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API building tools on top of ActionController. Also, an awesome name.

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Rocket Pants! Build Status

Please Note: Work on RocketPants 2.0 is currently underway on the 2.0-rewrite branch. Please check there before requesting features.

Introduction

First thing's first, you're probably asking yourself - "Why the ridiculous name?". It's simple, really - RocketPants is memorable, and sounds completely bad ass. - everything a library needs.

At its core, RocketPants is a set of tools (built around existing toolsets such as ActionPack) to make it easier to build well-designed APIs in Ruby and more importantly, along side Rails. You can think of it like Grape, a fantastic library which RocketPants was originally inspired by but with deeper Rails and ActionPack integration.

Key Features

Why use RocketPants over alternatives like Grape or normal Rails? The reasons we built it come down to a couple of simple things:

  1. It's opinionated (like Grape) - In this case, we dictate a certain JSON structure we've found nice to work with (after having worked with and investigated a large number of other apis), it makes it simple to add metadata along side requests and the like.
  2. Simple and Often Automatic Response Metadata - RocketPants automatically takes care of sending metadata about paginated responses and arrays where possible. This means as a user, you only need to worry about writing expose object_or_presenter in your controller and RocketPants will do it's best to send as much information back to the user.
  3. Extended Error Support - RocketPants has a built in framework to manage errors it knows how to handle (in the forms of mapping exceptions to a well defined JSON structure) as well as tools to make it simple to hook up to Airbrake and do things such as including an error identifier in the response.
  4. It's built on ActionPack - One of the key differentiators to Grape is that RocketPants embraces ActionPack and uses the modular components included from Rails 3.0 onwards to provide things you're familiar with already such as filters. If you're using Strong Parameters (e.g. in Rails 4), we'll even give you support for that.
  5. Semi-efficient Caching Support - Thanks to a combination of Rails middleware and collection vs. resource distinctions, RocketPants makes it relatively easy to implement "Efficient Validation" (See here). As a developer, this means you get even more benefits of http caching where possible, without the need to generate full requests when etags are present.
  6. Simple tools to consume RocketPants apis - RocketPants includes the RocketPants::Client class which builds upon APISmith to make it easier to build clients e.g. automatically converting paginated responses back.
  7. Built-in Header Metadata Support - APIs can easily expose Link: headers (it's even partly built-in for paginated data - see below), and request metadata (e.g. Object count, etc.) can easily be embedded in the headers of the response, making useful HEAD requests.
  8. Out of the Box ActiveRecord mapping - We'll automatically take care of mapping ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound, ActiveRecord::RecordNotSaved and ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid for you, even including validation messages where possible.
  9. Support for active_model_serializers - If you want to use ActiveModelSerializers, we'll take care of it. Even better, in your expose call, pass through :serializer as expected and we'll automatically take care of invoking it for you.

Examples

A full example application

Learn better by reading code? There is also have an example app mixing models and api clients over at Sutto/transperth-api that is built using RocketPants.

Example Server Code

Say, for example, you have a basic Food model:

class Food < ActiveRecord::Base
  include RocketPants::Cacheable
end
class FoodsController < RocketPants::Base

  version 1

  # The list of foods is paginated for 5 minutes, the food itself is cached
  # until it's modified (using Efficient Validation)
  caches :index, :show, :cache_for => 5.minutes

  def index
    expose Food.paginate(:page => params[:page])
  end

  def show
    expose Food.find(params[:id])
  end

end

And in the router we'd just use the normal REST-like routes in Rails:

api :version => 1 do
  resources :foods, :only => [:index, :show]
end

And then, using this example, hitting GET http://localhost:3000/1/foods would result in:

{
  "response": [{
    "id":    1,
    "name": "Delicious Food"
  }, {
    "id":   2,
    "name": "More Delicious Food"
  }],
  "count": 2,
  "pagination": {
    "previous": nil,
    "next":     nil,
    "current":  1,
    "per_page": 10,
    "count":    2,
    "pages":    1
  }
}

with the Cache-Control header set whilst hitting GET http://localhost:3000/1/foods/1 would return:

{
  "response": {
    "id":    1,
    "name": "Delicious Food"
  }
}

with the Etag header set.

JSONP

If you want to enable JSONP support, it's as simple as calling jsonp in your class method:

class MyController < RocketPants::Base
  jsonp
end

By default this will use the callback parameter, e.g. GET /1/my?callback=console.log. To change this parameter, specify the parameter option like so:

class MyController < RocketPants::Base
  jsonp :parameter => :jsonp
end

Finally, to disable it in a subclass, simple call jsonp in the child and pass :enable => false as an option.

Header Metadata

When RocketPants.header_metadata or config.rocket_pants.header_metadata are set to true, RocketPants can automatically expose metadata via X-Api- headers. Likewise, for paginated responses, if you implement page_url(page_number) in your controller with header metadata enabled, RocketPants will automatically add HTTP Link Headers for the next, prev, first and last to your response.

Likewise, you can manually add link headers using the link(rel, href, attributes = {}) method like so:

def index
  # Not an actual rel, just an example...
  link :profile, user_profile_path(current_user)
  expose current_user
end

For batch adding links, you can use the links method:

def index
  # Probably not the best example...
  links :next => random_wallpaper_path, :prev => random_wallpaper_path
  expose Wallpaper.random
end

Example Client Code

Using the example above, we could then use the following to write a client:

class FoodsClient < RocketPants::Client

  version  1
  base_uri 'http://localhost:3000'

  class Food < APISmith::Smash
    property :id
    property :name
  end

  def foods
    get 'foods', :transformer => Food
  end

  def food(id)
    get "foods/#{id}", :transformer => Food
  end

end

General Structure

RocketPants builds upon the mixin-based approach to ActionController-based rails applications that Rails 3 made possible. Instead of including everything like Rails does in ActionController::Base, RocketPants only includes the bare minimum to make apis. In the near future, it may be modified to work with ActionController::Base for the purposes of better compatibility with other gems.

Out of the box, we use the following ActionController components:

  • ActionController::HideActions - Lets you hide methods from actions.
  • ActionController::UrlFor - url_for helpers / tweaks by Rails to make integration with routes work better.
  • ActionController::Redirecting - Allows you to use redirect_to.
  • ActionController::ConditionalGet - Adds support for Rails caching controls, e.g. fresh_when and expires_in.
  • ActionController::RackDelegation - Lets you reset the session and set the response body.
  • ActionController::RecordIdentifier - Gives dom_class and dom_id methods, used for polymorphic routing.
  • ActionController::HttpAuthentication Mixins - Gives Token, Digest and Basic authentication.
  • AbstractController::Callbacks - Adds support for callbacks / filters.
  • ActionController::Rescue - Lets you use rescue_from.

And added our own:

  • RocketPants::UrlFor - Automatically includes the current version when generating URLs from the controller.
  • RocketPants::Respondable - The core of RocketPants, the code that handles converting objects to the different container types.
  • RocketPants::Versioning - Allows versioning requirements on the controller to ensure it is only callable with a specific api version.
  • RocketPants::Instrumentation - Adds Instrumentation notifications making it easy to use and hook into with Rails.
  • RocketPants::Caching - Implements time-based caching for index actions and etag-based efficient validation for singular resources.
  • RocketPants::ErrorHandling - Short hand to create errors as well as simplifications to catch and render a standardised error representation.
  • RocketPants::Rescuable - Allows you to hook in to rescuing exceptions and to make it easy to post notifications to tools such as AirBrake.
  • RocketPants::StrongParameters - Adds support for strong parameters.

To use RocketPants, instead of inheriting from ActionController::Base, just inherit from RocketPants::Base.

Likewise, in Rails applications RocketPants also adds RocketPants::CacheMiddleware before the controller endpoints to implement "Efficient Validation".

Installing RocketPants

Installing RocketPants is a simple matter of adding:

gem 'rocket_pants', '~> 1.0'

To your Gemfile and running bundle install. Next, instead of inheriting from ActionController::Base, simply inherit from RocketPants::Base. For example, if you're working with an API-only application, instead of having this at the top of application_controller.rb:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base

you would do this:

class ApplicationController < RocketPants::Base

Your other controllers would inherit from ApplicationController as usual. For example:

class UsersController < ApplicationController

Otherwise, you can generate a new api_controller.rb base controller which inherits from RocketPants::Base, and place all your logic there. For example:

In application_controller.rb:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base

In api_controller.rb:

class ApiController < RocketPants::Base

# logic goes here

In your other controllers, such as users_controller.rb:

class UsersController < ApiController

Configuration

Setting up RocketPants in your rails application is pretty simple and requires a minimal amount of effort. Inside your environment configuration, RocketPants offers the following options to control how it's configured (and their expanded alternatives):

  • config.rocket_pants.use_caching - Defaulting to true for production environments and false elsewhere, defines whether RocketPants caching setup as described below is used.
  • config.rocket_pants.cache - A Moneta::Store / Moneta adapter instance (depending on the version of Moneta in use)used as the RocketPants cache, defaulting to a memory-based. Change for proper caching. (See here for more information on Moneta.)
  • config.rocket_pants.header_metadata - Defaults to false, if true enables header metadata in the application.
  • config.rocket_pants.pass_through_errors - Defaults true in development and test, false otherwise. If true, will pass through errors up the stack otherwise will swallow them and return a system error via JSON for any unhandled exceptions.

Version Controllers / Routes

The current preferred way of dealing with version APIs in RocketPants is to do it using routes in the form of /:version/:endpoint - e.g. GET /1/users/324. RocketPants has support in the router and controller level for enforcing and controlling this. In the controller, it's a matter of specifying the required API versions:

class UsersController < RocketPants::Base
  version 1 # A single version
  # or...
  version 2..3 # 2-3 support this controller
end

And in the case of multiple versions, I strongly encourage namespaces the controllers inside modules. If the version param (as specified) by the URL does not match, then the specified controller will return an :invalid_version error as shown below.

Next, in your config/routes.rb file, you can also declare versions using the following syntax and it will automatically set up the routes for you:

api :version => 1 do
  get 'x', :to => 'test#item'
end

Which will route GET /1/x to TestController#item.

Likewise, you can specify a route for multiple versions by:

api :versions => 1..3 do
  get 'x', :to => 'test#item'
end

How do I layout file system versions versions?

Using users an an example, for a namespaced / modularised version controller the file system location would be app/controllers/api/v1/users_controller.rb - Rails uses it's own inflection to look for Api::V1::UsersController in that file. In here, you'd write your control roughly like:

class Api::V1::UsersController < RocketPants::Base
  version 1

  def index
    expose User.all # Not what we'd actually do, of course.
  end

end

Note that I'd personally also introduce Api::V1::BaseController, and inherit from that - that way any shared logic (e.g. authentication) can be put in there.

Finally, in the routes - the easiest way would be in the api declaration:

api versions: 1, module: "api/v1" do
  resources :users, only: [:index]  
end

Which will set up /1/users to hit the index action of Api::V1::UsersController - the module parameter comes from the rails built in routing configuration: http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionDispatch/Routing/Mapper/Scoping.html#method-i-scope

Working with data

When using RocketPants, you write your controllers the same as how you would with normal ActionController, the only thing that changes is how you handle data. head and redirect_to still work exactly the same as in Rails, but instead of using respond_with and render you instead use RocketPant's exposes methods (and it's kind). Namely:

  • expose / exposes - The core of all type conversion, will check the type of data and automatically convert it to the correct type (for either a singular, collection or paginated resource).
  • paginated - Render an object as a paginated collection of data.
  • collection - Renders a collection of objects - e.g. an array of users.
  • resource - Renders a single object.

Along side the above that wrap data, it also provides:

  • responds - Renders JSON, normalizing the object first (unwrapped).
  • render_json - Renders an object as JSON.

Singular Resources

Singular resources will be converted to JSON via serializable_hash, passing through any objects and then wrapped in an object as the response key:

{
  "response": {
    "your": "serialized-object"
  }
}

Collections

Similar to singular resources, but also include extra data about the count of items.

{
  "response": [{
    "name": "object-one"
  }, {
    "name": "object-two"
  }],
  "count": 2
}

Paginated Collections

The final type, similar to collection objects but it includes details about the paginated data:

{
  "response": [
    {"name": "object-one"},
    {"name": "object-two"},
    {"name": "object-three"},
    {"name": "object-four"},
    {"name": "object-five"}
  ],
  "count": 5,
  "pagination": {
    "previous": 1,
    "next":     3,
    "current":  2,
    "per_page": 5,
    "count":    23,
    "pages":    5
  }
}

Registering / Dealing with Errors

One of the built in features of RocketPants is the ability to handle rescuing / controlling exceptions and more importantly to handle mapping exceptions to names, messages and error codes.

This comes in useful when you wish to automatically convert exceptions such as ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound (Note: This case is handled already) to a structured bit of data in the response. Namely, it makes it trivial to generate objects that follow the JSON structure of:

{
  "error":             "standard_error_name",
  "error_description": "A translated error message describing what happened."
}

It also adds a facilities to make it easy to add extra information to the response.

RocketPants will also attempt to convert all errors in the controller, defaulting to "system" as the exception name and message as the error description. We also provide a registry to allow throwing exception from their symbolic name like so:

error! :not_found

In the controller.

Out of the box, the following exceptions come pre-registered and setup. For each of them, you can either use the error form (error! :error_key) or you can raise an instance of the exception class like normal.

Note that inside your application, you can also use rake rocket_pants:errors to view a list of all registered errors, including custom ones.

Error Key Exception Class HTTP Status Description
:throttled RocketPants::Throttled 503 Unavailable The user has hit an api throttled error.
:unauthenticated RocketPants::Unauthenticated 401 Unauthorized The user doesn't have valid authentication details.
:invalid_version RocketPants::Invalidversion 404 Not Found An invalid API version was specified.
:not_implemented RocketPants::NotImplemented 503 Unavailable The specified endpoint is not yet implemented.
:not_found RocketPants::NotFound 404 Not Found The given resource could not be found.
:invalid_resource* RocketPants::InvalidResource* 422 Unprocessable Entity The given resource was invalid.
:bad_request RocketPants::BadRequest 400 Bad Request The given request was not as expected.
:conflict RocketPants::Conflict 409 Conflict The resource was a conflict with the existing version.
:forbidden RocketPants::Forbidden 403 Forbidden The requested action was forbidden.

Note that error also excepts a Hash of contextual options, many which will be passed through to the Rails I18N subsystem. E.g:

error! :throttled, :max_per_hour => 100

Will look up the translation rocket_pants.errors.throttled in your I18N files, and call them with :max_per_hour as an argument.

Finally, You can use this to also pass custom values to include in the response, e.g:

error! :throttled, :metadata => {:code => 123}

Will return something similar to:

{
  "error":             "throttled",
  "error_description": "The example error message goes here",
  "code":              123
}

* Note that :invalid_resource (RocketPants::InvalidResource), although registered as a default RocketPants error, does not behave like other default registered errors. When using it, you must include an ActiveModel errors object, e.g.:

error!(:invalid_resource, post.errors)
# or
render_error RocketPants::InvalidResource.new(post.errors)

If you don't do that, you may get an ArgumentError, because of the way Rocket Pants handles instantiation of a RocketPants::InvalidResource.

Built in ActiveRecord Errors

Out of the box, Rocket Pants will automatically map the following to built in errors and rescue them as appropriate.

  • ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound into RocketPants::NotFound
  • ActiveRecord::RecordNotUnique into RocketPants::Conflict
  • ActiveRecord::RecordNotSaved into RocketPants::InvalidResource (with no validation messages).
  • ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid into RocketPants::InvalidResource (with messages in the "messages" key of the JSON).

Please Note: The default RecordInvalid mapper can potentially leak information about your structure - If there is data in the default error messages you don't wish to expose, we suggest implementing it on a per-action basis (using normal rescues / .save instead of .save!) OR remapping the handler for ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid.

For Invalid Resource messages, the response looks roughly akin to:

{
  "error": "invalid_resource",
  "error_description": "The current resource was deemed invalid.",
  "messages": {
    "name":        ["can't be blank"],
    "child_number":["can't be blank", "is not a number"],
    "latin_name":  ["is too short (minimum is 5 characters)", "is invalid"]
  }
}

A Note on Mongoid

We currently don't support mongoid / other ORMs in RocketPants, but you can map errors directly like so:

ApiController < RocketPants::Base
  map_error! Mongoid::Errors::Validations do |exception|
    RocketPants::InvalidResource.new exception.record.errors
  end
end

Thanks to @tiredenzo on #47 for this information. If you'd be interested in making a rocket_pants-mongoid gem mapping more errors, please get in touch.

Strong Parameters

One of the newer features of Rocket Pants, if you have the Strong Parameters plugin on Rails 3 or are using Rails 4, is that we'll automatically rescue strong parameters errors and render them as bad_request API errors to the requesting users.

Implementing Efficient Validation

One of the core design principles built into RocketPants is simple support for "Efficient Validation" as described in the Rack::Cache FAQ - Namely, it adds simple support for object-level caching using etags with fast verification thanks to the RocketPants::CacheMiddleware cache middleware.

To do this, it uses RocketPants.cache, by default any Moneta-based store, to keep a mapping of object -> current cache key. RocketPants will then generate the etag when caching is enabled in the controller for singular-responses, generating an etag that can be quickly validated.

For example, you'd add the following to your model:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  include RocketPants::Cacheable
end

And then in your controller, you'd have something like:

class UsersController < RocketPants::Base

  version 1

  # Time based, e.g. collections, will be cached for 5 minutes - whilst singular
  # items e.g. show will use etag-based caching:
  caches :show, :index, :cache_for => 5.minutes

  def index
    expose User.all
  end

  def show
    expose User.find(params[:id])
  end

end

When the user hits the index endpoint, it will generate an expiry-based caching header that caches the result for up to 5 minutes. When the user instead hits the show endpoint, it will generate a special etag that contains and object identifier portion and an object cache key. Inside RocketPants.cache, we store the mapping and then inside RocketPants::CacheMiddleware, we simply check if the given cache key matches the specified object identifier. If it does, we return a not modified response otherwise we pass it through to controller - giving the advantage of efficient caching without having to hit the full database on every request.

Using with RSpec

When testing controllers written using RocketPants, your normal rails approach should work. The only difference one needs to take into the account is the need to specify the :version parameter on any http requests, e.g:

# get
get :index, :version => 1

# post
post :index, :version => 1, :payload => { :foo => 'bar' ... }

Otherwise it will raise an exception.

To set the version to be used for all tests in a given set of specs you can use the default_version tag. It will set the version for all tests in that block and not require :version to be set individually:

describe YourAwesomeController do
  default_version 1
end

RocketPants includes a set of helpers to make testing controllers built on RocketPants::Base simpler.

  • be_singular_resource - Checks the response is a single resource - e.g. response.should be_singular_resource.
  • be_collection_resource - Checks the response is collection of resources - e.g. response.should be_collection_resource.
  • be_paginated_resource - Checks the response is paginated - e.g. response.should be_paginated_resource.
  • be_api_error(type = any) - Checks it returned an error for the specified exception (or check the response is an error without any argument) - e.g. response.should be_api_error RocketPants::NotFound.
  • have_exposed(data, options = {}) - Given an object and conversion options, lets you check the output exposed the same object. e.g: response.should have_exposed user

Likewise, it adds the following helper methods:

  • parsed_body - A parsed-JSON representation of the response.
  • decoded_body - A Hashie::Mash of the response body.

To set up the integration, in your spec/spec_helper.rb add:

config.include RocketPants::TestHelper,    :type => :controller
config.include RocketPants::RSpecMatchers, :type => :controller

Inside the RSpec.configure do |config| block.

Contributors

If you're not on this list and thing you should be, let @Sutto know.

Contributing

We encourage all community contributions. Keeping this in mind, please follow these general guidelines when contributing:

  • Fork the project
  • Create a topic branch for what you’re working on (git checkout -b awesome_feature)
  • Commit away, push that up (git push your_remote awesome_feature)
  • Create a new GitHub Issue with the commit, asking for review. Alternatively, send a pull request with details of what you added.
  • Once it’s accepted, if you want access to the core repository feel free to ask! Otherwise, you can continue to hack away in your own fork.

Other than that, our guidelines very closely match the GemCutter guidelines here.

(Thanks to GemCutter for the contribution guide)

License

RocketPants is released under the MIT License (see the license file) and is copyright Filter Squad and Darcy Laycock, 2013.

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