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Hawaii Nuget

A dotnet CLI tool to generate type-safe F# and Fable clients from OpenAPI/Swagger/OData services.

Features

  • Supports any OpenApi/Swagger schema in form of JSON or Yaml, compatible with those that can be read by OpenAPI.NET
  • Supports OData services (see example below), made possible by OpenAPI.NET.OData which translates the OData model into an OpenApi document
  • Generates clients for F# on dotnet or for Fable in the browser
  • Automatically handles JSON deserialization into schema types
  • Automatically handles mixed responses from end points that return binary or typed JSON responses
  • Generates discriminated union types to describe the possible responses of each endpoint
  • Generates full F# projects, including their required dependencies and targeting netstandard2.0

Install

dotnet tool install -g hawaii

Configuration

Create a configuration file called hawaii.json with the following shape:

{
    "schema": <schema>,
    "project": <project>,
    "output": <output>,
    ["target"]: <"fsharp" | "fable">
    ["synchronous"]: <true | false>,
    ["asyncReturnType"]: <"async" | "task">,
    ["resolveReferences"]: <true | false>,
    ["emptyDefinitions"]: <"ignore" | "free-form">,
    ["overrideSchema"]: <JSON schema subset>,
    ["filterTags"]: <list of tags>
}

Where

  • <schema> is a URL to the OpenApi/Swagger/OData location, whether that is an external URL or a relative file path. In case of OData services, the external URL has to end with $metadata which points to the Edm model of that service (see TripPinService example below) or it can be a local .xml file that contains the schema
  • <project> is the name of the project that will get generated
  • <output> is a relative path to the output directory where the project will be generated. (Note: this directory is deleted and re-generated when you run hawaii)
  • <synchronous> is an optional flag that determines whether hawaii should generate client methods that run http requests synchronously. This is useful when used inside console applications. (set to false by default)
  • <target> specifies whether hawaii should generate a client for F# on dotnet (default) or a Fable client
  • <asyncReturnType> is an option to determine whether hawaii should generate client methods that return Async<'T> when set to "async" (default) or Task<'T> when set to "task" (this option is irrelevant when the synchronous option is set to true)
  • <resolveReferences> determines whether hawaii will attempt to resolve external references via schema pre-processing. This is set to false by default but sometimes an OpenApi schema is scattered into multiple schemas across a repository and this might help with the resolution.
  • <emptyDefintions> determines what hawaii should do when encountering a global type definition without schema information. When set to "ignore" (default) hawaii will generate the global type. However, sometimes these global types are still referenced from other types or definitions, in which case the setting this option to "free-form" will generate a type abbreviation for the empty schema equal to a free form object (JToken when targetting F# or obj when targetting Fable)
  • <overrideSchema> Allows you to override the resolved schema either to add more information (such as a missing operation ID) or correct the types when you know better (see below)
  • <filterTags> Allows to filter which operations will be included based on their OpenAPI tags. Useful when generating the full schema isn't possible or isn't practical. To see what tags are available, use hawaii --show-tags

Example (PetStore Schema)

Here is an example configuration for the pet store API:

{
    "schema": "https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3/openapi.json",
    "output": "./output",
    "project": "PetStore",
    "synchronous": true
}

After you have the configuration ready, run hawaii in the directory where you have the hawaii.json file:

hawaii

You can also tell hawaii where to find the configuration file if it wasn't named hawaii.json, for example

hawaii --config ./petstore-hawaii.json

Using the generated project

Once hawaii has finished running, you find a fully generated F# project inside of the <output> directory. This project can be referenced from your application so you can start using it.

You can reference the project like this from your app like this:

<ItemGroup>
  <ProjectReference Include="..\path\to\output\PetStore.fsproj" />
</ItemGroup>

Then from your code:

open System
open System.Net.Http
open PetStore
open PetStore.Types

let petStoreUri = Uri "https://petstore3.swagger.io/api/v3"
let httpClient = new HttpClient(BaseAddress=petStoreUri)
let petStore = PetStoreClient(httpClient)

let availablePets() =
    let status = PetStatus.Available.Format()
    match petStore.findPetsByStatus(status) with
    | FindPetsByStatus.OK pets -> for pet in pets do printfn $"{pet.name}"
    | FindPetsByStatus.BadRequest -> printfn "Bad request"

availablePets()

// inventory : Map<string, int>
let (GetInventory.OK(inventory)) = petStore.getInventory()

for (status, quantity) in Map.toList inventory do
    printfn $"There are {quantity} pet(s) {status}"

Notice that you have to provide your own HttpClient to the PetStoreClient and set the BaseAddress to the base path of the service.

Example with OData (TripPinService schema)

{
  "schema": "https://services.odata.org/V4/(S(s3lb035ptje4a1j0bvkmqqa0))/TripPinServiceRW/$metadata",
  "project": "TripPinService",
  "output": "./output"
}

Generate OpenAPI specs from the OData schemas

Sometimes you want to see how Hawaii generated a client from an OData schema.

You use the following command to generate the intermediate OpenAPI specs file in the form of JSON.

Then you can inspect it but also modify then use it as your <schema> when you need to make corrections to the generated client

hawaii --from-odata-schema {schema} --output {output}

where

  • {schema} is either a URL to an external OData schema or local .xml file which the contents of the schema
  • {output} is a relative file path where the translated OpenAPI specs will be written

Example of such command

hawaii --from-odata-schema "https://services.odata.org/V4/(S(s3lb035ptje4a1j0bvkmqqa0))/TripPinServiceRW/$metadata" --output ./TripPin.json

Sample Applications

  • Minimal PetStore - A simple console application showing how to use the PetStore API client generated by Hawaii
  • Feliz PetStore - A Feliz application that shows how to use the PetStore API client generated by Hawaii when targeting Fable
  • OData TripPin Service - This application demonstrates a console application that uses a client for the TripPin OData service generated by Hawaii

Version

You can ask hawaii which version it is currently on:

hawaii --version

No Logo

If you don't want the logo to show up in your CI or local machine, add --no-logo as the last parameter

hawaii --no-logo
hawaii --config ./hawaii.json --no-logo

Advanced - Overriding The Schema

OpenAPI schemas can be very loose and not always typed. Sometimes they will be missing operation IDs on certain paths. Although Hawaii will attempt to derive valid operation IDs from the path, name collisions can sometimes happen. Hawaii provides the overrideSchema option to allow you to "fix" the source schema or add more information when its missing.

Here is an example for how you can override operation IDs for certain paths

{
  "overrideSchema": {
    "paths": {
      "/consumer/v1/services/{id}/allocations": {
        "get": {
          "operationId": "getAllocationsForCustomerByServiceId"
        }
      },
      "/consumer/v1/services/allocations/{id}": {
        "get": {
            "operationId": "getAllocationIdFromCustomerServices"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

The overrideSchema property basically takes a subset of another schema and merges it with the source schema.

You can go a step further by overriding the return types of certain responses. The following example shows how you can get the raw text output from the default response of a path instead of getting a typed response:

{
  "overrideSchema": {
    "paths": {
      "/bin/querybuilder.json": {
        "get": {
          "responses": {
            "default": {
              "content": {
                "application/json": {
                  "schema": {
                    "type": "string"
                  }
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Limitations

These are the very early days of Hawaii as a tool to generate F# clients and there are some known limitations and rough edges that I will be working on:

  • anyOf/oneOf not supported unless they contain a single element, in which case they are reduced away

You can watch the live coding sessions as a playlist published on YouTube here

Running integration tests

cd ./build
# run hawaii against multiple config permutations
dotnet run -- generate-and-build
# run hawaii against 10 schemas
dotnet run -- integration
# run hawaii agains the first {n} schemas out of ~2000 and see the progress
dotnet run -- rate {n}

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