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grape-jsonapi_entity

Adds Jsonapi v1.0 sugar on Grape-Entity.

Introduction

Installation

Add the grape, grape-entity and grape-jsonapi_entity gems to Gemfile.

gem 'grape'
gem 'grape-entity'
gem 'grape-jsonapi_entity'

Run bundle install.

Usage

Tell your API to use Grape::Jsonapi::Formatter

class API < Grape::API
  format :jsonapi
  formatter :jsonapi, Grape::Jsonapi::Formatter
end

Create a Jsonapi Resource

Following Json Api v 1.0 spec. Resource Objects may expose the following fields

field description
id automatically exposed by Grape::Jsonapi::Entity::Resource
type automatically exposed by Grape::Jsonapi::Entity::Resource, additionally it will make an attempt to automatically determine a type using either the plural word passed via the root method, or based on the class name of the resource entity. To specify a type, you can overload the json_api_type method in your resource as shown here. You can also use the json_api_type keyword as in this example
attributes can be exposed using the attribute method, instead of expose. All expose options and block syntax should work with attribute
relationships relationships of compound-documents can be represented using the nest method, and expects the :using option to be passed with another Resource Entity

Example Resources

module API
  module Entities
    class Status < Grape::Jsonapi::Entity::Resource
      root 'statuses'

      format_with(:iso_timestamp) { |dt| dt.iso8601 }

      attribute :user_name
      attribute :text, documentation: { type: "String", desc: "Status update text." }
      attribute :ip, if: { type: :full }
      attribute :user_type, :user_id, if: lambda { |status, options| status.user.public? }
      attribute :location, merge: true
      attribute :contact_info do
        expose :phone
        expose :address, merge: true, using: API::Entities::Address
      end
      attribute :digest do |status, options|
        Digest::MD5.hexdigest status.txt
      end

      nest :replies, using: API::Entities::Status, as: :responses
      nest :last_reply, using: API::Entities::Status do |status, options|
        status.replies.last
      end

      with_options(format_with: :iso_timestamp) do
        attribute :created_at
        attribute :updated_at
      end
    end
  end
end

module API
  module Entities
    class StatusDetailed < Grape::Jsonapi::Entity::Resource
      attribute :internal_id
    end
  end
end

json_api_type

Overloading the json_api_type method is one way of specifying the type field in your Json Api output. The following code will output 'Weather' in the type field.

module API
  module Entities
    class Status < Grape::Jsonapi::Entity::Resource
      attribute :user_name
      attribute :ip

      def json_api_type
        'Weather'
      end
    end
  end
end

Presenting

This follows the grape-entity use of present. but instead of passing your entity directly to :with, we wrap it in a factory call to nest the data inside Jsonapi's top level document structure. It also makes the output of the type field the result of current_user.admin? ? :full : :default

  class Statuses < Grape::API
    version 'v1'

    desc 'Statuses index' do
      params: API::Entities::Status.documentation
    end

    get '/statuses' do
      statuses = Status.all
      type = current_user.admin? ? :full : :default
      present({ data: statuses },
        with: Grape::Jsonapi::Document.top(API::Entities::Status),
        json_api_type: type
      )
    end
  end

Content Negotiation

This fulfills server responsibilites for JSON API Content Negotiation v1.0 and makes one addition. JSON API specifies that the client must send Content-Type: application/vnd.api+json with all request documents. This gem specifies that the client must send Content-Type: application/vnd.api+json with every request, regardless of whether sending a document or not.

Exceptions

Two new exceptions have also been added.

  • UnsupportedMediaTypeError is raised when the Content-Type header is invalid.
  • NotAcceptableError is raised when the Accept header is invalid.

Usage:

  • Run the service and pass it the Accept header and Content-Type header.
  • It returns true or raises exception if not JSON API-compliant.
Grape::Jsonapi::Services::ContentNegotiator.run(accept_header, content_type)

Fetching & Parameters

Filtering

This follows the JSON APi specifications for filtering.

Formats
  • Accepts a hash with the key as search field:
{ foo: value }
  • When value is scalar type, operation 'equals(==)' is implied:
{ foo: 'scalar', bar: 123 } => where(foo: 'scalar', bar: 123)
  • if value is an array, 'IN' operation is applied:
{ foo: [1,2,3] } => where(:foo.in([1,2,3]))
  • if value is a Hash, there must be one entry, of which the value_key is the operation, and the value must be scalar. Valid operations include <, <=, >, >=, ==:
{ foo: {'<': 100 } } => where(foo < 100)

In your API, accept an optional filter parameter with with a custom type. It should call the Filter module's allow method and pass it your search term:

  params do
    optional :filter, type:
      Grape::Jsonapi::Parameters::Filter.allow([:something_id])
  end

Pass the params like this in your tests:

  context 'with a something' do
    let(:params) do
      { filter: JSON.unparse(something_id: [something.id.to_s]) }
    end
  end

TODO

Document Structures

Fetching & Parameters

Error Handling

##Copyright and License

MIT License, see LICENSE for details.

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sugar to make it easier to conform to JSON API spec with grape entities

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