Skip to main content

Generate API Documentation Using Swagger Module in NestJS

Swagger provides us a standard to generate API documentation based on the Open API specification. If we use NestJS for building our API providers, we can utilize a tool provided by NestJS in the @nestjs/swagger module to generate the documentation automatically in the built time. This module also requires the swagger-ui-express module if we use Express as the NestJS base HTTP handler.


Set Swagger configuration

First, we need to define Swagger options and instantiate the documentation provider on the main.ts file.

import { DocumentBuilder, SwaggerModule } from '@nestjs/swagger';

// sample application instance
const app = await NestFactory.create(AppModule);

// setup Swagger options
const options = new DocumentBuilder()
    .setTitle('Coffee')
    .setVersion('1.0')
    .setDescription('Learn NestJS with coffee')
    .build();

// build the document
const document = SwaggerModule.createDocument(app, options);

// provide an endpoint where the document can be accessed
SwaggerModule.setup('docs', app, document);

Set custom compiler options

NestJS is optimized for us to implement the object validation processes and define the shapes of any objects passed to our API endpoints that are subjected to data transfer objects (DTO). The implementation utilizes Typescript decorators which are not evaluated in the built time if we use the default compiler. To let the Swagger module generates correct definitions of any request payloads, we need to override default compiler options in the nest-cli.json file by enabling the NestJS Swagger plugin.

{
  // ...
  "compilerOptions": {
    "deleteOutDir": true,
    "plugins": ["@nestjs/swagger/plugin"]
  }
}

Revision for PartialType

If we declare a DTO that utilizes the PartialType function for extending the attributes of a parent DTO, we need to implement the definition provided by the @nestjs/swagger module. Otherwise, the documentation will not render the correct properties of the DTO.

import { PartialType } from '@nestjs/swagger';
import { ParentDto } from './parent.dto';

export class ChildDto extends PartialType(ParentDto) {}

Add details of DTO properties

We can utilize the @ApiProperty() decorator on each property in a DTO to set details of the property.

import { ApiProperty } from '@nestjs/swagger';

export class SampleDto {
  @ApiProperty({ description: 'Name of the product' })
  @IsString()
  readonly name: string;

  @ApiProperty({ example: [] })
  @IsString({ each: true })
  readonly models: string[];
}

Add details of HTTP responses

By default, the documentation generated by the Swagger module will only show details of success responses based on the evaluated controllers. If we want to provide custom details or additional response definitions, we can utilize some decorators provided by the @nesjs/swagger module such as @ApiResponse(), @ApiForbiddenResponse(), and so on. These decorators can be applied both on a controller method and the class to provide default definitions for its contained methods.

@ApiResponse({ status: 404, description: 'Resource is not found' })
@Controller('product')
export class ProductController {

  @ApiResponse({ status: 401, description: 'Invalid query parameters' })
  @Get()
  findAll() {}

  @ApiForbiddenResponse({ description: 'Unauthorized access' })
  @Post()
  create() {}
}

Grouping the endpoints

To improve the readability of our documentation, sometimes we need to group or categorize our endpoints. We can apply the @ApiTags() decorator on our controller class.

@ApiTags('inventory')
@Controller('product')
export class ProductController {}

// ...
@ApiTags('inventory')
@Controller('product-category')
export class ProductCategoryController {}


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Increase of Malicious Activities and Implementation of reCaptcha

In recent time, I've seen the increase of malicious activities such as login attempts or phishing emails to some accounts I manage. Let me list some of them and the actions taken. SSH Access Attempts This happened on a server that host a Gitlab server. Because of this case, I started to limit the incoming traffic to the server using internal and cloud firewall provided by the cloud provider. I limit the exposed ports, connected network interfaces, and allowed protocols. Phishing Attempts This typically happened through email and messaging platform such as Whatsapp and Facebook Page messaging. The malicious actors tried to share a suspicious link lured as invoice, support ticket, or something else. Malicious links shared Spammy Bot The actors leverage one of public endpoint on my website to send emails. Actually, the emails won't be forwarded anywhere except to my own email so this just full my inbox. This bot is quite active, but I'm still not sure what...

Configuring Swap Memory on Ubuntu Using Ansible

If we maintain a Linux machine with a low memory capacity while we are required to run an application with high memory consumption, enabling swap memory is an option. Ansible can be utilized as a helper tool to automate the creation of swap memory. A swap file can be allocated in the available storage of the machine. The swap file then can be assigned as a swap memory. Firstly, we should prepare the inventory file. The following snippet is an example, you must provide your own configuration. [server] 192.168.1.2 [server:vars] ansible_user=root ansible_ssh_private_key_file=~/.ssh/id_rsa Secondly, we need to prepare the task file that contains not only the tasks but also some variables and connection information. For instance, we set /swapfile  as the name of our swap file. We also set the swap memory size to 2GB and the swappiness level to 60. - hosts: server become: true vars: swap_vars: size: 2G swappiness: 60 For simplicity, we only check the...

Deliver SaaS According Twelve-Factor App

If you haven't heard of  the twelve-factor app , it gives us a recommendation or a methodology for developing SaaS or web apps structured into twelve items. The recommendation has some connections with microservice architecture and cloud-native environments which become more popular today. We can learn the details on its website . In this post, we will do a quick review of the twelve points. One Codebase Multiple Deployment We should maintain only one codebase for our application even though the application may be deployed into multiple environments like development, staging, and production. Having multiple codebases will lead to any kinds of complicated issues. Explicitly State Dependencies All the dependencies for running our application should be stated in the project itself. Many programming languages have a kind of file that maintains a list of the dependencies like package.json in Node.js. We should also be aware of the dependencies related to the pla...

Kenshin VS The Assassin

It is an assassin versus assassin.

Handling PDF Generation in Web Service

If we are building a website that requires a PDF generation feature, there are several options for implementing it based on the use cases or user requirements. First, we can generate the PDF on the client side using any available client library. It is suitable if the use case is to print out some data that is already available inside certain website components, and we want to maintain the styles of the components in the document. Second, we can do it fully in the back-end using any library available, such as PDF-lib, jsPDF, and so on. This approach is suitable if we want to keep the data processing or any related business functions in the back-end server. This second approach might have disadvantages, such as the difficulty of maintaining the design assets and styles which are already on our website. Third, it is using a hybrid approach, where certain processes are handled on the client side, and some are handled on the back-end. In this post, I want to discuss more about the...

Free Cloud Services from UpCloud

Although I typically deploy my development environment or experimental services on UpCloud , I do not always stay updated on its announcements. Recently, I discovered that UpCloud has introduced a new plan called the Essentials plan, which enables certain cloud services to be deployed at no cost. The complimentary services are generally associated with network components or serve as the foundation for other cloud services. This feature is particularly useful when retaining foundational services, such as a load balancer, is necessary, while tearing down all services and reconfiguring the DNS and other application settings each time we temporarily clean up infrastructure to reduce costs is undesirable.  When reviewing the service specifications of the cloud services in the Essentials plan, they appear to be very similar to those in the Development plan. The difference in service levels is unclear, but it could be related to hardware or resource allocation. For instance, the loa...