This library reads your JSDoc-annotated source code and generates an OpenAPI (Swagger) specification.
Imagine having API files like these:
/**
* @openapi
* /:
* get:
* description: Welcome to swagger-jsdoc!
* responses:
* 200:
* description: Returns a mysterious string.
*/
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.send('Hello World!');
});
The library will take the contents of @openapi
(or @swagger
) with the following configuration:
const swaggerJsdoc = require('swagger-jsdoc');
const options = {
definition: {
openapi: '3.0.0',
info: {
title: 'Hello World',
version: '1.0.0',
},
},
apis: ['./src/routes*.js'], // files containing annotations as above
};
const openapiSpecification = swaggerJsdoc(options);
The resulting openapiSpecification
will be a swagger tools-compatible (and validated) specification.
You are viewing swagger-jsdoc
v6 which is published in CommonJS module system.
npm install swagger-jsdoc --save
Or
yarn add swagger-jsdoc
By default swagger-jsdoc
tries to parse all docs to it's best capabilities. If you'd like to you can instruct an Error to be thrown instead if validation failed by setting the options flag failOnErrors
to true
. This is for instance useful if you want to verify that your swagger docs validate using a unit test.
const swaggerJsdoc = require('swagger-jsdoc');
const options = {
failOnErrors: true, // Whether or not to throw when parsing errors. Defaults to false.
definition: {
openapi: '3.0.0',
info: {
title: 'Hello World',
version: '1.0.0',
},
},
apis: ['./src/routes*.js'],
};
const openapiSpecification = swaggerJsdoc(options);
Click on the version you are using for further details: