A Swagger 2.0 spec extractor for Flask
You can now specify base path for yml files:
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route("/spec")
def spec():
base_path = os.path.join(app.root_path, 'docs')
return jsonify(swagger(app), from_file_keyword="swagger_from_file", base_path=base_path)
and use relative paths:
@app.route('/test', methods=['POST'])
def login():
"""
swagger_from_file: test.yml
"""
Install:
pip install flask-swagger
Flask-swagger provides a method (swagger) that inspects the Flask app for endpoints that contain YAML docstrings with Swagger 2.0 Operation objects.
class UserAPI(MethodView):
def post(self):
"""
Create a new user
---
tags:
- users
definitions:
- schema:
id: Group
properties:
name:
type: string
description: the group's name
parameters:
- in: body
name: body
schema:
id: User
required:
- email
- name
properties:
email:
type: string
description: email for user
name:
type: string
description: name for user
address:
description: address for user
schema:
id: Address
properties:
street:
type: string
state:
type: string
country:
type: string
postalcode:
type: string
groups:
type: array
description: list of groups
items:
$ref: "#/definitions/Group"
responses:
201:
description: User created
"""
return {}
Flask-swagger supports docstrings in methods of MethodView classes (à la Flask-RESTful) and regular Flask view functions.
Following YAML conventions, flask-swagger searches for ---
, everything preceding is provided as summary
(first line) and description
(following lines) for the endpoint while everything after is parsed as a swagger Operation object.
In order to support inline definition of Schema objects in Parameter and Response objects, flask-swagger veers a little off from the standard. We require an id
field for the inline Schema which is then used to correctly place the Schema object in the Definitions object.
Schema objects can be defined in a definitions section within the docstrings (see group object above) or within responses or parameters (see user object above). We also support schema objects nested within the properties of other Schema objects. An example is shown above with the address property of User.
If you don't like to put YAML on docstrings you can put the same content in an external file.
Create a new user
---
tags:
- users
definitions:
- schema:
id: Group
properties:
name:
type: string
description: the group's name
parameters:
- in: body
name: body
schema:
id: User
required:
- email
- name
properties:
email:
type: string
description: email for user
name:
type: string
description: name for user
address:
description: address for user
schema:
id: Address
properties:
street:
type: string
state:
type: string
country:
type: string
postalcode:
type: string
groups:
type: array
description: list of groups
items:
$ref: "#/definitions/Group"
responses:
201:
description: User created
and point to it in your docstring.
class UserAPI(MethodView):
def post(self):
"""
Create a new user
blah blah
swagger_from_file: path/to/file.yml
blah blah
"""
return {}
Note that you can replace swagger_from_file
by another keyword. Supply your chosen keyword as an argument to swagger.
To expose your Swagger specification to the world you provide a Flask route that does something along these lines
from flask import Flask, jsonify
from flask_swagger import swagger
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route("/spec")
def spec():
return jsonify(swagger(app))
Note that the Swagger specification returned by swagger(app)
is as minimal as it can be. It's your job to override and add to the specification as you see fit.
@app.route("/spec")
def spec():
swag = swagger(app)
swag['info']['version'] = "1.0"
swag['info']['title'] = "My API"
return jsonify(swag)
Swagger-UI is the reason we embarked on this mission to begin with, flask-swagger does not however include Swagger-UI. Simply follow the awesome documentation over at https://github.com/swagger-api/swagger-ui and point your swaggerUi.url to your new flask-swagger endpoint and enjoy.
This package now comes with a very simple command line interface: flaskswagger. This command can be used to build and update swagger specs for your flask apps from the command line or at build time.
flaskswagger -h
usage: flaskswagger [-h] [--template TEMPLATE] [--out-dir OUT_DIR]
[--definitions DEFINITIONS] [--host HOST]
[--base-path BASE_PATH] [--version VERSION]
app
positional arguments:
app the flask app to swaggerify
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--template TEMPLATE template spec to start with, before any other options
or processing
--out-dir OUT_DIR the directory to output to
--definitions DEFINITIONS
json definitions file
--host HOST
--base-path BASE_PATH
--version VERSION Specify a spec version
For example, this can be used to build a swagger spec which can be served from your static directory. In the example below, we use the manually created swagger.json.manual as a template, and output to the static/
directory.
flaskswagger server:app --template static/swagger.json.manual --out-dir static/
Also, you can ask flaskswagger to add host and basePath to your swagger spec:
flaskswagger server:app --host localhost:5000 --base-path /v1
Acknowledgements
Flask-swagger builds on ideas and code from flask-sillywalk and flask-restful-swagger
Notable forks