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🦋 Auto-validates api requests, responses, and securities using ExpressJS and an OpenAPI 3.x specification

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express-openapi-validator

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An OpenApi validator for ExpressJS that automatically validates API requests and responses using an OpenAPI 3 specification.

express-openapi-validator is an unopinionated library that integrates with new and existing API applications. express-openapi-validator lets you write code the way you want; it does not impose any coding convention or project layout. Simply, install the validator onto your express app, point it to your OpenAPI 3 specification, then define and implement routes the way you prefer. See an example.

Features:

  • ✔️ request validation
  • ✔️ response validation
  • 👮 security validation / custom security functions
  • 👽 3rd party / custom formats
  • 🎈 file upload

GitHub stars Twitter URL

Install

npm i express-openapi-validator

Usage

  1. Install the openapi validator
new OpenApiValidator({
  apiSpec: './test/resources/openapi.yaml',
  validateRequests: true, // (default)
  validateResponses: true, // false by default
}).install(app);
  1. Register an error handler
app.use((err, req, res, next) => {
  // format error
  res.status(err.status || 500).json({
    message: err.message,
    errors: err.errors,
  });
});

Note: Ensure express is configured with all relevant body parsers. body parser middleware functions must be specified prior to any validated routes. See an example.

Usage (options)

See Advanced Usage options to:

  • inline api specs as JSON.
  • tweak the file upload configuration.
  • customize authentication with securityHandlers.
  • use OpenAPI 3.0.x 3rd party and custom formats.
  • and more...

The following demonstrates how to use express-openapi-validator to auto validate requests and responses. It also includes file upload!

See the complete source code for the example below:

const express = require('express');
const path = require('path');
const cookieParser = require('cookie-parser');
const bodyParser = require('body-parser');
const logger = require('morgan');
const http = require('http');
const app = express();

// 1. Import the express-openapi-validator library
const OpenApiValidator = require('express-openapi-validator').OpenApiValidator;

// 2. Set up body parsers for the request body types you expect
//    Must be specified prior to endpoints in 5.
app.use(bodyParser.json());
app.use(bodyParser.text());
app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded());

app.use(logger('dev'));
app.use(express.json());
app.use(express.urlencoded({ extended: false }));
app.use(cookieParser());
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public')));

// 3. (optionally) Serve the OpenAPI spec
app.use('/spec', express.static(spec));

// 4. Install the OpenApiValidator onto your express app
new OpenApiValidator({
  apiSpec: './openapi.yaml',
  // securityHandlers: { ... }, // <-- if using security
  // validateResponses: true, // <-- to validate responses
  // unknownFormats: ['my-format'] // <-- to provide custom formats
}).install(app);

// 5. Define routes using Express
app.get('/v1/pets', function(req, res, next) {
  res.json([{ id: 1, name: 'max' }, { id: 2, name: 'mini' }]);
});

app.post('/v1/pets', function(req, res, next) {
  res.json({ name: 'sparky' });
});

app.get('/v1/pets/:id', function(req, res, next) {
  res.json({ id: req.params.id, name: 'sparky' });
});

// 5a. Define route(s) to upload file(s)
app.post('/v1/pets/:id/photos', function(req, res, next) {
  // files are found in req.files
  // non-file multipart params can be found as such: req.body['my-param']

  res.json({
    files_metadata: req.files.map(f => ({
      originalname: f.originalname,
      encoding: f.encoding,
      mimetype: f.mimetype,
      // Buffer of file conents
      buffer: f.buffer,
    })),
  });
});

// 6. Create an Express error handler
app.use((err, req, res, next) => {
  // 7. Customize errors
  res.status(err.status || 500).json({
    message: err.message,
    errors: err.errors,
  });
});

API Validation Response Examples

Validates a query parameter with a value constraint

curl -s http://localhost:3000/v1/pets/as |jq
{
  "message": "request.params.id should be integer",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": ".params.id",
      "message": "should be integer",
      "errorCode": "type.openapi.validation"
    }
  ]
}

Validates a query parameter with a range constraint

 curl -s 'http://localhost:3000/v1/pets?limit=25' |jq
{
  "message": "request.query should have required property 'type', request.query.limit should be <= 20",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": ".query.type",
      "message": "should have required property 'type'",
      "errorCode": "required.openapi.validation"
    },
    {
      "path": ".query.limit",
      "message": "should be <= 20",
      "errorCode": "maximum.openapi.validation"
    }
  ]
}

Validates securities e.g. API Key

 curl -s --request POST \
  --url http://localhost:3000/v1/pets \
  --data '{}' |jq
{
  "message": "'X-API-Key' header required",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": "/v1/pets",
      "message": "'X-API-Key' header required"
    }
  ]
}

Providing the header passes OpenAPI validation.

Note: that your Express middleware or endpoint logic can then provide additional checks.

curl -XPOST http://localhost:3000/v1/pets \
  --header 'X-Api-Key: XXXXX' \
  --header 'content-type: application/json' \
  -d '{"name": "spot"}' | jq

{
  "id": 4,
  "name": "spot"
}

Validates content-type

curl -s --request POST \
  --url http://localhost:3000/v1/pets \
  --header 'content-type: application/xml' \
  --header 'x-api-key: XXXX' \
  --data '{
        "name": "test"
}' |jq
  "message": "unsupported media type application/xml",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": "/v1/pets",
      "message": "unsupported media type application/xml"
    }
  ]
}

Validates a POST request body

curl -s --request POST \
  --url http://localhost:3000/v1/pets \
  --header 'content-type: application/json' \
  --header 'x-api-key: XXXX' \
  --data '{}'|jq
{
  "message": "request.body should have required property 'name'",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": ".body.name",
      "message": "should have required property 'name'",
      "errorCode": "required.openapi.validation"
    }
  ]
}

File Upload (out of the box)

curl -XPOST http://localhost:3000/v1/pets/10/photos -F file=@app.js|jq
{
  "files_metadata": [
    {
      "originalname": "app.js",
      "encoding": "7bit",
      "mimetype": "application/octet-stream"
    }
  ]
}

Validates responses (optional)

Errors in response validation return 500, not of 400

/v1/pets/99 will return a response that does not match the spec

 curl -s 'http://localhost:3000/v1/pets/99' |jq
{
  "message": ".response should have required property 'name', .response should have required property 'id'",
  "errors": [
    {
      "path": ".response.name",
      "message": "should have required property 'name'",
      "errorCode": "required.openapi.validation"
    },
    {
      "path": ".response.id",
      "message": "should have required property 'id'",
      "errorCode": "required.openapi.validation"
    }
  ]
}

...and much more. Try it out!

Advanced Usage

OpenApiValidator Options

express-openapi validator provides a good deal of flexibility via its options.

Options are provided via the options object. Options take the following form:

new OpenApiValidator(options).install({
  apiSpec: './openapi.yaml',
  validateRequests: true,
  validateResponses: true,
  unknownFormats: ['phone-number', 'uuid'],
  multerOpts: { ... },
  securityHandlers: {
    ApiKeyAuth: (req, scopes, schema) => {
      throw { status: 401, message: 'sorry' }
    }
  }
});

▪️ apiSpec (required)

Specifies the path to an OpenAPI 3 specification or a JSON object representing the OpenAPI 3 specificiation

apiSpec: './path/to/my-openapi-spec.yaml'

or

  apiSpec: {
  openapi: '3.0.1',
  info: {...},
  servers: [...],
  paths: {...},
  components: {
    responses: {...},
    schemas: {...}
  }
}

▪️ validateRequests (optional)

Determines whether the validator should validate requests.

  • true (default) - validate requests.
  • false - do not validate requests.

▪️ validateResponses (optional)

Determines whether the validator should validate responses. Also accepts response validation options.

  • true - validate responses in 'strict' mode i.e. responses MUST match the schema.

  • false (default) - do not validate responses

  • { ... } - validate responses with options

    removeAdditional

    • "failing" - additional properties that fail schema validation are automatically removed from the response.

    For example:

     validateResponses: {
       removeAdditional: 'failing'
     }

▪️ unknownFormats (optional)

Defines how the validator should behave if an unknown or custom format is encountered.

  • true (default) - When an unknown format is encountered, the validator will report a 400 error.

  • [string] (recommended for unknown formats) - An array of unknown format names that will be ignored by the validator. This option can be used to allow usage of third party schemas with format(s), but still fail if another unknown format is used.

    e.g.

    unknownFormats: ['phone-number', 'uuid']
  • "ignore" - to log warning during schema compilation and always pass validation. This option is not recommended, as it allows to mistype format name and it won't be validated without any error message.

▪️ multerOpts (optional)

Specifies the options to passthrough to multer. express-openapi-validator uses multer to handle file uploads. see multer opts

▪️ coerceTypes (optional)

Determines whether the validator should coerce value types to match the type defined in the OpenAPI spec.

  • true (default) - coerce scalar data types.
  • false - no type coercion.
  • "array" - in addition to coercions between scalar types, coerce scalar data to an array with one element and vice versa (as required by the schema).

▪️ securityHandlers (optional)

Note: securityHandlers are an optional component. securityHandlers provide a convenience, whereby the request, declared scopes, and the security schema itself are provided as parameters to each securityHandlers callback that you define. The code you write in each callback can then perform authentication and authorization checks. Note that the same can be achieved using standard Express middleware. The difference is that securityHandlers provide you the OpenAPI schema data described in your specification_. Ulimately, this means, you don't have to duplicate that information in your code.

All in all, securityHandlers are purely optional and are provided as a convenience.

Security handlers specify a set of custom security handlers to be used to validate security i.e. authentication and authorization. If a securityHandlers object is specified, a handler must be defined for all securities. If `securityHandlers are not specified, a default handler is always used. The default handler will validate against the OpenAPI spec, then call the next middleware.

If securityHandlers are specified, the validator will validate against the OpenAPI spec, then call the security handler providing it the Express request, the security scopes, and the security schema object.

  • securityHandlers is an object that maps security keys to security handler functions. Each security key must correspond to securityScheme name. The securityHandlers object signature is as follows:

    {
      securityHandlers: {
        [securityKey]: function(
          req: Express.Request,
          scopes: string[],
          schema: SecuritySchemeObject
        ): void,
      }
    }

    SecuritySchemeObject

    For example:

    securityHandlers: {
      ApiKeyAuth: function(req, scopes, schema) {
        console.log('apikey handler throws custom error', scopes, schema);
        throw Error('my message');
      },
    }

    The express-openapi-validator performs a basic validation pass prior to delegating to security handlers. If basic validation passes, security handler function(s) are invoked.

    In order to signal an auth failure, the security handler function must either:

    1. throw { status: 403, message: 'forbidden' }
    2. throw Error('optional message')
    3. return false
    4. return a promise which resolves to false e.g Promise.resolve(false)
    5. return a promise rejection e.g.
      • Promise.reject({ status: 401, message: 'yikes' });
      • Promise.reject(Error('optional 'message')
      • Promise.reject(false)

    Note: error status 401 is returned, unless option i. above is used

    Some examples:

    securityHandlers: {
      ApiKeyAuth: (req, scopes, schema) => {
        throw Error('my message');
      },
      OpenID: async (req, scopes, schema) => {
        throw { status: 403, message: 'forbidden' }
      },
      BasicAuth: (req, scopes, schema) => {
        return Promise.resolve(false);
      },
      ...
    }

    In order to grant authz, the handler function must either:

    • return true
    • return a promise which resolves to true

    Some examples

    securityHandlers: {
      ApiKeyAuth: (req, scopes, schema) => {
        return true;
      },
      BearerAuth: async (req, scopes, schema) => {
        return true;
      },
      ...
    }

    Each securityHandlers securityKey must match a components/securitySchemes property

    components:
      securitySchemes:
        ApiKeyAuth: # <-- Note this name must be used as the name handler function property
          type: apiKey
          in: header
          name: X-API-Key

    See OpenAPI 3 authentication for securityScheme and security documentation

    See examples from unit tests

The Base URL

The validator will only validate requests — and (optionally) responses — that are under the server's base URL.

This is useful for those times when the API and frontend are being served by the same application. (More detail about the base URL.)

servers:
  - url: https://api.example.com/v1

The validation applies to all paths defined under this base URL. Routes in your app that are not under the base URL—such as pages—will not be validated.

URL Validated?
https://api.example.com/v1/users
https://api.example.com/index.html no; not under the base URL

FAQ

Q: Can I use express-openapi-validator with swagger-ui-express?

A: Yes. Be sure to use the swagger-ui-express serve middleware prior to installing OpenApiValidator. This will ensure that swagger-ui-express is able to fully prepare the spec before before OpenApiValidator attempts to use it. For example:

const swaggerUi = require('swagger-ui-express')
const OpenApiValidator = require('express-openapi-validator').OpenApiValidator

...

app.use('/', swaggerUi.serve, swaggerUi.setup(documentation))

new OpenApiValidator({
  apiSpec, // api spec JSON object
  //... other options
  }
}).install(app)

Contributors ✨

Contributions welcome! Here's how to contribute.

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Carmine DiMascio
Carmine DiMascio

💻 ⚠️ 🚇
Sheldhur Mornor
Sheldhur Mornor

💻 ⚠️
Andrey Trebler
Andrey Trebler

💻 ⚠️
richdouglasevans
richdouglasevans

📖
Miran Setinc
Miran Setinc

💻
Frank Calise
Frank Calise

💻
Gonen Dukas
Gonen Dukas

🤔 ⚠️
Sven Eliasson
Sven Eliasson

💻 ⚠️
Spencer Brown
Spencer Brown

💻 ⚠️

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

License

MIT

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🦋 Auto-validates api requests, responses, and securities using ExpressJS and an OpenAPI 3.x specification

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