Awesome
Seahorse
Seahorse is a way to describe your service APIs as first-class citizens with a declarative DSL. The library also provides Ruby on Rails integration so that take advantage of your API model in controller actions.
Features
Seahorse provides the ability to define an API model, but also has functionality
to support parameter validation and serialization of inputs and outputs to API
calls. With Rails integration, this is automatic, namely, parameters in
params
are automatically type-converted and validated, outputs are
automatically serialized from your API model to JSON or XML. You can also hook
this up to a Sinatra app with a little amount of work.
Installing
gem install seahorse
Usage
Using Seahorse in a Rails app is pretty easy!
First, define your API model and operations by creating a class like
Api::Post
in app/models/api/post.rb
and including Seahorse::Model
:
class Api::Post
include Seahorse::Model
# Define a type so you can re-use this later
type :post do
model ::Post # Hook up to an AR model
integer :post_id, as: :id
string :username, as: [:user, :username]
string :body
timestamp :created_at
end
# The 'index' action in Rails.
# Also maps to the 'list_posts' command as an RPC call
operation :index do
# Define this if you need to map parameters in the URL
url '/:username/posts'
# Define some input parameters
input do
string :username, uri: true, required: true
integer :page
end
# Define the output parameters
output do
# A list of posts
list(:posts) { post }
# The page number of the next page
integer :next_page
end
end
# Other operations here...
end
You can generate a JSON description of this API model by calling:
puts Api::Post.to_json
Rails Integration
In Rails, you can hook this API model up to routing by adding the following line
in your config/routes.rb
:
Seahorse::Model.add_all_routes(self)
This finds all API models defined and hooks them up to your Rails app.
Note that in Rails, the Post API model will route to your PostsController
.
Then you just write Rails code as normal. Here is what the index controller
action might look like on PostsController
:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
# You need to add this for Seahorse integration
include Seahorse::Controller
def index
# Simple pagination logic
page_size, page = 20, params[:page] || 1
offset = (page - 1) * page_size
# Build the response
output = { posts: Post.limit(page_size).offset(offset) }
output[:next_page] = page + 1 if Post.count > (offset + page_size)
respond_with(output)
end
end
Note that params[:page]
can be used without calling .to_i
because Seahorse
already typecasted it to an integer, since your model's input defined it as one.
You no longer have to worry about typecasting values in and out. You simply
take input params and call respond_with
on the data you want to serialize
out the data you want to display (also defined in your API model).
Here's what a create action might look like:
def create
user = User.where(username: params[:username]).first
respond_with user.posts.create(params[:post])
end
Note that all your parameters are automatically validated and type-converted according to the inputs you defined in your API model. You don't have to white list attributes in your model, and you don't need to define strong parameters either; Seahorse does this all for you.
Contributing
Feel free to open issues or submit pull requests with any ideas you can think of to make integrating the Seahorse model into your application an easier process. This project was initially created as a tech demo for RailsConf 2013 to illustrate some of the principles used to design the client-side SDKs at Amazon Web Services, so the current breadth of features is fairly minimal. Feature additions and extra work on the project is welcome!
License
Seahorse uses the Apache 2.0 License. See LICENSE for details.