filtered, and ``@api`` is replaced with the actual Parameter +object. + +.. code-block:: json + + { + "filters": [ + "strtolower", + { + "method": "MyClass::convertString", + "args": [ "test", "@value", "@api" ] + } + ] + } + +The above example will filter a parameter using ``strtolower``. It will then call the ``convertString`` static method +of ``MyClass``, passing in "test", the actual value of the parameter, and a ``Guzzle\Service\Description\Parameter`` +object. + +Operation parameter location attributes +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The location field of top-level parameters control how a parameter is serialized when generating a request. + +uri location +^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are injected into the ``uri`` attribute of the operation using +`URI-template expansion <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6570>`_. + +.. code-block:: json + + { + "operations": { + "uriTest": { + "uri": "/test/{testValue}", + "parameters": { + "testValue": { + "location": "uri" + } + } + } + } + } + +query location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are injected into the query string of a request. Query values can be nested, which would result in a PHP +style nested query string. The name of a parameter is the default name of the query string parameter added to the +request. You can override this behavior by specifying the ``sentAs`` attribute on the parameter. + +.. code-block:: json + + { + "operations": { + "queryTest": { + "parameters": { + "testValue": { + "location": "query", + "sentAs": "test_value" + } + } + } + } + } + +header location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are injected as headers on an HTTP request. The name of the parameter is used as the name of the header by +default. You can change the name of the header created by the parameter using the ``sentAs`` attribute. + +Headers that are of type ``object`` will be added as multiple headers to a request using the key of the input array as +the header key. Setting a ``sentAs`` attribute along with a type ``object`` will use the value of ``sentAs`` as a +prefix for each header key. + +body location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are injected as the body of a request. The input of these parameters may be anything that can be cast to a +string or a ``Guzzle\Http\EntityBodyInterface`` object. + +postField location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are inserted as POST fields in a request. Nested values may be supplied and will be represented using +PHP style nested query strings. The POST field name is the same as the parameter name by default. You can use the +``sentAs`` parameter to override the POST field name. + +postFile location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are added as POST files. A postFile value may be a string pointing to a local filename or a +``Guzzle\Http\Message\PostFileInterface`` object. The name of the POST file will be the name of the parameter by +default. You can use a custom POST file name by using the ``sentAs`` attribute. + +Supports "string" and "array" types. + +json location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are added to the body of a request as top level keys of a JSON document. Nested values may be specified, +with any number of nested ``Guzzle\Common\ToArrayInterface`` objects. When JSON parameters are specified, the +``Content-Type`` of the request will change to ``application/json`` if a ``Content-Type`` has not already been specified +on the request. + +xml location +^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Parameters are added to the body of a request as top level nodes of an XML document. Nested values may be specified, +with any number of nested ``Guzzle\Common\ToArrayInterface`` objects. When XML parameters are specified, the +``Content-Type`` of the request will change to ``application/xml`` if a ``Content-Type`` has not already been specified +on the request. + +responseBody location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Specifies the EntityBody of a response. This can be used to download the response body to a file or a custom Guzzle +EntityBody object. + +No location +^^^^^^^^^^^ + +If a parameter has no location attribute, then the parameter is simply used as a data value. + +Other locations +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Custom locations can be registered as new locations or override default locations if needed. + +.. _model-schema: + +Model Schema +------------ + +Models are used in service descriptions to provide generic JSON schema definitions that can be extended from or used in +``$ref`` attributes. Models can also be referenced in a ``responseClass`` attribute to provide valuable output to an +operation. Models are JSON schema documents and use the exact syntax and attributes used in parameters. + +Response Models +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Response models describe how a response is parsed into a ``Guzzle\Service\Resource\Model`` object. Response models are +always modeled as JSON schema objects. When an HTTP response is parsed using a response model, the rules specified on +each property of a response model will translate 1:1 as keys in a PHP associative array. When a ``sentAs`` attribute is +found in response model parameters, the value retrieved from the HTTP response is retrieved using the ``sentAs`` +parameter but stored in the response model using the name of the parameter. + +The location field of top-level parameters in a response model tell response parsers how data is retrieved from a +response. + +statusCode location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves the status code of the response. + +reasonPhrase location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves the reason phrase of the response. + +header location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves a header from the HTTP response. + +body location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves the body of an HTTP response. + +json location +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves a top-level parameter from a JSON document contained in an HTTP response. + +You can use ``additionalProperties`` if the JSON document is wrapped in an outer array. This allows you to parse the +contents of each item in the array using the parsing rules defined in the ``additionalProperties`` schema. + +xml location +^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Retrieves a top-level node value from an XML document contained in an HTTP response. + +Other locations +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Custom locations can be registered as new locations or override default locations if needed. + +Example service description +--------------------------- + +Let's say you're interacting with a web service called 'Foo' that allows for the following routes and methods:: + + GET/POST /users + GET/DELETE /users/:id + +The following JSON service description implements this simple web service: + +.. class:: overflow-height-500px + + .. code-block:: json + + { + "name": "Foo", + "apiVersion": "2012-10-14", + "baseUrl": "http://api.foo.com", + "description": "Foo is an API that allows you to Baz Bar", + "operations": { + "GetUsers": { + "httpMethod": "GET", + "uri": "/users", + "summary": "Gets a list of users", + "responseClass": "GetUsersOutput" + }, + "CreateUser": { + "httpMethod": "POST", + "uri": "/users", + "summary": "Creates a new user", + "responseClass": "CreateUserOutput", + "parameters": { + "name": { + "location": "json", + "type": "string" + }, + "age": { + "location": "json", + "type": "integer" + } + } + }, + "GetUser": { + "httpMethod": "GET", + "uri": "/users/{id}", + "summary": "Retrieves a single user", + "responseClass": "GetUserOutput", + "parameters": { + "id": { + "location": "uri", + "description": "User to retrieve by ID", + "required": true + } + } + }, + "DeleteUser": { + "httpMethod": "DELETE", + "uri": "/users/{id}", + "summary": "Deletes a user", + "responseClass": "DeleteUserOutput", + "parameters": { + "id": { + "location": "uri", + "description": "User to delete by ID", + "required": true + } + } + } + }, + "models": { + "GetUsersOutput": { + "type": "array", + "items": { + "type": "object", + "properties": { + "name": { + "location": "json", + "type": "string" + }, + "age": { + "location": "json", + "type": "integer" + } + } + } + }, + "CreateUserOutput": { + "type": "object", + "properties": { + "id": { + "location": "json", + "type": "string" + }, + "location": { + "location": "header", + "sentAs": "Location", + "type": "string" + } + } + }, + "GetUserOutput": { + "type": "object", + "properties": { + "name": { + "location": "json", + "type": "string" + }, + "age": { + "location": "json", + "type": "integer" + } + } + }, + "DeleteUserOutput": { + "type": "object", + "properties": { + "status": { + "location": "statusCode", + "type": "integer" + } + } + } + } + } + +If you attach this service description to a client, you would completely configure the client to interact with the +Foo web service and provide valuable response models for each operation. + +.. code-block:: php + + use Guzzle\Service\Description\ServiceDescription; + + $description = ServiceDescription::factory('/path/to/client.json'); + $client->setDescription($description); + + $command = $client->getCommand('DeleteUser', array('id' => 123)); + $responseModel = $client->execute($command); + echo $responseModel['status']; + +.. note:: + + You can add the service description to your client's factory method or constructor. |