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What is SimpleJSONAPIClient?

SimpleJSONAPIClient is a framework for building Ruby clients for JSONAPI-compliant services.

How do I use SimpleJSONAPIClient?

Setup

First create models inheriting from SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base, and specifying a few details.

  • COLLECTION_URL - the path to fetch the resource collection
  • INDIVIDUAL_URL - the path to fetch an individual resource
  • TYPE - the JSONAPI resource type to use when creating a new resource
  • attributes - the names of attributes which can be found on the resource
  • relationships - has_one and has_many define relationships, and take these arguments:
    • relationship name (e.g., the :goats in has_many :goats)
    • class_name to use when instantiating related objects

They should look like this:

class Post < SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base
  COLLECTION_URL = '/posts'
  INDIVIDUAL_URL = '/posts/%{id}'
  TYPE = 'posts'

  attributes :title, :text
  meta :copyright

  has_one :author, class_name: 'Author'
  has_many :comments, class_name: 'Comment'
end

class Author < SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base
  COLLECTION_URL = '/authors'
  INDIVIDUAL_URL = '/authors/%{id}'
  TYPE = 'authors'

  attributes :name

  has_many :posts, class_name: 'Post'
  has_many :comments, class_name: 'Comment'
end

class Comment < SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base
  COLLECTION_URL = '/comments'
  INDIVIDUAL_URL = '/comments/%{id}'
  TYPE = 'comments'

  attributes :text

  has_one :post, class_name: 'Post'
  has_one :author, class_name: 'Author'
end

If you have behavior you'd like to share across models, you may want to first create an abstract class inheriting from SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base and then have all your models inherit from that.

Next, create a Faraday connection to handle the domain, authorization strategy, and anything else you need (making sure to include JSON parsing middleware):

def connection(token)
  default_headers = {
    'Accept' => 'application/vnd.api+json',
    'Content-Type' => 'application/vnd.api+json',
    'Authorization' => "token=#{token}"
  }

  @connection ||= Faraday.new(url: 'https://example.com', headers: default_headers) do |connection|
    connection.request :json
    connection.response :json, :content_type => /\bjson$/ # use middleware to parse JSON when response Content-Type is json
    connection.adapter :net_http
  end
end

Now you can start making requests!

Fetching

Laziness and SimpleJSONAPIClient

Post.fetch_all(connection: connection)
=> #<Enumerator: #<Enumerator::Generator:0x00562894acd420>:each>

What's going on? SimpleJSONAPIClient tries to be as lazy as possible while still being convenient. So if you actually want to fetch everything, you'll be able to call Array methods and it will fetch the resource, paginating through all the results. If it's an endpoint with thousands of pages, you can use Enumerator methods like #each and it'll paginate through the results, fetching the next page when it runs out of objects.

Let's call #to_a to see a bit more detail.

posts = Post.fetch_all(connection: connection).to_a
=> [#<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="I am absolutely incensed about something." author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>,
 #<Post id=2 title="The System is Down" text="The Cheat" author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/2/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/2/comments>>]

Attributes are loaded immediately, but relationships are lazily instantiated. So if we dig a little bit further:

posts.first.author
=> #<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author>

Nope, still lazy! However, once we start fetching details about the author, SimpleJSONAPIClient knows a request has to be made, and fills in the details:

posts.first.author.id
=> "3"

posts.first.author
=> #<Author id=3 name="Filbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Post url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/authors/3/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/authors/3/comments>>

We can read more easily by calling #as_json:

posts.first.author.as_json
=> {
  :data => {
    :type => "authors",
    :attributes => { :name => "Filbert" },
    :relationships => {
      :posts => {
        :data => [{ :type => "posts", :id => "1" }]
      },
      :comments => { :data => [] }
    }
  }
}

More About Fetching Capabilities

You can also explicitly fetch a single item:

post = Post.fetch(connection: connection, url_opts: { id: 1 })
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="I am absolutely incensed about something." author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>

url_opts, in all cases where you see them, are passed to the template Strings for INDIVIDUAL_URL and COLLECTION_URL in the model.

You've already seen that id and relationships are available; attributes and meta information also become methods on the object:

post = Post.fetch(connection: connection, url_opts: { id: 1 })
post.title
=> "A Very Proper Post Title"
post.text
=> "I am absolutely incensed about something."
post.copyright
=> "Copyright 2017"

You can also use JSONAPI includes to reduce the number of requests that are necessary:

post = JSONAPIAppClient::Post.fetch(connection: connection, url_opts: { id: 1 }, includes: ['author', 'comments.author'])
post.author # will not make another web request
post.comments.first.author # will not make another web request

SimpleJSONAPIClient will check the included records for related records you access through the returned model.

And finally, you can use JSONAPI-style filtering and pagination as well:

# Given 3 authors...
JSONAPIAppClient::Author.fetch_all(connection: connection).to_a
=> [#<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=1 name="Filbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/comments>>,
 #<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=2 name="Dilbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/2/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/2/comments>>,
 #<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=3 name="Wilbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/comments>>]

# Filtering by name
JSONAPIAppClient::Author.fetch_all(connection: connection, filter_opts: { name: 'Filbert' }).to_a
=> [#<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=1 name="Filbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/comments>>]

# Just grabbing the last page
JSONAPIAppClient::Author.fetch_all(connection: connection, page_opts: { size: 1, number: 3 }).to_a
=> [#<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=3 name="Wilbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/comments>>]

# You can adjust the pagination strategy and SimpleJSONAPIClient will follow it, but return the same results
JSONAPIAppClient::Author.fetch_all(connection: connection, page_opts: { size: 1, number: 1 }).to_a
=> [#<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=1 name="Filbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/1/comments>>,
 #<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=2 name="Dilbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/2/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/2/comments>>,
 #<JSONAPIAppClient::Author id=3 name="Wilbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Post url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Relationships::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=JSONAPIAppClient::Comment url=http://jsonapi_app_console:3002/authors/3/comments>>]

Creating

Creating records is available from the model class:

post = Post.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="I am absolutely incensed about something." author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>
author = Author.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1}, connection: connection)
=> #<Author id=1 name="Filbert" posts=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Post url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/authors/1/posts> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/authors/1/comments>>

Comment.create(connection: connection, text: 'I adore your article!', post: post, author: author)
=> #<Comment id=19 text="I adore your article!" post=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Client::Post url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/comments/19/post> author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/comments/19/author>>

The created record is returned; if creation fails, a SimpleJSONAPIClient::Errors::ApiError is raised.

Updating

If you want to update a record, you can do it from the model itself:

post = Post.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="I am absolutely incensed about something." author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>
[2] pry(main)> post.update(attributes: { text: 'foo' })
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="foo" author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>

If you have the ID of the record handy, you update straight from the model class without fetching the record first:

Post.update(id: 1, url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection, text: 'foo')
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="foo" author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>

Deleting

You can delete a record from the model itself:

post = Post.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> #<Post id=1 title="A Very Proper Post Title" text="I am absolutely incensed about something." author=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::SingularLinkRelationship model_class=Author url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/author> comments=#<SimpleJSONAPIClient::Base::ArrayLinkRelationship model_class=Comment url=http://jsonapi_app:3000/posts/1/comments>>

post.delete
=> true
Post.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> nil

or from the class, if you have the ID:

Post.delete(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> true
Post.fetch(url_opts: { id: 1 }, connection: connection)
=> nil

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'simple_jsonapi_client'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install simple_jsonapi_client

Development

You must have Docker and Docker Compose installed to run the tests and use the built-in development utilities.

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment, and bin/rails to interact with the Rails app in spec/jsonapi_app that is provided for local development and testing.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/amcaplan/simple_jsonapi_client. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the SimpleJsonapiClient project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

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