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ApiMaker

Generates Rails API endpoints and JavaScript API files for Webpack and more by inspecting your models and serializers.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem "api_maker", git: "https://github.com/kaspernj/api_maker.git"

Add the extension .mjs to shakapacker.yml.

ApiMaker requires Shakapacker, so make sure you have that set up as well. It also uses an extension called qs, that you should add to your packages, but that is probally already there by default.

ApiMaker makes use of CanCanCan to keep track of what models a given user should have access to. Each resource defines its own abilities under app/api_maker/resources/user_resource like this:

class Resources::UserResource < Resources::ApplicationResource
  def abilities
    can :update, User if current_user&.admin?
    can :update, User, id: current_user&.id if current_user.present?
    can :read, User
  end
end

If you want to use the table modules:

gem "api_maker_table", git: "https://github.com/kaspernj/api_maker.git"

Run this command:

rails api_maker_table:install:migrations

Run the migrations

rails db:migrate

Add an api_maker_args method to your application controller. This controls what arguments will be passed to the CanCan ability and the serializers:

class ApplicationController
private

  def api_maker_args
    @api_maker_args ||= {current_user: current_user}
  end
end

Insert this mount into config/routes.rb:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  mount ApiMaker::Engine => "/api_maker"
end

Make API maker able to listen for location changes by inserting this into your pack:

import history from "shared/history"
import {callbacksHandler} from "on-location-changed/src/callbacks-handler"

callbacksHandler.connectReactRouterHistory(history)

Install the ERB loader for Webpack, and make sure it doesn't ignore the node_modules folder.

Resources

ApiMaker will only create models, endpoints and serializers for ActiveRecord models that are defined as resources. So be sure to add resources under app/api_maker/resources for your models first. You can add some helper methods if you want to use in your resources like current_user and signed_in_as_admin?.

class Resources::ApplicationResource < ApiMaker::BaseResource
  def current_user
    args&.dig(:current_user)
  end

  def signed_in_as_admin?
    current_user&.role == "admin"
  end
end
class Resources::UserResources < Resources::ApplicationResource
  attributes :id, :email, :custom_attribute
  attributes :calculated_attribute, selected_by_default: false
  attributes :secret_attribute, if: :signed_in_as_admin?
  collection_commands :count_users
  member_commands :calculate_age
  relationships :account, :tasks

  def custom_attribute
    "Hello world! Current user is: #{args.fetch(:current_user).email}"
  end
end

You should also create an application command here: app/api_maker/commands/application_command with content like this:

class Commands::ApplicationCommand < ApiMaker::BaseCommand
end

Add this to your application model:

class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
  include ApiMaker::ModelExtensions
end

ApiMaker uses that to keep track of what attributes, relationships and commands you want exposed through the API.

If you want to be able to create and update models, then you should go into each resource and create a params method to define, which attributes can be written on each model like this:

class Resources::TaskResource < ApiMaker::ModelController
  def permitted_params(arg)
    arg.params.require(:project).permit(:name)
  end
end

I18n

Start by adding i18n-on-steroids to your project:

yarn add i18n-on-steroids

Create a I18n object you want to use throughout your project (app/javascript/i18n.js):

import I18nOnSteroids from "i18n-on-steroids"

const i18n = new I18nOnSteroids()

i18n.setLocale("en")

export default i18n

You can import it globally through the provide plugin in Webpack and then use translations like this:

i18n.t("js.some.key") //=> Key

Routes

Configure JS routes in config/js_routes.rb:

JsRoutes.setup do |config|
  config.camel_case = true
  config.url_links = true
end

Define route definitions that can be read by both Rails and JS like this in app/javascript/route-definitions.json:

{
  "routes": [
    {"name": "new_session", "path": "/sessions/new", "component": "sessions/new"},
    {"name": "root", "path": "/", "component": "sessions/new"}
  ]
}

Define a file for js-routes in app/javascript/js-routes.js.erb that will automatically update if the routes or the definitions are changed:

/* rails-erb-loader-dependencies ../config/routes.rb ./javascript/route-definitions.json */

const routes = {};

<%= JsRoutes.generate(namespace: "Namespace") %>

Install the route definitions in the Rails routes like this in config/routes.rb:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  route_definitions = JSON.parse(File.read(Rails.root.join("app/javascript/nemoa/route-definitions.json")))
  ApiMaker::ResourceRouting.install_resource_routes(self, layout: "nemoa", route_definitions: route_definitions)
end

Define a routes file for your project (or multiple) in app/javascript/routes.js:

import jsRoutes from "js-routes"
import Routes from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/routes"
import routeDefinitions from "route-definitions.json"

const routes = new Routes({jsRoutes, routeDefinitions})

export default routes

You can use your Rails routes like this:

import Routes from "routes"

Routes.userPath(user.id()) //=> /users/4

ActionCable

Your connection.rb should look something like this:

class ApplicationCable::Connection < ActionCable::Connection::Base
  identified_by :current_user

  def connect
    self.current_user = find_verified_user
  end

private

  def find_verified_user
    verified_user = User.find_by(id: cookies.signed["user.id"])

    if verified_user && cookies.signed["user.expires_at"] > Time.zone.now
      verified_user
    else
      reject_unauthorized_connection
    end
  end
end

Your channel.rb should look something like this:

class ApplicationCable::Channel < ActionCable::Channel::Base
private # rubocop:disable Layout/IndentationWidth

  def current_ability
    @current_ability ||= ApiMakerAbility.for_user(current_user)
  end

  def current_user
    @current_user ||= env["warden"].user
  end
end

Usage

Creating a new model from JavaScript

import {Task} from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/models.mjs.erb"

const task = new Task()
task.assignAttributes({name: "New task"})

try {
 await task.create()
 console.log(`Task was created with ID: ${task.id()}`)
} catch (error) {
  console.log("Task wasnt created")
}

Finding an existing model

const task = await Task.find(5)

console.log(`Task found: ${task.name()}`)

Updating a model

task.assignAttributes({name: "New name"})

try {
  await task.save()

  console.log(`Task was updated and name is now: ${task.name()}`)
} catch (error) {
  console.log("Task wasnt updated")
}
try {
  await task.update({name: "New name"})

  console.log(`Task was updated and name is now: ${task.name()}`)
} catch (error) {
  console.log("Task wasnt updated")
}

Deleting a model

try {
  await task.destroy()

  console.log("Task was destroyed")
} catch (error) {
  console.log("Task wasnt destroyed")
}

Preloading models

const tasks = await Task.ransack().preload("project.customer").toArray()

for (const task of tasks) {
  console.log(`Project of task ${task.id()}: ${task.project().name()}`)
  console.log(`Customer of task ${task.id()}: ${task.project().customer().name()}`)
}

Query models

API maker uses Ransack to expose a huge amount of options to query data.

const = tasks = await Task.ransack({name_cont: "something"}).toArray()

console.log(`Found: ${tasks.length} tasks`)

Distinct:

const tasks = await Task.ransack({relationships_something_eq: "something"}).distinct().toArray()

Selecting only specific attributes

const tasks = await Task.ransack().select({Task: ["id", "name"]}).toArray()

Sorting models

Task.ransack({s: "id desc"})

Attributes

Each attribute is defined as a method on each model. So if you have an attribute called name on the Task-model, then it be read by doing this: task.name().

Prop types validation

You can validate model types and loaded attributes like this:

import ModelPropType from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/model-prop-type"

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  static propTypes = {
    task: ModelPropType.ofModel(Task).withLoadedAttributes(["id", "name", "updatedAt"]).isRequired
  }
}

Or if it isn't required:

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  static propTypes = {
    task: ModelPropType.ofModel(Task).withLoadedAttributes(["id", "name", "updatedAt"]).isNotRequired
  }
}

You can also validate loaded abilities like this:

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  static propTypes = {
    task: ModelPropType.ofModel(Task).withLoadedAbilities(["destroy", "edit"]).isNotRequired
  }
}

It is possible to validate on nested preloaded associations recursively as well:

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  static propTypes = {
    task: ModelPropType.ofModel(Task)
      .withLoadedAssociation("project")
        .withLoadedAttributes(["name"]) // Validates that the attribute 'name' is loaded on the association called 'project'
        .withLoadedAssociation("account")
          .withLoadedAttributes(["name"]) // Validates that the attribute 'name' is loaded on the association called 'account' through 'project'
          .previous()
        .previous()
      .isRequired
  }
}

Relationships

Has many

A has many relationship will return a collection the queries the sub models.

const tasks = await project.tasks().toArray()

console.log(`Project ${project.id()} has ${tasks.length} tasks`)

for(const key in tasks) {
  const task = tasks[key]
  console.log(`Task ${task.id()} is named: ${task.name()}`)
}

Belongs to

A belongs to relationship will return a promise that will get that model:

const project = await task.project()

console.log(`Task ${task.id()} belongs to a project called: ${project.name()}`)

Has one

A has one relationship will also return a promise that will get that model like a belongs to relationship.

Getting the current user

First include this in your layout, so JS can know which user is signed in:

<body>
  <%= render "/api_maker/data" %>

Then you can do like this in JS:

import Devise from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/devise"

console.log(`The current user has this email: ${Devise.currentUser().email()}`)

Events from the backend

Custom events

Add the relevant access to your resource:

class Resources::UserResource < ApplicationAbility
  def abilities
    can :event_new_message, User, id: 5
  end
end

Send an event from Ruby:

user = User.find(5)
user.api_maker_event("new_message", message: "Hello world")

Receive the event in JavaScript:

const user = await User.find(5)
user.connect("new_message", args => {
  console.log(`New message: ${args.message}`)
})

Or you can receive the event in React:

<EventConnection event="new_message" model={user} onCall={args => this.onNewMessage(args)} />

Update models

Add this to your abilities:

class ApiMakerAbility < ApplicationAbility
  def initialize(args:)
    can [:create_events, :destroy_events, :update_events], User, id: 5
  end
end

Add this to the model you want to broadcast updates:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  api_maker_broadcast_creates
  api_maker_broadcast_destroys
  api_maker_broadcast_updates
end
const user = await User.find(5)

let subscription = user.connectUpdated(args => {
  console.log(`Model was updated: ${args.model.id()}`)
})

Remember to unsubscrube again:

subscription.unsubscribe()

You can also use a React component if you use React and dont want to keep track of when to unsubscribe:

import EventCreated from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/event-created"
import EventDestroyed from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/event-destroyed"
import EventUpdated from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/event-updated"
<EventCreated modelClass={User} onCreated={this.onUserCreated} />
<EventDestroyed model={user} onDestroyed={this.onUserDestroyed} />
<EventUpdated model={user} onUpdated={this.onUserUpdated} />
onUserCreated = (args) => {
  this.setState({user: args.model})
}

onUserDestroyed = (args) => {
  this.setState({user: args.model})
}

onUserUpdated = (args) => {
  this.setState({user: args.model})
}

You can also use this React component to show a models attribute with automatic updates:

import UpdatedAttribute from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/updated-attribute"
<UpdatedAttribute model={user} attribute="email" />

You can also use the EventConnection React component so you don't need to keep track of your subscription and unsubscribe:

import EventConnection from "@kaspernj/api-maker/src/event-connection"
<EventConnection model={this.state.user} event="eventName" onCall={this.onEvent} />

onEvent = (data) => {
  console.log("Event was called", data)
}

Loading abilities into the frontend from CanCan

const tasks = await Task
  .ransack({name_cont: "something"})
  .abilities({
    Task: ["edit"]
  })
  .toArray()

const firstTask = tasks[0]

if (firstTask.can("edit")) {
  console.log(`User can edit task ${task.id()}`)
} else {
  console.log(`User cant edit task ${task.id()}`)
}

Loading static abilities from CanCan

Getting the CanCan instance

import { CanCan } from "api-maker"

const canCan = CanCan.current()

Loading a single ability

await canCan.loadAbility("access", "admin")

Loading multiple static abilities for a model

await canCan.loadAbilities([
  [Invoice, ["bookBookable", "creditCreditable"]]
])

Resetting cached abilities in CanCan

To avoid doing queries for the same abilities in CanCan over an over they are cached. If some things change it can be necessary to reset those abilities.

await canCan.resetAbilities()

Serializing

Conditional attributes

This will only include the email for users, if the current user signed in is an admin.

class Resources::UserResource < Resources::ApplicationResource
  attributes :id
  attributes :email, if: :signed_in_as_admin?

private

  def signed_in_as_admin?
    args[:current_user]&.admin?
  end
end

Reporting errors

Add an intializer with something like this:

ApiMaker::Configuration.configure do |config|
  config.on_error do |command:, controller:, error:, response:|
    ExceptionNotifier.notify_exception(error, env: controller&.request&.env)
  end
end

Use your own ability class

You can customise the ability object.

Configure API maker to use your own class:

ApiMaker::Configuration.configure do |config|
  config.ability_class_name = "MyAbility"
end

Then add an ability:

class MyAbility < ApiMaker::Ability
  def initialize(args)
    super
    your_custom_code
  end
end

Development

Bundle all configurations.

bundle exec appraisal bundle

Run a spec with all configurations.

bundle exec appraisal rspec

Its kinda fucked up to run system specs, but this command should work from the ruby-gem directory:

rm -rf spec/dummy/public/packs/ && cd spec/dummy/ && bin/shakapacker && cd ../.. && xvfb-run bundle exec appraisal "rails 7" rspec spec/system/api_maker_table/api_maker_table_spec.rb

Contributing

Contribution directions go here.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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A Rails gem for generating a JavaScript API automatically based on your ActiveRecord models.

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