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  • License MIT

Package Exports

    This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (openapi-merger) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

    Readme

    openapi-merger

    Yet another CLI tool for merging multiple OpenAPI files into a single file.

    build workflow NPM

    Features

    • Similar to swagger-merger
    • Convert all remote & URL refs into local refs
      • This is useful on code generation, because it helps openapi-generator to output unique model classes without duplication.
    • $include keyword: same as $ref, except it merges the object with sibling elements. ($ref ignores them)

    Usage

    $ npm install -g openapi-merger
    $ openapi-merger -i openapi.yaml -o merged.yaml

    $include keyword

    openapi-merger introduces the special keyword $include. It has similar syntax as $ref, which takes JSON reference as its value.

    $include: 'reference to content'

    The biggest difference is that $include replaces itself directly by the referenced content, allowing to merge its sibling elements.

    Merge objects & arrays

    If $include is used in an object and then referenced content is an object too, they are merged.

    • main.yml
    object:
      $include: object.yml
      key3: val3
    • object.yml
    key1: val1
    key2: val2
    • results in:
    object:
      key1: val1
      key2: val2
      key3: val3

    Arrays go in the same manner.

    • main.yml
    array:
      - $include: array.yml
      - val3
    • array.yml
    - val1
    - val2
    • results in:
    array:
      - val1
      - val2
      - val3

    If you want not to merge arrays, use $include in a nested array.

    • main.yml
    array:
      - - $include: array.yml
      - val3
    • array.yml
    - val1
    - val2
    • results in:
    array:
      - - val1
        - val2
      - val3

    Multiple $include at same place

    $include can be used multiple times in the same place by appending # with some ID, avoiding key duplication.

    $include#foo: ./foo.yml
    $include#bar: ./bar.yml

    Key modification & Filtering

    $include is capable of modification and filtering of the keys of the referenced content. This is useful when you want to aggregate multiple OpenAPI documents of backend services into one for API Gateway.

    To utilize this function, a configuration file should be given by -c option. The configuration file is like following:

    include:
      # 'foo' class, which add '/v1' prefix to each key
      foo:
        prefix: /v1
      # 'bar' class, which selects only keys matching to regex 
      # here excluding paths that begins 'internal'
      bar: 
        filter: ^(?!/internal).*

    Use defined class as following:

    • main.yml
    # using foo class
    $include.foo: paths.yml 
    # using bar class
    $include.bar: paths.yml
    • paths.yml
    /users:
      post:
        ...
    
    /users/{id}:
      get:
        ...
    
    /internal/pets:
      post:
        ...
    • results in:
    # from $include.foo
    /v1/users:
      post:
        ...
    
    /v1/users/{id}:
      get:
        ...
    
    /v1/internal/pets:
      post:
        ...
    
    # from $include.bar
    /users:
      post:
        ...
    
    /users/{id}:
      get:
        ...

    You can still use # notation to avoid key conflicts like below.

    $include#a.foo: paths1.yml
    $include#b.foo: paths2.yml