rswag

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OpenApi 3.0 and Swagger 2.0 compatible!

Seeking maintainers! Got a pet-bug that needs fixing? Just let us know in your issue/pr that you’d like to step up to help.

Rswag extends rspec-rails “request specs” with a Swagger-based DSL for describing and testing API operations. You describe your API operations with a succinct, intuitive syntax, and it automatically runs the tests. Once you have green tests, run a rake task to auto-generate corresponding Swagger files and expose them as YAML or JSON endpoints. Rswag also provides an embedded version of the awesome swagger-ui that’s powered by the exposed file. This toolchain makes it seamless to go from integration specs, which you’re probably doing in some form already, to living documentation for your API consumers.

Api Rswag creates Swagger tooling for Rails API’s. Generate beautiful API documentation, including a UI to explore and test operations, directly from your rspec integration tests.

And that’s not all …

Once you have an API that can describe itself in Swagger, you’ve opened the treasure chest of Swagger-based tools including a client generator that can be targeted to a wide range of popular platforms. See swagger-codegen for more details.

Table of Contents

Getting Started

  1. Add this line to your applications Gemfile:

    ruby gem 'rswag'

    or if you like to avoid loading rspec in other bundler groups load the rswag-specs component separately. Note: Adding it to the :development group is not strictly necessary, but without it, generators and rake tasks must be preceded by RAILS_ENV=test.

    ```ruby # Gemfile gem ‘rswag-api’ gem ‘rswag-ui’

    group :development, :test do gem ‘rspec-rails’ gem ‘rswag-specs’ end ```

  2. Run the install generator

    ruby rails g rswag:install

    Or run the install generators for each package separately if you installed Rswag as separate gems, as indicated above:

    ruby rails g rswag:api:install rails g rswag:ui:install RAILS_ENV=test rails g rswag:specs:install

  3. Create an integration spec to describe and test your API. There is also a generator which can help get you started rails generate rspec:swagger API::MyController

    ```ruby # spec/requests/blogs_spec.rb require ‘swagger_helper’

    describe ‘Blogs API’ do

    path ‘/blogs’ do

     post 'Creates a blog' do
       tags 'Blogs'
       consumes 'application/json'
       parameter name: :blog, in: :body, schema: {
         type: :object,
         properties: {
           title: { type: :string },
           content: { type: :string }
         },
         required: [ 'title', 'content' ]
       }
    
       response '201', 'blog created' do
         let(:blog) { { title: 'foo', content: 'bar' } }
         run_test!
       end
    
       response '422', 'invalid request' do
         let(:blog) { { title: 'foo' } }
         run_test!
       end
     end    end
    

    path ‘/blogs/id’ do

     get 'Retrieves a blog' do
       tags 'Blogs', 'Another Tag'
       produces 'application/json', 'application/xml'
       parameter name: :id, in: :path, type: :string
       request_body_example value: { some_field: 'Foo' }, name: 'basic', summary: 'Request example description'
    
       response '200', 'blog found' do
         schema type: :object,
           properties: {
             id: { type: :integer },
             title: { type: :string },
             content: { type: :string }
           },
           required: [ 'id', 'title', 'content' ]
    
         let(:id) { Blog.create(title: 'foo', content: 'bar').id }
         run_test!
       end
    
       response '404', 'blog not found' do
         let(:id) { 'invalid' }
         run_test!
       end
    
       response '406', 'unsupported accept header' do
         let(:'Accept') { 'application/foo' }
         run_test!
       end
     end    end  end  ``` By default, the above command will create spec under _spec/requests_ folder. You can pass an option to change this default path as in `rails generate rspec:swagger API::BlogsController --spec_path integration`. This will create the spec file _spec/integration/blogs_spec.rb_
    
  4. Generate the Swagger JSON file(s)

    ruby rake rswag:specs:swaggerize

    This common command is also aliased as rake rswag.

    Or if you installed your gems separately: RAILS_ENV=test rails rswag

  5. Spin up your app and check out the awesome, auto-generated docs at /api-docs!

The rspec DSL

Paths, Operations and Responses

If you’ve used Swagger before, then the syntax should be very familiar. To describe your API operations, start by specifying a path and then list the supported operations (i.e. HTTP verbs) for that path. Path parameters must be surrounded by curly braces ({}). Within an operation block (see “post” or “get” in the example above), most of the fields supported by the Swagger “Operation” object are available as methods on the example group. To list (and test) the various responses for an operation, create one or more response blocks. Again, you can reference the Swagger “Response” object for available fields.

Take special note of the run_test! method that’s called within each response block. This tells rswag to create and execute a corresponding example. It builds and submits a request based on parameter descriptions and corresponding values that have been provided using the rspec “let” syntax. For example, the “post” description in the example above specifies a “body” parameter called “blog”. It also lists 2 different responses. For the success case (i.e. the 201 response), notice how “let” is used to set the blog parameter to a value that matches the provided schema. For the failure case (i.e. the 422 response), notice how it’s set to a value that does not match the provided schema. When the test is executed, rswag also validates the actual response code and, where applicable, the response body against the provided JSON Schema.

If you want to add metadata to the example, you can pass keyword arguments to the run_test! method:

```ruby # to run particular test case response ‘201’, ‘blog created’ do run_test! focus: true end

to write vcr cassette

response ‘201’, ‘blog created’ do run_test! vcr: true end ```

If you want to customize the description of the generated specification, a description can be passed to run_test!

ruby response '201', 'blog created' do run_test! "custom spec description" end

If you want to do additional validation on the response, pass a block to the run_test! method:

ruby response '201', 'blog created' do run_test! do |response| data = JSON.parse(response.body) expect(data['title']).to eq('foo') end end

If you’d like your specs to be a little more explicit about what’s going on here, you can replace the call to run_test! with equivalent “before” and “it” blocks:

```ruby response ‘201’, ‘blog created’ do let(:blog) { { title: ‘foo’, content: ‘bar’ } }

before do |example| submit_request(example.metadata) end

it ‘returns a valid 201 response’ do |example| assert_response_matches_metadata(example.metadata) end end ```

Also note that the examples generated with run_test! are tagged with the :rswag so they can easily be filtered. E.g. rspec --tag rswag

date-time in query parameters

Input sent in queries of Rspec tests is HTML safe, including date-time strings.

```ruby parameter name: :date_time, in: :query, type: :string

response ‘200’, ‘blog found’ do let(:date_time) { DateTime.new(2001, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ‘-7’).to_s }

run_test! do expect(request[:path]).to eq(‘/blogs?date_time=2001-02-03T04%3A05%3A06-07%3A00’) end end ```

Strict schema validation

By default, if response body contains undocumented properties tests will pass. To keep your responses clean and validate against a strict schema definition you can set the global config option:

ruby # spec/swagger_helper.rb RSpec.configure do |config| config.swagger_strict_schema_validation = true end

or set the option per individual example:

```ruby # using in run_test! describe ‘Blogs API’ do path ‘/blogs’ do post ‘Creates a blog’ do … response ‘201’, ‘blog created’ do let(:blog) { { title: ‘foo’, content: ‘bar’ } }

    run_test!(swagger_strict_schema_validation: true)
  end
end   end end

using in response block

describe ‘Blogs API’ do path ‘/blogs’ do post ‘Creates a blog’ do …

  response '201', 'blog created', swagger_strict_schema_validation: true do
    let(:blog) { { title: 'foo', content: 'bar' } }

    run_test!
  end
end   end end

using in an explicit example

describe ‘Blogs API’ do path ‘/blogs’ do post ‘Creates a blog’ do … response ‘201’, ‘blog created’ do let(:blog) { { title: ‘foo’, content: ‘bar’ } }

    before do |example|
      submit_request(example.metadata)
    end

    it 'returns a valid 201 response', swagger_strict_schema_validation: true do |example|
      assert_response_matches_metadata(example.metadata)
    end
  end
end   end end ```

Null Values

This library is currently using JSON::Draft4 for validation of response models. Nullable properties can be supported with the non-standard property ‘x-nullable’ to a definition to allow null/nil values to pass. Or you can add the new standard nullable property to a definition. ```ruby describe ‘Blogs API’ do path ‘/blogs’ do post ‘Creates a blog’ do …

  response '200', 'blog found' do
    schema type: :object,
      properties: {
        id: { type: :integer },
        title: { type: :string, nullable: true }, # preferred syntax
        content: { type: :string, 'x-nullable': true } # legacy syntax, but still works
      }
    ....
  end
end   end end ```

Support for oneOf, anyOf or AllOf schemas

Open API 3.0 now supports more flexible schema validation with the oneOf, anyOf and allOf directives. rswag will handle these definitions and validate them properly.

Notice the schema inside the response section. Placing a schema method inside the response will validate (and fail the tests) if during the integration test run the endpoint response does not match the response schema. This test validation can handle anyOf and allOf as well. See below:

```ruby

path ‘/blogs/flexible’ do post ‘Creates a blog flexible body’ do tags ‘Blogs’ description ‘Creates a flexible blog from provided data’ operationId ‘createFlexibleBlog’ consumes ‘application/json’ produces ‘application/json’

  parameter name: :blog, in: :body, schema: {
      oneOf: [
        { '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/blog' },
        { '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/flexible_blog' }
      ]
    }

  response '201', 'flexible blog created' do
    schema oneOf: [{ '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/blog' }, { '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/flexible_blog' }]
    run_test!
  end
end   end

``` This automatic schema validation is a powerful feature of rswag.

Global Metadata

In addition to paths, operations and responses, Swagger also supports global API metadata. When you install rswag, a file called swagger_helper.rb is added to your spec folder. This is where you define one or more Swagger documents and provide global metadata. Again, the format is based on Swagger so most of the global fields supported by the top level “Swagger” object can be provided with each document definition. As an example, you could define a Swagger document for each version of your API and in each case specify a title, version string. In Open API 3.0 the pathing and server definitions have changed a bit Swagger host/basePath:

```ruby # spec/swagger_helper.rb RSpec.configure do |config| config.swagger_root = Rails.root.to_s + ‘/swagger’

config.swagger_docs = { ‘v1/swagger.json’ => { openapi: ‘3.0.1’, info: { title: ‘API V1’, version: ‘v1’, description: ‘This is the first version of my API’ }, servers: [ { url: ‘https://defaultHost’, variables: { defaultHost: { default: ‘www.example.com’ } } } ] },

'v2/swagger.yaml' => {
  openapi: '3.0.1',
  info: {
    title: 'API V2',
    version: 'v2',
    description: 'This is the second version of my API'
  },
  servers: [
    {
      url: '{protocol}://{defaultHost}',
      variables: {
        protocol: {
          default: :https
        },
        defaultHost: {
            default: 'www.example.com'
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}   } end ```

Supporting multiple versions of API

By default, the paths, operations and responses defined in your spec files will be associated with the first Swagger document in swagger_helper.rb. If your API has multiple versions, you should be using separate documents to describe each of them. In order to assign a file with a given version of API, you’ll need to add the swagger_doc tag to each spec specifying its target document name:

```ruby # spec/requests/v2/blogs_spec.rb describe ‘Blogs API’, swagger_doc: ‘v2/swagger.yaml’ do

path ‘/blogs’ do …

path ‘/blogs/id’ do … end ```

Formatting the description literals:

Swagger supports the Markdown syntax to format strings. This can be especially handy if you were to provide a long description of a given API version or endpoint. Use this guide for reference.

NOTE: There is one difference between the official Markdown syntax and Swagger interpretation, namely tables. To create a table like this:

Column1 Column2
cell1 cell2

you should use the following syntax, making sure there is no whitespace at the start of any of the lines:


 | Column1 | Column2 | 
 | | ------- | ------- |
 | cell1 | cell2 |
 

Specifying/Testing API Security

Swagger allows for the specification of different security schemes and their applicability to operations in an API. To leverage this in rswag, you define the schemes globally in swagger_helper.rb and then use the “security” attribute at the operation level to specify which schemes, if any, are applicable to that operation. Swagger supports :basic, :bearer, :apiKey and :oauth2 and :openIdConnect scheme types. See the spec for more info, as this underwent major changes between Swagger 2.0 and Open API 3.0

```ruby # spec/swagger_helper.rb RSpec.configure do |config| config.swagger_root = Rails.root.to_s + ‘/swagger’

config.swagger_docs = { ‘v1/swagger.json’ => { … # note the new Open API 3.0 compliant security structure here, under “components” components: { securitySchemes: { basic_auth: { type: :http, scheme: :basic }, api_key: { type: :apiKey, name: ‘api_key’, in: :query } } } } } end

spec/requests/blogs_spec.rb

describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs’ do

post 'Creates a blog' do
  tags 'Blogs'
  security [ basic_auth: [] ]
  ...

  response '201', 'blog created' do
    let(:Authorization) { "Basic #{::Base64.strict_encode64('jsmith:jspass')}" }
    run_test!
  end

  response '401', 'authentication failed' do
    let(:Authorization) { "Basic #{::Base64.strict_encode64('bogus:bogus')}" }
    run_test!
  end
end   end end

example of documenting an endpoint that handles basic auth and api key based security

describe ‘Auth examples API’ do path ‘/auth-tests/basic-and-api-key’ do post ‘Authenticates with basic auth and api key’ do tags ‘Auth Tests’ operationId ‘testBasicAndApiKey’ security [{ basic_auth: [], api_key: [] }]

  response '204', 'Valid credentials' do
    let(:Authorization) { "Basic #{::Base64.strict_encode64('jsmith:jspass')}" }
    let(:api_key) { 'foobar' }
    run_test!
  end

  response '401', 'Invalid credentials' do
    let(:Authorization) { "Basic #{::Base64.strict_encode64('jsmith:jspass')}" }
    let(:api_key) { 'bar-foo' }
    run_test!
  end
end   end end

```

NOTE: Depending on the scheme types, you’ll be required to assign a corresponding parameter value with each example. For example, :basic auth is required above and so the :Authorization (header) parameter must be set accordingly

Configuration & Customization

The steps described above will get you up and running with minimal setup. However, rswag offers a lot of flexibility to customize as you see fit. Before exploring the various options, you’ll need to be aware of it’s different components. The following table lists each of them and the files that get added/updated as part of a standard install.

Gem Description Added/Updated
rswag-specs Swagger-based DSL for rspec & accompanying rake task for generating Swagger files spec/swagger_helper.rb
rswag-api Rails Engine that exposes your Swagger files as JSON endpoints config/initializers/rswag_api.rb, config/routes.rb
rswag-ui Rails Engine that includes swagger-ui and powers it from your Swagger endpoints config/initializers/rswag-ui.rb, config/routes.rb

Output Location for Generated Swagger Files

You can adjust this in the swagger_helper.rb that’s installed with rswag-specs:

ruby # spec/swagger_helper.rb RSpec.configure do |config| config.swagger_root = Rails.root.to_s + '/your-custom-folder-name' ... end

NOTE: If you do change this, you’ll also need to update the rswag_api.rb initializer (assuming you’re using rswag-api). More on this later.

Input Location for Rspec Tests

By default, rswag will search for integration tests in spec/requests, spec/api and spec/integration. If you want to use tests from other locations, provide the PATTERN argument to rake:

ruby # search for tests in spec/swagger rake rswag:specs:swaggerize PATTERN="spec/swagger/**/*_spec.rb"

Additional rspec options

You can add additional rspec parameters using the ADDITIONAL_RSPEC_OPTS env variable:

ruby # Only include tests tagged "rswag" rake rswag:specs:swaggerize ADDITIONAL_RSPEC_OPTS="--tag rswag"

Referenced Parameters and Schema Definitions

Swagger allows you to describe JSON structures inline with your operation descriptions OR as referenced globals. For example, you might have a standard response structure for all failed operations. Again, this is a structure that changed since swagger 2.0. Notice the new “schemas” section for these. Rather than repeating the schema in every operation spec, you can define it globally and provide a reference to it in each spec:

```ruby # spec/swagger_helper.rb config.swagger_docs = { ‘v1/swagger.json’ => { openapi: ‘3.0.0’, info: { title: ‘API V1’ }, components: { schemas: { errors_object: { type: ‘object’, properties: { errors: { ‘$ref’ => ‘#/components/schemas/errors_map’ } } }, errors_map: { type: ‘object’, additionalProperties: { type: ‘array’, items: { type: ‘string’ } } }, blog: { type: ‘object’, properties: { id: { type: ‘integer’ }, title: { type: ‘string’ }, content: { type: ‘string’, nullable: true }, thumbnail: { type: ‘string’, nullable: true } }, required: %w[id title] }, new_blog: { type: ‘object’, properties: { title: { type: ‘string’ }, content: { type: ‘string’, nullable: true }, thumbnail: { type: ‘string’, format: ‘binary’, nullable: true } }, required: %w[title] } } } } }

spec/requests/blogs_spec.rb

describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs’ do

post 'Creates a blog' do

  parameter name: :new_blog, in: :body, schema: { '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/new_blog' }

  response 422, 'invalid request' do
    schema '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/errors_object'   ... end

spec/requests/comments_spec.rb

describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs/blog_id/comments’ do

post 'Creates a comment' do

  response 422, 'invalid request' do
    schema '$ref' => '#/components/schemas/errors_object'   ... end ```

Request examples

```ruby # spec/integration/blogs_spec.rb describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs/blog_id’ do

get 'Retrieves a blog' do

  request_body_example value: { some_field: 'Foo' }, name: 'request_example_1', summary: 'A request example'

  response 200, 'blog found' do
    ... ```

to use the actual request from the spec as the example:

```ruby config.after(:each, operation: true, use_as_request_example: true) do |spec| spec.metadata[:operation][:request_examples] ||= []

example = { value: JSON.parse(request.body.string, symbolize_names: true), name: ‘request_example_1’, summary: ‘A request example’ }

spec.metadata[:operation][:request_examples] « example end ```

Response headers

In Rswag, you could use header method inside the response block to specify header objects for this response. Rswag will validate your response headers with those header objects and inject them into the generated swagger file:

```ruby # spec/requests/comments_spec.rb describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs/blog_id/comments’ do

post 'Creates a comment' do

  response 422, 'invalid request' do
    header 'X-Rate-Limit-Limit', schema: { type: :integer }, description: 'The number of allowed requests in the current period'
    header 'X-Rate-Limit-Remaining', schema: { type: :integer }, description: 'The number of remaining requests in the current period'   ... end ```

Nullable or Optional Response Headers

You can include nullable or required to specify whether a response header must be present or may be null. When nullable is not included, the headers validation validates that the header response is non-null. When required is not included, the headers validation validates the the header response is passed.

```ruby # spec/integration/comments_spec.rb describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs/blog_id/comments’ do

get 'Gets a list of comments' do

  response 200, 'blog found' do
    header 'X-Cursor', schema: { type: :string, nullable: true }, description: 'The cursor to get the next page of comments.'
    header 'X-Per-Page', schema: { type: :integer }, required: false, description: 'The number of comments per page.'   ... end ```

Response examples

You can provide custom response examples to the generated swagger file by calling the method examples inside the response block: However, auto generated example responses are now enabled by default in rswag. See below.

```ruby # spec/requests/blogs_spec.rb describe ‘Blogs API’ do

path ‘/blogs/blog_id’ do

get 'Retrieves a blog' do

  response 200, 'blog found' do
    example 'application/json', :example_key, {
        id: 1,
        title: 'Hello world!',
        content: '...'
      }
    example 'application/json', :example_key_2, {
        id: 1,
        title: 'Hello world!',
        content: '...'
      }, "Summary of the example", "Longer description of the example"   ... end ```

Enable auto generation examples from responses

To enable examples generation from responses add callback above run_test! like:

ruby after do |example| content = example.metadata[:response][:content] || {} example_spec = { "application/json"=>{ examples: { test_example: { value: JSON.parse(response.body, symbolize_names: true) } } } } example.metadata[:response][:content] = content.deep_merge(example_spec) end

Dry Run Option

The --dry-run option is enabled by default for Rspec 3, but if you need to disable it you can use the environment variable SWAGGER_DRY_RUN=0 during the generation command or add the following to your config/environments/test.rb:

ruby RSpec.configure do |config| config.swagger_dry_run = false end

Running tests without documenting

If you want to use Rswag for testing without adding it to you swagger docs, you can provide the document tag: ruby describe 'Blogs API' do path '/blogs/{blog_id}' do get 'Retrieves a blog' do # documentation is now disabled for this response only response 200, 'blog found', document: false do ...

You can also reenable documentation for specific responses only: ```ruby # documentation is now disabled describe ‘Blogs API’, document: false do path ‘/blogs/blog_id’ do get ‘Retrieves a blog’ do # documentation is reenabled for this response only response 200, ‘blog found’, document: true do … end

  response 401, 'special case' do
    ...
  end ```
rswag helper methods

### Route Prefix for Swagger JSON Endpoints ###

The functionality to expose Swagger files, such as those generated by rswag-specs, as JSON endpoints is implemented as a Rails Engine. As with any Engine, you can change it’s mount prefix in routes.rb:

```ruby TestApp::Application.routes.draw do …

mount Rswag::Api::Engine => ‘your-custom-prefix’ end ```

Assuming a Swagger file exists at <swagger_root>/v1/swagger.json, this configuration would expose the file as the following JSON endpoint:

GET http://<hostname>/your-custom-prefix/v1/swagger.json

Root Location for Swagger Files

You can adjust this in the rswag_api.rb initializer that’s installed with rspec-api:

ruby Rswag::Api.configure do |c| c.swagger_root = Rails.root.to_s + '/your-custom-folder-name' ... end

NOTE: If you’re using rswag-specs to generate Swagger files, you’ll want to ensure they both use the same <swagger_root>. The reason for separate settings is to maintain independence between the two gems. For example, you could install rswag-api independently and create your Swagger files manually.

Dynamic Values for Swagger JSON

There may be cases where you need to add dynamic values to the Swagger JSON that’s returned by rswag-api. For example, you may want to provide an explicit host name. Rather than hardcoding it, you can configure a filter that’s executed prior to serializing every Swagger document:

```ruby Rswag::Api.configure do |c| …

c.swagger_filter = lambda { |swagger, env| swagger[‘host’] = env[‘HTTP_HOST’] } end ```

Note how the filter is passed the rack env for the current request. This provides a lot of flexibility. For example, you can assign the “host” property (as shown) or you could inspect session information or an Authorization header and remove operations based on user permissions.

Custom Headers for Swagger Files

You can specify custom headers for serving your generated Swagger JSON. For example you may want to force a specific charset for the ‘Content-Type’ header. You can configure a hash of headers to be sent with the request:

```ruby Rswag::Api.configure do |c| …

c.swagger_headers = { ‘Content-Type’ => ‘application/json; charset=UTF-8’ } end ```

Take care when overriding Content-Type if you serve both YAML and JSON files as it will no longer switch the Content-Type header correctly.

Enable Swagger Endpoints for swagger-ui

You can update the rswag_ui.rb initializer, installed with rswag-ui, to specify which Swagger endpoints should be available to power the documentation UI. If you’re using rswag-api, these should correspond to the Swagger endpoints it exposes. When the UI is rendered, you’ll see these listed in a drop-down to the top right of the page:

ruby Rswag::Ui.configure do |c| c.swagger_endpoint '/api-docs/v1/swagger.json', 'API V1 Docs' c.swagger_endpoint '/api-docs/v2/swagger.json', 'API V2 Docs' end

Enable Simple Basic Auth for swagger-ui

You can also update the rswag_ui.rb initializer, installed with rswag-ui to specify a username and password should you want to keep your documentation private.

ruby Rswag::Ui.configure do |c| c.basic_auth_enabled = true c.basic_auth_credentials 'username', 'password' end

Route Prefix for the swagger-ui

Similar to rswag-api, you can customize the swagger-ui path by changing it’s mount prefix in routes.rb:

```ruby TestApp::Application.routes.draw do …

mount Rswag::Api::Engine => ‘api-docs’ mount Rswag::Ui::Engine => ‘your-custom-prefix’ end ```

Customizing the swagger-ui

The swagger-ui provides several options for customizing it’s behavior, all of which are documented here https://github.com/swagger-api/swagger-ui/tree/2.x#swaggerui. If you need to tweak these or customize the overall look and feel of your swagger-ui, then you’ll need to provide your own version of index.html. You can do this with the following generator.

```ruby rails g rswag:ui:custom

```

This will add a local version that you can modify at app/views/rswag/ui/home/index.html.erb. For example, it will let you to add your own <title> and favicon.

To replace the “Swagger sponsored by” brand image, you can add the following script to the generated file:

```html

      var logo = document.getElementsByClassName('link');

      logo[0].children[0].alt = "My API";
      logo[0].children[0].src = "/favicon.png";
  });   }); })(); </script> ```

The above script would expect to find an image named favicon.png in the public folder.

Serve UI Assets Directly from your Web Server

Rswag ships with an embedded version of the swagger-ui, which is a static collection of JavaScript and CSS files. These assets are served by the rswag-ui middleware. However, for optimal performance you may want to serve them directly from your web server (e.g. Apache or NGINX). To do this, you’ll need to copy them to the web server root. This is the “public” folder in a typical Rails application.

bundle exec rake rswag:ui:copy_assets[public/api-docs]

NOTE:: The provided subfolder MUST correspond to the UI mount prefix - “api-docs” by default.

Notes to test swagger output locally with swagger editor docker pull swaggerapi/swagger-editor docker run -d -p 80:8080 swaggerapi/swagger-editor This will run the swagger editor in the docker daemon and can be accessed at http://localhost. From here, you can use the UI to load the generated swagger.json to validate the output.

Custom :getter option for parameter

To avoid conflicts with Rspec include matcher and other possible intersections like status method:

``` … parameter name: :status, getter: :filter_status, in: :query, schema: { type: :string, enum: %w[one two three], }, required: false

let(:status) { nil } # will not be used in query string let(:filter_status) { ‘one’ } # &status=one will be provided in final query ```

Linting with RuboCop RSpec

When you lint your RSpec spec files with rubocop-rspec, it will fail to detect RSpec aliases that Rswag defines. Make sure to use rubocop-rspec 2.0 or newer and add the following to your .rubocop.yml:

yaml inherit_gem: rswag-specs: .rubocop_rspec_alias_config.yml