A Swift package for encoding to- and decoding from JSON API compliant requests and responses.
See the JSON API Spec here: https://jsonapi.org/format/
- Basic Example
- Compound Example
- Metadata Example
- Custom Errors Example
- PATCH Example
- Resource Storage Example (using JSONAPI-ResourceStorage)
This library works well when used by both the server responsible for serialization and the client responsible for deserialization. Check out the example.
The primary goals of this framework are:
- Allow creation of Swift types that are easy to use in code but also can be encoded to- or decoded from JSON API v1.0 Spec compliant payloads without lots of boilerplate code.
- Leverage
Codable
to avoid additional outside dependencies and get operability with non-JSON encoders/decoders for free. - Do not sacrifice type safety.
- Be platform agnostic so that Swift code can be written once and used by both the client and the server.
- Provide human readable error output. The errors thrown when decoding an API response and the results of the
JSONAPITesting
framework'scompare(to:)
functions all have digestible human readable descriptions (just useString(describing:)
).
The big caveat is that, although the aim is to support the JSON API spec, this framework ends up being naturally opinionated about certain things that the API Spec does not specify. These caveats are largely a side effect of attempting to write the library in a "Swifty" way.
If you find something wrong with this library and it isn't already mentioned under Project Status, let me know! I want to keep working towards a library implementation that is useful in any application.
- Swift 5.2+
- Swift Package Manager, Xcode 11+, or Cocoapods
Just include the following in your package's dependencies and add JSONAPI
to the dependencies for any of your targets.
.package(url: "https://github.com/mattpolzin/JSONAPI.git", from: "5.1.0")
With Xcode 11+, you can open the folder containing this repository. There is no need for an Xcode project, but you can generate one with swift package generate-xcodeproj
.
To use this framework in your project via Cocoapods, add the following dependencies to your Podfile.
pod 'Poly', :git => 'https://github.com/mattpolzin/Poly.git'
pod 'MP-JSONAPI', :git => 'https://github.com/mattpolzin/JSONAPI.git'
This library does not support the Carthage package manager. This is intentional to avoid an additional dependency on Xcode and the Xcode's project files as their format changes throughout versions (in addition to the complexity of maintaining different shared schemes for each supported operating system).
The difference between supporting and not supporting Carthage is the difference between maintaining an Xcode project with at least one shared build scheme; I encourage those that need Carthage support to fork this repository and add support to their fork by committing an Xcode project (you can generate one as described in the Xcode project section above). Once an Xcode project is generated, you need to mark at least one scheme as shared.
To run the included Playground files, create an Xcode project using Swift Package Manager, then create an Xcode Workspace in the root of the repository and add both the generated Xcode project and the playground to the Workspace.
Note that Playground support for importing non-system Frameworks is still a bit touchy as of Swift 4.2. Sometimes building, cleaning and building, or commenting out and then uncommenting import statements (especially in the Entities.swift
Playground Source file) can get things working for me when I am getting an error about JSONAPI
not being found.
The JSONAPI
framework is packaged with a test library to help you test your JSONAPI
integration. The test library is called JSONAPITesting
. You can see JSONAPITesting
in action in the Playground included with the JSONAPI
repository.
Literal expressibility for Attribute
, ToOneRelationship
, and Id
are provided so that you can easily write test ResourceObject
values into your unit tests.
For example, you could create a mock Author
(from the above example) as follows
let author = Author(
id: "1234", // You can just use a String directly as an Id
attributes: .init(name: "Janice Bluff"), // The name Attribute does not need to be initialized, you just use a String directly.
relationships: .none,
meta: .none,
links: .none
)
The ResourceObject
gets a check()
function that can be used to catch problems with your JSONAPI
structures that are not caught by Swift's type system.
To catch malformed JSONAPI.Attributes
and JSONAPI.Relationships
, just call check()
in your unit test functions:
func test_initAuthor() {
let author = Author(...)
Author.check(author)
}
You can compare Documents
, ResourceObjects
, Attributes
, etc. and get human-readable output using the compare(to:)
methods included with JSONAPITesting
.
func test_articleResponse() {
let endToEndAPITestResponse: SingleArticleDocumentWithIncludes = ...
let expectedResponse: SingleArticleDocumentWithIncludes = ...
let comparison = endToEndAPITestResponse.compare(to: expectedResponse)
XCTAssert(comparison.isSame, String(describing: comparison))
}
The JSONAPI-Arbitrary
library provides SwiftCheck
Arbitrary
conformance for many of the JSONAPI
types.
See https://github.com/mattpolzin/JSONAPI-Arbitrary for more information.
The JSONAPI-OpenAPI
library generates OpenAPI compliant JSON Schema for models built with the JSONAPI
library. If your Swift code is your preferred source of truth for API information, this is an easy way to document the response schemas of your API.
JSONAPI-OpenAPI
also has experimental support for generating JSONAPI
Swift code from Open API documentation (this currently lives on the feature/gen-swift
branch).
See https://github.com/mattpolzin/JSONAPI-OpenAPI for more information.
The JSONAPI-ResourceStorage
package has two very early stage modules supporting storage and retrieval of JSONAPI.ResourceObjects
. Please consider these modules to be more of examples of two directions you could head in than anything else.