- What is Grape?
- Stable Release
- Project Resources
- Installation
- Basic Usage
- Mounting
- Versioning
- Describing Methods
- Parameters
- Parameter Validation and Coercion
- Supported Parameter Types
- Custom Types and Coercions
- Multipart File Parameters
- First-Class
JSONTypes - Multiple Allowed Types
- Validation of Nested Parameters
- Dependent Parameters
- Group Options
- Built-in Validators
- Namespace Validation and Coercion
- Custom Validators
- Validation Errors
- I18n
- Custom Validation Messages
- Headers
- Routes
- Helpers
- Path Helpers
- Parameter Documentation
- Cookies
- HTTP Status Code
- Redirecting
- Recognizing Path
- Allowed Methods
- Raising Exceptions
- Exception Handling
- Logging
- API Formats
- Content-type
- API Data Formats
- RESTful Model Representations
- Sending Raw or No Data
- Authentication
- Describing and Inspecting an API
- Current Route and Endpoint
- Before and After
- Anchoring
- Using Custom Middleware
- Writing Tests
- Reloading API Changes in Development
- Performance Monitoring
- Contributing to Grape
- License
- Copyright
Grape is a REST-like API framework for Ruby. It's designed to run on Rack or complement existing web application frameworks such as Rails and Sinatra by providing a simple DSL to easily develop RESTful APIs. It has built-in support for common conventions, including multiple formats, subdomain/prefix restriction, content negotiation, versioning and much more.
You're reading the documentation for the next release of Grape, which should be 0.19.1. Please read UPGRADING when upgrading from a previous version. The current stable release is 0.19.0.
- Grape Website
- Need help? Try Grape Google Group or Gitter
- Follow us on Twitter
Grape is available as a gem, to install it just install the gem:
gem install grape
If you're using Bundler, add the gem to Gemfile.
gem 'grape'
Run bundle install.
Grape APIs are Rack applications that are created by subclassing Grape::API.
Below is a simple example showing some of the more common features of Grape in
the context of recreating parts of the Twitter API.
module Twitter
class API < Grape::API
version 'v1', using: :header, vendor: 'twitter'
format :json
prefix :api
helpers do
def current_user
@current_user ||= User.authorize!(env)
end
def authenticate!
error!('401 Unauthorized', 401) unless current_user
end
end
resource :statuses do
desc 'Return a public timeline.'
get :public_timeline do
Status.limit(20)
end
desc 'Return a personal timeline.'
get :home_timeline do
authenticate!
current_user.statuses.limit(20)
end
desc 'Return a status.'
params do
requires :id, type: Integer, desc: 'Status id.'
end
route_param :id do
get do
Status.find(params[:id])
end
end
desc 'Create a status.'
params do
requires :status, type: String, desc: 'Your status.'
end
post do
authenticate!
Status.create!({
user: current_user,
text: params[:status]
})
end
desc 'Update a status.'
params do
requires :id, type: String, desc: 'Status ID.'
requires :status, type: String, desc: 'Your status.'
end
put ':id' do
authenticate!
current_user.statuses.find(params[:id]).update({
user: current_user,
text: params[:status]
})
end
desc 'Delete a status.'
params do
requires :id, type: String, desc: 'Status ID.'
end
delete ':id' do
authenticate!
current_user.statuses.find(params[:id]).destroy
end
end
end
endThe above sample creates a Rack application that can be run from a rackup config.ru file
with rackup:
run Twitter::APIAnd would respond to the following routes:
GET /api/statuses/public_timeline
GET /api/statuses/home_timeline
GET /api/statuses/:id
POST /api/statuses
PUT /api/statuses/:id
DELETE /api/statuses/:id
Grape will also automatically respond to HEAD and OPTIONS for all GET, and just OPTIONS for all other routes.
If you want to use ActiveRecord within Grape, you will need to make sure that ActiveRecord's connection pool is handled correctly.
The easiest way to achieve that is by using ActiveRecord's ConnectionManagement middleware in your
config.ru before mounting Grape, e.g.:
use ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionManagement
run Twitter::APIIf you wish to mount Grape alongside another Rack framework such as Sinatra, you can do so easily using
Rack::Cascade:
# Example config.ru
require 'sinatra'
require 'grape'
class API < Grape::API
get :hello do
{ hello: 'world' }
end
end
class Web < Sinatra::Base
get '/' do
'Hello world.'
end
end
use Rack::Session::Cookie
run Rack::Cascade.new [API, Web]Place API files into app/api. Rails expects a subdirectory that matches the name of the Ruby module and a file name that matches the name of the class. In our example, the file name location and directory for Twitter::API should be app/api/twitter/api.rb.
Modify application.rb:
config.paths.add File.join('app', 'api'), glob: File.join('**', '*.rb')
config.autoload_paths += Dir[Rails.root.join('app', 'api', '*')]Modify config/routes:
mount Twitter::API => '/'Additionally, if the version of your Rails is 4.0+ and the application uses the default model layer of ActiveRecord, you will want to use the hashie-forbidden_attributes gem. This gem disables the security feature of strong_params at the model layer, allowing you the use of Grape's own params validation instead.
# Gemfile
gem 'hashie-forbidden_attributes'See below for additional code that enables reloading of API changes in development.
You can mount multiple API implementations inside another one. These don't have to be different versions, but may be components of the same API.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
mount Twitter::APIv1
mount Twitter::APIv2
endYou can also mount on a path, which is similar to using prefix inside the mounted API itself.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
mount Twitter::APIv1 => '/v1'
endThere are four strategies in which clients can reach your API's endpoints: :path,
:header, :accept_version_header and :param. The default strategy is :path.
version 'v1', using: :pathUsing this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version in the URL.
curl http://localhost:9292/v1/statuses/public_timeline
version 'v1', using: :header, vendor: 'twitter'Currently, Grape only supports versioned media types in the following format:
vnd.vendor-and-or-resource-v1234+format
Basically all tokens between the final - and the + will be interpreted as the version.
Using this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version in the HTTP Accept head.
curl -H Accept:application/vnd.twitter-v1+json http://localhost:9292/statuses/public_timeline
By default, the first matching version is used when no Accept header is
supplied. This behavior is similar to routing in Rails. To circumvent this default behavior,
one could use the :strict option. When this option is set to true, a 406 Not Acceptable error
is returned when no correct Accept header is supplied.
When an invalid Accept header is supplied, a 406 Not Acceptable error is returned if the :cascade
option is set to false. Otherwise a 404 Not Found error is returned by Rack if no other route
matches.
version 'v1', using: :accept_version_headerUsing this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version in the HTTP Accept-Version header.
curl -H "Accept-Version:v1" http://localhost:9292/statuses/public_timeline
By default, the first matching version is used when no Accept-Version header is
supplied. This behavior is similar to routing in Rails. To circumvent this default behavior,
one could use the :strict option. When this option is set to true, a 406 Not Acceptable error
is returned when no correct Accept header is supplied and the :cascade option is set to false.
Otherwise a 404 Not Found error is returned by Rack if no other route matches.
version 'v1', using: :paramUsing this versioning strategy, clients should pass the desired version as a request parameter, either in the URL query string or in the request body.
curl http://localhost:9292/statuses/public_timeline?apiver=v1
The default name for the query parameter is 'apiver' but can be specified using the :parameter option.
version 'v1', using: :param, parameter: 'v'curl http://localhost:9292/statuses/public_timeline?v=v1
You can add a description to API methods and namespaces.
desc 'Returns your public timeline.' do
detail 'more details'
params API::Entities::Status.documentation
success API::Entities::Entity
failure [[401, 'Unauthorized', 'Entities::Error']]
named 'My named route'
headers XAuthToken: {
description: 'Valdates your identity',
required: true
},
XOptionalHeader: {
description: 'Not really needed',
required: false
}
end
get :public_timeline do
Status.limit(20)
enddetail: A more enhanced descriptionparams: Define parameters directly from anEntitysuccess: (former entity) TheEntityto be used to present by default this routefailure: (former http_codes) A definition of the used failure HTTP Codes and Entitiesnamed: A helper to give a route a name and find it with this name in the documentation Hashheaders: A definition of the used Headers
Request parameters are available through the params hash object. This includes GET, POST
and PUT parameters, along with any named parameters you specify in your route strings.
get :public_timeline do
Status.order(params[:sort_by])
endParameters are automatically populated from the request body on POST and PUT for form input, JSON and
XML content-types.
The request:
curl -d '{"text": "140 characters"}' 'http://localhost:9292/statuses' -H Content-Type:application/json -v
The Grape endpoint:
post '/statuses' do
Status.create!(text: params[:text])
endMultipart POSTs and PUTs are supported as well.
The request:
curl --form image_file='@image.jpg;type=image/jpg' http://localhost:9292/upload
The Grape endpoint:
post 'upload' do
# file in params[:image_file]
endIn the case of conflict between either of:
- route string parameters
GET,POSTandPUTparameters- the contents of the request body on
POSTandPUT
route string parameters will have precedence.
Grape allows you to access only the parameters that have been declared by your params block. It filters out the params that have been passed, but are not allowed. Consider the following API endpoint:
format :json
post 'users/signup' do
{ 'declared_params' => declared(params) }
endIf we do not specify any params, declared will return an empty Hashie::Mash instance.
Request
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/users/signup -d '{"user": {"first_name":"first name", "last_name": "last name"}}'Response
{
"declared_params": {}
}
Once we add parameters requirements, grape will start returning only the declared params.
format :json
params do
requires :user, type: Hash do
requires :first_name, type: String
requires :last_name, type: String
end
end
post 'users/signup' do
{ 'declared_params' => declared(params) }
endRequest
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/users/signup -d '{"user": {"first_name":"first name", "last_name": "last name", "random": "never shown"}}'Response
{
"declared_params": {
"user": {
"first_name": "first name",
"last_name": "last name"
}
}
}The returned hash is a Hashie::Mash instance, allowing you to access parameters via dot notation:
declared(params).user == declared(params)['user']The #declared method is not available to before filters, as those are evaluated prior
to parameter coercion.
By default declared(params) includes parameters that were defined in all parent namespaces. If you want to return only parameters from your current namespace, you can set include_parent_namespaces option to false.
format :json
namespace :parent do
params do
requires :parent_name, type: String
end
namespace ':parent_name' do
params do
requires :child_name, type: String
end
get ':child_name' do
{
'without_parent_namespaces' => declared(params, include_parent_namespaces: false),
'with_parent_namespaces' => declared(params, include_parent_namespaces: true),
}
end
end
endRequest
curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/parent/foo/barResponse
{
"without_parent_namespaces": {
"child_name": "bar"
},
"with_parent_namespaces": {
"parent_name": "foo",
"child_name": "bar"
},
}By default declared(params) includes parameters that have nil values. If you want to return only the parameters that are not nil, you can use the include_missing option. By default, include_missing is set to true. Consider the following API:
format :json
params do
requires :first_name, type: String
optional :last_name, type: String
end
post 'users/signup' do
{ 'declared_params' => declared(params, include_missing: false) }
endRequest
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/users/signup -d '{"user": {"first_name":"first name", "random": "never shown"}}'Response with include_missing:false
{
"declared_params": {
"user": {
"first_name": "first name"
}
}
}Response with include_missing:true
{
"declared_params": {
"first_name": "first name",
"last_name": null
}
}It also works on nested hashes:
format :json
params do
requires :user, type: Hash do
requires :first_name, type: String
optional :last_name, type: String
requires :address, type: Hash do
requires :city, type: String
optional :region, type: String
end
end
end
post 'users/signup' do
{ 'declared_params' => declared(params, include_missing: false) }
endRequest
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/users/signup -d '{"user": {"first_name":"first name", "random": "never shown", "address": { "city": "SF"}}}'Response with include_missing:false
{
"declared_params": {
"user": {
"first_name": "first name",
"address": {
"city": "SF"
}
}
}
}Response with include_missing:true
{
"declared_params": {
"user": {
"first_name": "first name",
"last_name": null,
"address": {
"city": "Zurich",
"region": null
}
}
}
}Note that an attribute with a nil value is not considered missing and will also be returned
when include_missing is set to false:
Request
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:9292/users/signup -d '{"user": {"first_name":"first name", "last_name": null, "address": { "city": "SF"}}}'Response with include_missing:false
{
"declared_params": {
"user": {
"first_name": "first name",
"last_name": null,
"address": { "city": "SF"}
}
}
}You can define validations and coercion options for your parameters using a params block.
params do
requires :id, type: Integer
optional :text, type: String, regexp: /\A[a-z]+\z/
group :media do
requires :url
end
optional :audio do
requires :format, type: Symbol, values: [:mp3, :wav, :aac, :ogg], default: :mp3
end
mutually_exclusive :media, :audio
end
put ':id' do
# params[:id] is an Integer
endWhen a type is specified an implicit validation is done after the coercion to ensure the output type is the one declared.
Optional parameters can have a default value.
params do
optional :color, type: String, default: 'blue'
optional :random_number, type: Integer, default: -> { Random.rand(1..100) }
optional :non_random_number, type: Integer, default: Random.rand(1..100)
endNote that default values will be passed through to any validation options specified.
The following example will always fail if :color is not explicitly provided.
params do
optional :color, type: String, default: 'blue', values: ['red', 'green']
endThe correct implementation is to ensure the default value passes all validations.
params do
optional :color, type: String, default: 'blue', values: ['blue', 'red', 'green']
endThe following are all valid types, supported out of the box by Grape:
- Integer
- Float
- BigDecimal
- Numeric
- Date
- DateTime
- Time
- Boolean
- String
- Symbol
- Rack::Multipart::UploadedFile (alias
File) - JSON
Aside from the default set of supported types listed above, any class can be
used as a type so long as an explicit coercion method is supplied. If the type
implements a class-level parse method, Grape will use it automatically.
This method must take one string argument and return an instance of the correct
type, or raise an exception to indicate the value was invalid. E.g.,
class Color
attr_reader :value
def initialize(color)
@value = color
end
def self.parse(value)
fail 'Invalid color' unless %w(blue red green).include?(value)
new(value)
end
end
# ...
params do
requires :color, type: Color, default: Color.new('blue')
end
get '/stuff' do
# params[:color] is already a Color.
params[:color].value
endAlternatively, a custom coercion method may be supplied for any type of parameter
using coerce_with. Any class or object may be given that implements a parse or
call method, in that order of precedence. The method must accept a single string
parameter, and the return value must match the given type.
params do
requires :passwd, type: String, coerce_with: Base64.method(:decode)
requires :loud_color, type: Color, coerce_with: ->(c) { Color.parse(c.downcase) }
requires :obj, type: Hash, coerce_with: JSON do
requires :words, type: Array[String], coerce_with: ->(val) { val.split(/\s+/) }
optional :time, type: Time, coerce_with: Chronic
end
endExample of use of coerce_with with a lambda (a class with a parse method could also have been used)
It will parse a string and return an Array of Integers, matching the Array[Integer] type.
params do
requires :values, type: Array[Integer], coerce_with: ->(val) { val.split(/\s+/).map(&:to_i) }
endGrape makes use of Rack::Request's built-in support for multipart
file parameters. Such parameters can be declared with type: File:
params do
requires :avatar, type: File
end
post '/' do
# Parameter will be wrapped using Hashie:
params.avatar.filename # => 'avatar.png'
params.avatar.type # => 'image/png'
params.avatar.tempfile # => #<File>
endGrape supports complex parameters given as JSON-formatted strings using the special type: JSON
declaration. JSON objects and arrays of objects are accepted equally, with nested validation
rules applied to all objects in either case:
params do
requires :json, type: JSON do
requires :int, type: Integer, values: [1, 2, 3]
end
end
get '/' do
params[:json].inspect
end
# ...
client.get('/', json: '{"int":1}') # => "{:int=>1}"
client.get('/', json: '[{"int":"1"}]') # => "[{:int=>1}]"
client.get('/', json: '{"int":4}') # => HTTP 400
client.get('/', json: '[{"int":4}]') # => HTTP 400Additionally type: Array[JSON] may be used, which explicitly marks the parameter as an array
of objects. If a single object is supplied it will be wrapped.
params do
requires :json, type: Array[JSON] do
requires :int, type: Integer
end
end
get '/' do
params[:json].each { |obj| ... } # always works
endFor stricter control over the type of JSON structure which may be supplied,
use type: Array, coerce_with: JSON or type: Hash, coerce_with: JSON.
Variant-type parameters can be declared using the types option rather than type:
params do
requires :status_code, types: [Integer, String, Array[Integer, String]]
end
get '/' do
params[:status_code].inspect
end
# ...
client.get('/', status_code: 'OK_GOOD') # => "OK_GOOD"
client.get('/', status_code: 300) # => 300
client.get('/', status_code: %w(404 NOT FOUND)) # => [404, "NOT", "FOUND"]As a special case, variant-member-type collections may also be declared, by
passing a Set or Array with more than one member to type:
params do
requires :status_codes, type: Array[Integer,String]
end
get '/' do
params[:status_codes].inspect
end
# ...
client.get('/', status_codes: %w(1 two)) # => [1, "two"]Parameters can be nested using group or by calling requires or optional with a block.
In the above example, this means params[:media][:url] is required along with params[:id],
and params[:audio][:format] is required only if params[:audio] is present.
With a block, group, requires and optional accept an additional option type which can
be either Array or Hash, and defaults to Array. Depending on the value, the nested
parameters will be treated either as values of a hash or as values of hashes in an array.
params do
optional :preferences, type: Array do
requires :key
requires :value
end
requires :name, type: Hash do
requires :first_name
requires :last_name
end
endSuppose some of your parameters are only relevant if another parameter is given;
Grape allows you to express this relationship through the given method in your
parameters block, like so:
params do
optional :shelf_id, type: Integer
given :shelf_id do
requires :bin_id, type: Integer
end
endIn the example above Grape will use blank? to check whether the shelf_id param is present.
Given also takes a Proc with custom code. Below, the param description is required only if the value of category is equal foo:
params do
optional :category
given category: ->(val) { val == 'foo' } do
requires :description
end
endParameters options can be grouped. It can be useful if you want to extract common validation or types for several parameters. The example below presents a typical case when parameters share common options.
params do
requires :first_name, type: String, regexp: /w+/, desc: 'First name'
requires :middle_name, type: String, regexp: /w+/, desc: 'Middle name'
requires :last_name, type: String, regexp: /w+/, desc: 'Last name'
endGrape allows you to present the same logic through the with method in your
parameters block, like so:
params do
with(type: String, regexp: /w+/) do
requires :first_name, desc: 'First name'
requires :middle_name, desc: 'Middle name'
requires :last_name, desc: 'Last name'
end
endParameters can be defined as allow_blank, ensuring that they contain a value. By default, requires
only validates that a parameter was sent in the request, regardless its value. With allow_blank: false,
empty values or whitespace only values are invalid.
allow_blank can be combined with both requires and optional. If the parameter is required, it has to contain
a value. If it's optional, it's possible to not send it in the request, but if it's being sent, it has to have
some value, and not an empty string/only whitespaces.
params do
requires :username, allow_blank: false
optional :first_name, allow_blank: false
endParameters can be restricted to a specific set of values with the :values option.
Default values are eagerly evaluated. Above :non_random_number will evaluate to the same
number for each call to the endpoint of this params block. To have the default evaluate
lazily with each request use a lambda, like :random_number above.
params do
requires :status, type: Symbol, values: [:not_started, :processing, :done]
optional :numbers, type: Array[Integer], default: 1, values: [1, 2, 3, 5, 8]
endSupplying a range to the :values option ensures that the parameter is (or parameters are) included in that range (using Range#include?).
params do
requires :latitude, type: Float, values: -90.0..+90.0
requires :longitude, type: Float, values: -180.0..+180.0
optional :letters, type: Array[String], values: 'a'..'z'
endNote that both range endpoints have to be a #kind_of? your :type option (if you don't supplied the :type option, it will be guessed to be equal to the class of the range's first endpoint). So the following is invalid:
params do
requires :invalid1, type: Float, values: 0..10 # 0.kind_of?(Float) => false
optional :invalid2, values: 0..10.0 # 10.0.kind_of?(0.class) => false
endThe :values option can also be supplied with a Proc, evaluated lazily with each request.
For example, given a status model you may want to restrict by hashtags that you have
previously defined in the HashTag model.
params do
requires :hashtag, type: String, values: -> { Hashtag.all.map(&:tag) }
endThe values validator can also validate that the value is explicitly not within a specific
set of values by passing except. except accepts the same types of parameters as
values (Procs, ranges, etc.).
params do
requires :browsers, values: { except: [ 'ie6', 'ie7', 'ie8' ] }
endValues and except can be combined to define a range of accepted values while not allowing
certain values within the set. Custom error messages can be defined for both when the parameter
passed falls within the except list or when it falls entirely outside the value list.
params do
requires :number, type: Integer, values: { value: 1..20, except: [4, 13], except_message: 'includes unsafe numbers', message: 'is outside the range of numbers allowed' }
endParameters can be restricted to match a specific regular expression with the :regexp option. If the value
does not match the regular expression an error will be returned. Note that this is true for both requires
and optional parameters.
params do
requires :email, regexp: /.+@.+/
endThe validator will pass if the parameter was sent without value. To ensure that the parameter contains a value, use allow_blank: false.
params do
requires :email, allow_blank: false, regexp: /.+@.+/
endParameters can be defined as mutually_exclusive, ensuring that they aren't present at the same time in a request.
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
mutually_exclusive :beer, :wine
endMultiple sets can be defined:
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
mutually_exclusive :beer, :wine
optional :scotch
optional :aquavit
mutually_exclusive :scotch, :aquavit
endWarning: Never define mutually exclusive sets with any required params. Two mutually exclusive required params will mean params are never valid, thus making the endpoint useless. One required param mutually exclusive with an optional param will mean the latter is never valid.
Parameters can be defined as 'exactly_one_of', ensuring that exactly one parameter gets selected.
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
exactly_one_of :beer, :wine
endParameters can be defined as 'at_least_one_of', ensuring that at least one parameter gets selected.
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
at_least_one_of :beer, :wine, :juice
endParameters can be defined as 'all_or_none_of', ensuring that all or none of parameters gets selected.
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
all_or_none_of :beer, :wine, :juice
endAll of these methods can be used at any nested level.
params do
requires :food do
optional :meat
optional :fish
optional :rice
at_least_one_of :meat, :fish, :rice
end
group :drink do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
exactly_one_of :beer, :wine, :juice
end
optional :dessert do
optional :cake
optional :icecream
mutually_exclusive :cake, :icecream
end
optional :recipe do
optional :oil
optional :meat
all_or_none_of :oil, :meat
end
endNamespaces allow parameter definitions and apply to every method within the namespace.
namespace :statuses do
params do
requires :user_id, type: Integer, desc: 'A user ID.'
end
namespace ':user_id' do
desc "Retrieve a user's status."
params do
requires :status_id, type: Integer, desc: 'A status ID.'
end
get ':status_id' do
User.find(params[:user_id]).statuses.find(params[:status_id])
end
end
endThe namespace method has a number of aliases, including: group, resource,
resources, and segment. Use whichever reads the best for your API.
You can conveniently define a route parameter as a namespace using route_param.
namespace :statuses do
route_param :id do
desc 'Returns all replies for a status.'
get 'replies' do
Status.find(params[:id]).replies
end
desc 'Returns a status.'
get do
Status.find(params[:id])
end
end
endYou can also define a route parameter type by passing to route_param's options.
namespace :arithmetic do
route_param :n, type: Integer do
desc 'Returns in power'
get 'power' do
params[:n] ** params[:n]
end
end
endclass AlphaNumeric < Grape::Validations::Base
def validate_param!(attr_name, params)
unless params[attr_name] =~ /\A[[:alnum:]]+\z/
fail Grape::Exceptions::Validation, params: [@scope.full_name(attr_name)], message: 'must consist of alpha-numeric characters'
end
end
endparams do
requires :text, alpha_numeric: true
endYou can also create custom classes that take parameters.
class Length < Grape::Validations::Base
def validate_param!(attr_name, params)
unless params[attr_name].length <= @option
fail Grape::Exceptions::Validation, params: [@scope.full_name(attr_name)], message: "must be at the most #{@option} characters long"
end
end
endparams do
requires :text, length: 140
endYou can also create custom validation that use request to validate the attribute. For example if you want to have parameters that are available to only admins, you can do the following.
class Admin < Grape::Validations::Base
def validate(request)
# return if the param we are checking was not in request
# @attrs is a list containing the attribute we are currently validating
# in our sample case this method once will get called with
# @attrs being [:admin_field] and once with @attrs being [:admin_false_field]
return unless request.params.key? @attrs.first
# check if admin flag is set to true
return unless @option
# check if user is admin or not
# as an example get a token from request and check if it's admin or not
fail Grape::Exceptions::Validation, params: @attrs, message: 'Can not set admin-only field.' unless request.headers['X-Access-Token'] == 'admin'
end
endAnd use it in your endpoint definition as:
params do
optional :admin_field, type: String, admin: true
optional :non_admin_field, type: String
optional :admin_false_field, type: String, admin: false
endValidation and coercion errors are collected and an exception of type Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors is raised. If the exception goes uncaught it will respond with a status of 400 and an error message. The validation errors are grouped by parameter name and can be accessed via Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors#errors.
The default response from a Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors is a humanly readable string, such as "beer, wine are mutually exclusive", in the following example.
params do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
exactly_one_of :beer, :wine, :juice
endYou can rescue a Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors and respond with a custom response or turn the response into well-formatted JSON for a JSON API that separates individual parameters and the corresponding error messages. The following rescue_from example produces [{"params":["beer","wine"],"messages":["are mutually exclusive"]}].
format :json
subject.rescue_from Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors do |e|
error! e, 400
endGrape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors#full_messages returns the validation messages as an array. Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors#message joins the messages to one string.
For responding with an array of validation messages, you can use Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors#full_messages.
format :json
subject.rescue_from Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors do |e|
error!({ messages: e.full_messages }, 400)
endGrape returns all validation and coercion errors found by default.
To skip all subsequent validation checks when a specific param is found invalid, use fail_fast: true.
The following example will not check if :wine is present unless it finds :beer.
params do
required :beer, fail_fast: true
required :wine
endThe result of empty params would be a single Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors error.
Similarly, no regular expression test will be performed if :blah is blank in the following example.
params do
required :blah, allow_blank: false, regexp: /blah/, fail_fast: true
endGrape supports I18n for parameter-related error messages, but will fallback to English if translations for the default locale have not been provided. See en.yml for message keys.
Grape supports custom validation messages for parameter-related and coerce-related error messages.
params do
requires :name, values: { value: 1..10, message: 'not in range from 1 to 10' }, allow_blank: { value: false, message: 'cannot be blank' }, regexp: { value: /^[a-z]+$/, message: 'format is invalid' }, message: 'is required'
endparams do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
all_or_none_of :beer, :wine, :juice, message: "all params are required or none is required"
endparams do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
mutually_exclusive :beer, :wine, :juice, message: "are mutually exclusive cannot pass both params"
endparams do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
exactly_one_of :beer, :wine, :juice, message: {exactly_one: "are missing, exactly one parameter is required", mutual_exclusion: "are mutually exclusive, exactly one parameter is required"}
endparams do
optional :beer
optional :wine
optional :juice
at_least_one_of :beer, :wine, :juice, message: "are missing, please specify at least one param"
endparams do
requires :int, type: {value: Integer, message: "type cast is invalid" }
endparams do
requires :name, values: { value: -> { (1..10).to_a }, message: 'not in range from 1 to 10' }
endYou can pass a symbol if you want i18n translations for your custom validation messages.
params do
requires :name, message: :name_required
end# en.yml
en:
grape:
errors:
format: ! '%{attributes} %{message}'
messages:
name_required: 'must be present'You can also override attribute names.
# en.yml
en:
grape:
errors:
format: ! '%{attributes} %{message}'
messages:
name_required: 'must be present'
attributes:
name: 'Oops! Name'Will produce 'Oops! Name must be present'
You cannot set a custom message option for Default as it requires interpolation %{option1}: %{value1} is incompatible with %{option2}: %{value2}. You can change the default error message for Default by changing the incompatible_option_values message key inside en.yml
params do
requires :name, values: { value: -> { (1..10).to_a }, message: 'not in range from 1 to 10' }, default: 5
endRequest headers are available through the headers helper or from env in their original form.
get do
error!('Unauthorized', 401) unless headers['Secret-Password'] == 'swordfish'
endget do
error!('Unauthorized', 401) unless env['HTTP_SECRET_PASSWORD'] == 'swordfish'
endYou can set a response header with header inside an API.
header 'X-Robots-Tag', 'noindex'When raising error!, pass additional headers as arguments.
error! 'Unauthorized', 401, 'X-Error-Detail' => 'Invalid token.'Optionally, you can define requirements for your named route parameters using regular expressions on namespace or endpoint. The route will match only if all requirements are met.
get ':id', requirements: { id: /[0-9]*/ } do
Status.find(params[:id])
end
namespace :outer, requirements: { id: /[0-9]*/ } do
get :id do
end
get ':id/edit' do
end
endYou can define helper methods that your endpoints can use with the helpers
macro by either giving a block or a module.
module StatusHelpers
def user_info(user)
"#{user} has statused #{user.statuses} status(s)"
end
end
class API < Grape::API
# define helpers with a block
helpers do
def current_user
User.find(params[:user_id])
end
end
# or mix in a module
helpers StatusHelpers
get 'info' do
# helpers available in your endpoint and filters
user_info(current_user)
end
endYou can define reusable params using helpers.
class API < Grape::API
helpers do
params :pagination do
optional :page, type: Integer
optional :per_page, type: Integer
end
end
desc 'Get collection'
params do
use :pagination # aliases: includes, use_scope
end
get do
Collection.page(params[:page]).per(params[:per_page])
end
endYou can also define reusable params using shared helpers.
module SharedParams
extend Grape::API::Helpers
params :period do
optional :start_date
optional :end_date
end
params :pagination do
optional :page, type: Integer
optional :per_page, type: Integer
end
end
class API < Grape::API
helpers SharedParams
desc 'Get collection.'
params do
use :period, :pagination
end
get do
Collection
.from(params[:start_date])
.to(params[:end_date])
.page(params[:page])
.per(params[:per_page])
end
endHelpers support blocks that can help set default values. The following API can return a collection sorted by id or created_at in asc or desc order.
module SharedParams
extend Grape::API::Helpers
params :order do |options|
optional :order_by, type:Symbol, values:options[:order_by], default:options[:default_order_by]
optional :order, type:Symbol, values:%i(asc desc), default:options[:default_order]
end
end
class API < Grape::API
helpers SharedParams
desc 'Get a sorted collection.'
params do
use :order, order_by:%i(id created_at), default_order_by: :created_at, default_order: :asc
end
get do
Collection.send(params[:order], params[:order_by])
end
endIf you need methods for generating paths inside your endpoints, please see the grape-route-helpers gem.
You can attach additional documentation to params using a documentation hash.
params do
optional :first_name, type: String, documentation: { example: 'Jim' }
requires :last_name, type: String, documentation: { example: 'Smith' }
endYou can set, get and delete your cookies very simply using cookies method.
class API < Grape::API
get 'status_count' do
cookies[:status_count] ||= 0
cookies[:status_count] += 1
{ status_count: cookies[:status_count] }
end
delete 'status_count' do
{ status_count: cookies.delete(:status_count) }
end
endUse a hash-based syntax to set more than one value.
cookies[:status_count] = {
value: 0,
expires: Time.tomorrow,
domain: '.twitter.com',
path: '/'
}
cookies[:status_count][:value] +=1Delete a cookie with delete.
cookies.delete :status_countSpecify an optional path.
cookies.delete :status_count, path: '/'By default Grape returns a 201 for POST-Requests, 204 for DELETE-Requests and 200 status code for all other Requests.
You can use status to query and set the actual HTTP Status Code
post do
status 202
if status == 200
# do some thing
end
endYou can also use one of status codes symbols that are provided by Rack utils
post do
status :no_content
endYou can redirect to a new url temporarily (302) or permanently (301).
redirect '/statuses'redirect '/statuses', permanent: trueYou can recognize the endpoint matched with given path.
This API returns an instance of Grape::Endpoint.
class API < Grape::API
get '/statuses' do
end
end
API.recognize_path '/statuses'When you add a GET route for a resource, a route for the HEAD
method will also be added automatically. You can disable this
behavior with do_not_route_head!.
class API < Grape::API
do_not_route_head!
get '/example' do
# only responds to GET
end
endWhen you add a route for a resource, a route for the OPTIONS
method will also be added. The response to an OPTIONS request will
include an "Allow" header listing the supported methods. If the resource
has before and after callbacks they will be executed, but no other callbacks will
run.
class API < Grape::API
get '/rt_count' do
{ rt_count: current_user.rt_count }
end
params do
requires :value, type: Integer, desc: 'Value to add to the rt count.'
end
put '/rt_count' do
current_user.rt_count += params[:value].to_i
{ rt_count: current_user.rt_count }
end
endcurl -v -X OPTIONS http://localhost:3000/rt_count
> OPTIONS /rt_count HTTP/1.1
>
< HTTP/1.1 204 No Content
< Allow: OPTIONS, GET, PUTYou can disable this behavior with do_not_route_options!.
If a request for a resource is made with an unsupported HTTP method, an
HTTP 405 (Method Not Allowed) response will be returned. If the resource
has before callbacks they will be executed, but no other callbacks will
run.
curl -X DELETE -v http://localhost:3000/rt_count/
> DELETE /rt_count/ HTTP/1.1
> Host: localhost:3000
>
< HTTP/1.1 405 Method Not Allowed
< Allow: OPTIONS, GET, PUTYou can abort the execution of an API method by raising errors with error!.
error! 'Access Denied', 401Anything that responds to #to_s can be given as a first argument to error!.
error! :not_found, 404You can also return JSON formatted objects by raising error! and passing a hash instead of a message.
error!({ error: 'unexpected error', detail: 'missing widget' }, 500)You can present documented errors with a Grape entity using the the grape-entity gem.
module API
class Error < Grape::Entity
expose :code
expose :message
end
endThe following example specifies the entity to use in the http_codes definition.
desc 'My Route' do
failure [[408, 'Unauthorized', API::Error]]
end
error!({ message: 'Unauthorized' }, 408)The following example specifies the presented entity explicitly in the error message.
desc 'My Route' do
failure [[408, 'Unauthorized']]
end
error!({ message: 'Unauthorized', with: API::Error }, 408)By default Grape returns a 500 status code from error!. You can change this with default_error_status.
class API < Grape::API
default_error_status 400
get '/example' do
error! 'This should have http status code 400'
end
endFor Grape to handle all the 404s for your API, it can be useful to use a catch-all. In its simplest form, it can be like:
route :any, '*path' do
error! # or something else
endIt is very crucial to define this endpoint at the very end of your API, as it literally accepts every request.
Grape can be told to rescue all exceptions and return them in the API format.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from :all
endGrape can also rescue from all exceptions and still use the built-in exception handing.
This will give the same behavior as rescue_from :all with the addition that Grape will use the exception handling defined by all Exception classes that inherit Grape::Exceptions::Base.
The intent of this setting is to provide a simple way to cover the most common exceptions and return any unexpected exceptions in the API format.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from :grape_exceptions
endYou can also rescue specific exceptions.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from ArgumentError, UserDefinedError
endIn this case UserDefinedError must be inherited from StandardError.
Notice that you could combine these two approaches (rescuing custom errors takes precedence). For example, it's useful for handling all exceptions except Grape validation errors.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from Grape::Exceptions::ValidationErrors do |e|
error!(e, 400)
end
rescue_from :all
endThe error format will match the request format. See "Content-Types" below.
Custom error formatters for existing and additional types can be defined with a proc.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
error_formatter :txt, ->(message, backtrace, options, env) {
"error: #{message} from #{backtrace}"
}
endYou can also use a module or class.
module CustomFormatter
def self.call(message, backtrace, options, env)
{ message: message, backtrace: backtrace }
end
end
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
error_formatter :custom, CustomFormatter
endYou can rescue all exceptions with a code block. The error! wrapper automatically sets the default error code and content-type.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from :all do |e|
error!("rescued from #{e.class.name}")
end
endOptionally, you can set the format, status code and headers.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
rescue_from :all do |e|
error!({ error: 'Server error.' }, 500, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/error' })
end
endYou can also rescue all exceptions with a code block and handle the Rack response at the lowest level.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from :all do |e|
Rack::Response.new([ e.message ], 500, { 'Content-type' => 'text/error' }).finish
end
endOr rescue specific exceptions.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from ArgumentError do |e|
error!("ArgumentError: #{e.message}")
end
rescue_from NotImplementedError do |e|
error!("NotImplementedError: #{e.message}")
end
endBy default, rescue_from will rescue the exceptions listed and all their subclasses.
Assume you have the following exception classes defined.
module APIErrors
class ParentError < StandardError; end
class ChildError < ParentError; end
endThen the following rescue_from clause will rescue exceptions of type APIErrors::ParentError and its subclasses (in this case APIErrors::ChildError).
rescue_from APIErrors::ParentError do |e|
error!({
error: "#{e.class} error",
message: e.message
}, e.status)
endTo only rescue the base exception class, set rescue_subclasses: false.
The code below will rescue exceptions of type RuntimeError but not its subclasses.
rescue_from RuntimeError, rescue_subclasses: false do |e|
error!({
status: e.status,
message: e.message,
errors: e.errors
}, e.status)
endHelpers are also available inside rescue_from.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
helpers do
def server_error!
error!({ error: 'Server error.' }, 500, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/error' })
end
end
rescue_from :all do |e|
server_error!
end
endThe rescue_from block must return a Rack::Response object, call error! or re-raise an exception.
The with keyword is available as rescue_from options, it can be passed method name or Proc object.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
helpers do
def server_error!
error!({ error: 'Server error.' }, 500, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/error' })
end
end
rescue_from :all, with: :server_error!
rescue_from ArgumentError, with: -> { Rack::Response.new('rescued with a method', 400) }
endYou could put rescue_from clauses inside a namespace and they will take precedence over ones
defined in the root scope:
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
rescue_from ArgumentError do |e|
error!("outer")
end
namespace :statuses do
rescue_from ArgumentError do |e|
error!("inner")
end
get do
raise ArgumentError.new
end
end
endHere 'inner' will be result of handling occured ArgumentError.
Grape::Exceptions::InvalidVersionHeader, which is raised when the version in the request header doesn't match the currently evaluated version for the endpoint, will never be rescued from a rescue_from block (even a rescue_from :all) This is because Grape relies on Rack to catch that error and try the next versioned-route for cases where there exist identical Grape endpoints with different versions.
When mounted inside containers, such as Rails 3.x, errors such as "404 Not Found" or
"406 Not Acceptable" will likely be handled and rendered by Rails handlers. For instance,
accessing a nonexistent route "/api/foo" raises a 404, which inside rails will ultimately
be translated to an ActionController::RoutingError, which most likely will get rendered
to a HTML error page.
Most APIs will enjoy preventing downstream handlers from handling errors. You may set the
:cascade option to false for the entire API or separately on specific version definitions,
which will remove the X-Cascade: true header from API responses.
cascade falseversion 'v1', using: :header, vendor: 'twitter', cascade: falseGrape::API provides a logger method which by default will return an instance of the Logger
class from Ruby's standard library.
To log messages from within an endpoint, you need to define a helper to make the logger available in the endpoint context.
class API < Grape::API
helpers do
def logger
API.logger
end
end
post '/statuses' do
# ...
logger.info "#{current_user} has statused"
end
endYou can also set your own logger.
class MyLogger
def warning(message)
puts "this is a warning: #{message}"
end
end
class API < Grape::API
logger MyLogger.new
helpers do
def logger
API.logger
end
end
get '/statuses' do
logger.warning "#{current_user} has statused"
end
endFor similar to Rails request logging try the grape_logging or grape-middleware-logger gems.
Your API can declare which content-types to support by using content_type. If you do not specify any, Grape will support
XML, JSON, BINARY, and TXT content-types. The default format is :txt; you can change this with default_format.
Essentially, the two APIs below are equivalent.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
# no content_type declarations, so Grape uses the defaults
end
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
# the following declarations are equivalent to the defaults
content_type :xml, 'application/xml'
content_type :json, 'application/json'
content_type :binary, 'application/octet-stream'
content_type :txt, 'text/plain'
default_format :txt
endIf you declare any content_type whatsoever, the Grape defaults will be overridden. For example, the following API will only
support the :xml and :rss content-types, but not :txt, :json, or :binary. Importantly, this means the :txt
default format is not supported! So, make sure to set a new default_format.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
content_type :xml, 'application/xml'
content_type :rss, 'application/xml+rss'
default_format :xml
endSerialization takes place automatically. For example, you do not have to call to_json in each JSON API endpoint
implementation. The response format (and thus the automatic serialization) is determined in the following order:
- Use the file extension, if specified. If the file is .json, choose the JSON format.
- Use the value of the
formatparameter in the query string, if specified. - Use the format set by the
formatoption, if specified. - Attempt to find an acceptable format from the
Acceptheader. - Use the default format, if specified by the
default_formatoption. - Default to
:txt.
For example, consider the following API.
class MultipleFormatAPI < Grape::API
content_type :xml, 'application/xml'
content_type :json, 'application/json'
default_format :json
get :hello do
{ hello: 'world' }
end
endGET /hello(with anAccept: */*header) does not have an extension or aformatparameter, so it will respond with JSON (the default format).GET /hello.xmlhas a recognized extension, so it will respond with XML.GET /hello?format=xmlhas a recognizedformatparameter, so it will respond with XML.GET /hello.xml?format=jsonhas a recognized extension (which takes precedence over theformatparameter), so it will respond with XML.GET /hello.xls(with anAccept: */*header) has an extension, but that extension is not recognized, so it will respond with JSON (the default format).GET /hello.xlswith anAccept: application/xmlheader has an unrecognized extension, but theAcceptheader corresponds to a recognized format, so it will respond with XML.GET /hello.xlswith anAccept: text/plainheader has an unrecognized extension and an unrecognizedAcceptheader, so it will respond with JSON (the default format).
You can override this process explicitly by specifying env['api.format'] in the API itself.
For example, the following API will let you upload arbitrary files and return their contents as an attachment with the correct MIME type.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
post 'attachment' do
filename = params[:file][:filename]
content_type MIME::Types.type_for(filename)[0].to_s
env['api.format'] = :binary # there's no formatter for :binary, data will be returned "as is"
header 'Content-Disposition', "attachment; filename*=UTF-8''#{CGI.escape(filename)}"
params[:file][:tempfile].read
end
endYou can have your API only respond to a single format with format. If you use this, the API will not respond to file
extensions other than specified in format. For example, consider the following API.
class SingleFormatAPI < Grape::API
format :json
get :hello do
{ hello: 'world' }
end
endGET /hellowill respond with JSON.GET /hello.jsonwill respond with JSON.GET /hello.xml,GET /hello.foobar, or any other extension will respond with an HTTP 404 error code.GET /hello?format=xmlwill respond with an HTTP 406 error code, because the XML format specified by the request parameter is not supported.GET /hellowith anAccept: application/xmlheader will still respond with JSON, since it could not negotiate a recognized content-type from the headers and JSON is the effective default.
The formats apply to parsing, too. The following API will only respond to the JSON content-type and will not parse any other
input than application/json, application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, multipart/related and
multipart/mixed. All other requests will fail with an HTTP 406 error code.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
endWhen the content-type is omitted, Grape will return a 406 error code unless default_format is specified.
The following API will try to parse any data without a content-type using a JSON parser.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
default_format :json
endIf you combine format with rescue_from :all, errors will be rendered using the same format.
If you do not want this behavior, set the default error formatter with default_error_formatter.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
format :json
content_type :txt, 'text/plain'
default_error_formatter :txt
endCustom formatters for existing and additional types can be defined with a proc.
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
content_type :xls, 'application/vnd.ms-excel'
formatter :xls, ->(object, env) { object.to_xls }
endYou can also use a module or class.
module XlsFormatter
def self.call(object, env)
object.to_xls
end
end
class Twitter::API < Grape::API
content_type :xls, 'application/vnd.ms-excel'
formatter :xls, XlsFormatter
endBuilt-in formatters are the following.
:json: use object'sto_jsonwhen available, otherwise callMultiJson.dump:xml: use object'sto_xmlwhen available, usually viaMultiXml, otherwise callto_s:txt: use object'sto_txtwhen available, otherwiseto_s:serializable_hash: use object'sserializable_hashwhen available, otherwise fallback to:json:binary: data will be returned "as is"
Response statuses that indicate no content as defined by Rack here will bypass serialization and the body entity - though there should be none - will not be modified.
Grape supports JSONP via Rack::JSONP, part of the
rack-contrib gem. Add rack-contrib to your Gemfile.
require 'rack/contrib'
class API < Grape::API
use Rack::JSONP
format :json
get '/' do
'Hello World'
end
endGrape supports CORS via Rack::CORS, part of the
rack-cors gem. Add rack-cors to your Gemfile,
then use the middleware in your config.ru file.
require 'rack/cors'
use Rack::Cors do
allow do
origins '*'
resource '*', headers: :any, methods: :get
end
end
run Twitter::APIContent-type is set by the formatter. You can override the content-type of the response at runtime
by setting the Content-Type header.
class API < Grape::API
get '/home_timeline_js' do
content_type 'application/javascript'
"var statuses = ...;"
end
endGrape accepts and parses input data sent with the POST and PUT methods as described in the Parameters
section above. It also supports custom data formats. You must declare additional content-types via
content_type and optionally supply a parser via parser unless a parser is already available within
Grape to enable a custom format. Such a parser can be a function or a class.
With a parser, parsed data is available "as-is" in env['api.request.body'].
Without a parser, data is available "as-is" and in env['api.request.input'].
The following example is a trivial parser that will assign any input with the "text/custom" content-type
to :value. The parameter will be available via params[:value] inside the API call.
module CustomParser
def self.call(object, env)
{ value: object.to_s }
end
endcontent_type :txt, 'text/plain'
content_type :custom, 'text/custom'
parser :custom, CustomParser
put 'value' do
params[:value]
endYou can invoke the above API as follows.
curl -X PUT -d 'data' 'http://localhost:9292/value' -H Content-Type:text/custom -v
You can disable parsing for a content-type with nil. For example, parser :json, nil will disable JSON parsing altogether. The request data is then available as-is in env['api.request.body'].
Grape supports a range of ways to present your data with some help from a generic present method,
which accepts two arguments: the object to be presented and the options associated with it. The options
hash may include :with, which defines the entity to expose.
Add the grape-entity gem to your Gemfile. Please refer to the grape-entity documentation for more details.
The following example exposes statuses.
module API
module Entities
class Status < Grape::Entity
expose :user_name
expose :text, documentation: { type: 'string', desc: 'Status update text.' }
expose :ip, if: { type: :full }
expose :user_type, :user_id, if: ->(status, options) { status.user.public? }
expose :digest do |status, options|
Digest::MD5.hexdigest(status.txt)
end
expose :replies, using: API::Status, as: :replies
end
end
class Statuses < Grape::API
version 'v1'
desc 'Statuses index' do
params: API::Entities::Status.documentation
end
get '/statuses' do
statuses = Status.all
type = current_user.admin? ? :full : :default
present statuses, with: API::Entities::Status, type: type
end
end
endYou can use entity documentation directly in the params block with using: Entity.documentation.
module API
class Statuses < Grape::API
version 'v1'
desc 'Create a status'
params do
requires :all, except: [:ip], using: API::Entities::Status.documentation.except(:id)
end
post '/status' do
Status.create! params
end
end
endYou can present with multiple entities using an optional Symbol argument.
get '/statuses' do
statuses = Status.all.page(1).per(20)
present :total_page, 10
present :per_page, 20
present :statuses, statuses, with: API::Entities::Status
endThe response will be
{
total_page: 10,
per_page: 20,
statuses: []
}
In addition to separately organizing entities, it may be useful to put them as namespaced classes underneath the model they represent.
class Status
def entity
Entity.new(self)
end
class Entity < Grape::Entity
expose :text, :user_id
end
endIf you organize your entities this way, Grape will automatically detect the Entity class and
use it to present your models. In this example, if you added present Status.new to your endpoint,
Grape will automatically detect that there is a Status::Entity class and use that as the
representative entity. This can still be overridden by using the :with option or an explicit
represents call.
You can present hash with Grape::Presenters::Presenter to keep things consistent.
get '/users' do
present { id: 10, name: :dgz }, with: Grape::Presenters::Presenter
endThe response will be
{
id: 10,
name: 'dgz'
}It has the same result with
get '/users' do
present :id, 10
present :name, :dgz
endYou can use Roar to render HAL or Collection+JSON with the help of grape-roar, which defines a custom JSON formatter and enables presenting entities with Grape's present keyword.
You can use Rabl templates with the help of the grape-rabl gem, which defines a custom Grape Rabl formatter.
You can use Active Model Serializers serializers with the help of the grape-active_model_serializers gem, which defines a custom Grape AMS formatter.
In general, use the binary format to send raw data.
class API < Grape::API
get '/file' do
content_type 'application/octet-stream'
File.binread 'file.bin'
end
endYou can set the response body explicitly with body.
class API < Grape::API
get '/' do
content_type 'text/plain'
body 'Hello World'
# return value ignored
end
endUse body false to return 204 No Content without any data or content-type.
You can also set the response to a file with file.
class API < Grape::API
get '/' do
file '/path/to/file'
end
endIf you want a file to be streamed using Rack::Chunked, use stream.
class API < Grape::API
get '/' do
stream '/path/to/file'
end
endGrape has built-in Basic and Digest authentication (the given block
is executed in the context of the current Endpoint). Authentication
applies to the current namespace and any children, but not parents.
http_basic do |username, password|
# verify user's password here
{ 'test' => 'password1' }[username] == password
endhttp_digest({ realm: 'Test Api', opaque: 'app secret' }) do |username|
# lookup the user's password here
{ 'user1' => 'password1' }[username]
endGrape can use custom Middleware for authentication. How to implement these
Middleware have a look at Rack::Auth::Basic or similar implementations.
For registering a Middleware you need the following options:
label- the name for your authenticator to use it laterMiddlewareClass- the MiddlewareClass to use for authenticationoption_lookup_proc- A Proc with one Argument to lookup the options at runtime (return value is anArrayas Parameter for the Middleware).
Example:
Grape::Middleware::Auth::Strategies.add(:my_auth, AuthMiddleware, ->(options) { [options[:realm]] } )
auth :my_auth, { realm: 'Test Api'} do |credentials|
# lookup the user's password here
{ 'user1' => 'password1' }[username]
endUse warden-oauth2 or rack-oauth2 for OAuth2 support.
Grape routes can be reflected at runtime. This can notably be useful for generating documentation.
Grape exposes arrays of API versions and compiled routes. Each route contains a route_prefix, route_version, route_namespace, route_method, route_path and route_params. You can add custom route settings to the route metadata with route_setting.
class TwitterAPI < Grape::API
version 'v1'
desc 'Includes custom settings.'
route_setting :custom, key: 'value'
get do
end
endExamine the routes at runtime.
TwitterAPI::versions # yields [ 'v1', 'v2' ]
TwitterAPI::routes # yields an array of Grape::Route objects
TwitterAPI::routes[0].version # => 'v1'
TwitterAPI::routes[0].description # => 'Includes custom settings.'
TwitterAPI::routes[0].settings[:custom] # => { key: 'value' }Note that Route#route_xyz methods have been deprecated since 0.15.0.
Please use Route#xyz instead.
Note that difference of Route#options and Route#settings.
The options can be referred from your route, it should be set by specifing key and value on verb methods such as get, post and put.
The settings can also be referred from your route, but it should be set by specifing key and value on route_setting.
It's possible to retrieve the information about the current route from within an API call with route.
class MyAPI < Grape::API
desc 'Returns a description of a parameter.'
params do
requires :id, type: Integer, desc: 'Identity.'
end
get 'params/:id' do
route.route_params[params[:id]] # yields the parameter description
end
endThe current endpoint responding to the request is self within the API block
or env['api.endpoint'] elsewhere. The endpoint has some interesting properties,
such as source which gives you access to the original code block of the API
implementation. This can be particularly useful for building a logger middleware.
class ApiLogger < Grape::Middleware::Base
def before
file = env['api.endpoint'].source.source_location[0]
line = env['api.endpoint'].source.source_location[1]
logger.debug "[api] #{file}:#{line}"
end
endBlocks can be executed before or after every API call, using before, after,
before_validation and after_validation.
Before and after callbacks execute in the following order:
beforebefore_validation- validations
after_validation- the API call
after
Steps 4, 5 and 6 only happen if validation succeeds.
If a request for a resource is made with an unsupported HTTP method (returning
HTTP 405) only before callbacks will be executed. The remaining callbacks will
be bypassed.
If a request for a resource is made that triggers the built-in OPTIONS handler,
only before and after callbacks will be executed. The remaining callbacks will
be bypassed.
Using a simple before block to set a header
before do
header 'X-Robots-Tag', 'noindex'
endNamespaces
Callbacks apply to each API call within and below the current namespace:
class MyAPI < Grape::API
get '/' do
"root - #{@blah}"
end
namespace :foo do
before do
@blah = 'blah'
end
get '/' do
"root - foo - #{@blah}"
end
namespace :bar do
get '/' do
"root - foo - bar - #{@blah}"
end
end
end
endThe behaviour is then:
GET / # 'root - '
GET /foo # 'root - foo - blah'
GET /foo/bar # 'root - foo - bar - blah'Params on a namespace (or whichever alias you are using) will also be available when using before_validation or after_validation:
class MyAPI < Grape::API
params do
requires :blah, type: Integer
end
resource ':blah' do
after_validation do
# if we reach this point validations will have passed
@blah = declared(params, include_missing: false)[:blah]
end
get '/' do
@blah.class
end
end
endThe behaviour is then:
GET /123 # 'Fixnum'
GET /foo # 400 error - 'blah is invalid'Versioning
When a callback is defined within a version block, it's only called for the routes defined in that block.
class Test < Grape::API
resource :foo do
version 'v1', :using => :path do
before do
@output ||= 'v1-'
end
get '/' do
@output += 'hello'
end
end
version 'v2', :using => :path do
before do
@output ||= 'v2-'
end
get '/' do
@output += 'hello'
end
end
end
endThe behaviour is then:
GET /foo/v1 # 'v1-hello'
GET /foo/v2 # 'v2-hello'Altering Responses
Using present in any callback allows you to add data to a response:
class MyAPI < Grape::API
format :json
after_validation do
present :name, params[:name] if params[:name]
end
get '/greeting' do
present :greeting, 'Hello!'
end
endThe behaviour is then:
GET /greeting # {"greeting":"Hello!"}
GET /greeting?name=Alan # {"name":"Alan","greeting":"Hello!"}Instead of altering a response, you can also terminate and rewrite it from any callback using error!, including after. This will cause all subsequent steps in the process to not be called. This includes the actual api call and any callbacks
Grape by default anchors all request paths, which means that the request URL
should match from start to end to match, otherwise a 404 Not Found is
returned. However, this is sometimes not what you want, because it is not always
known upfront what can be expected from the call. This is because Rack-mount by
default anchors requests to match from the start to the end, or not at all.
Rails solves this problem by using a anchor: false option in your routes.
In Grape this option can be used as well when a method is defined.
For instance when your API needs to get part of an URL, for instance:
class TwitterAPI < Grape::API
namespace :statuses do
get '/(*:status)', anchor: false do
end
end
endThis will match all paths starting with '/statuses/'. There is one caveat though:
the params[:status] parameter only holds the first part of the request url.
Luckily this can be circumvented by using the described above syntax for path
specification and using the PATH_INFO Rack environment variable, using
env['PATH_INFO']. This will hold everything that comes after the '/statuses/'
part.
You can make a custom middleware by using Grape::Middleware::Base.
It's inherited from some grape official middlewares in fact.
For example, you can write a middleware to log application exception.
class LoggingError < Grape::Middleware::Base
def after
return unless @app_response && @app_response[0] == 500
env['rack.logger'].error("Raised error on #{env['PATH_INFO']}")
end
endYour middleware can overwrite application response as follows, except error case.
class Overwriter < Grape::Middleware::Base
def after
[200, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/plain' }, ['Overwritten.']]
end
endYou can add your custom middleware with use, that push the middleware onto the stack, and you can also control where the middleware is inserted using insert, insert_before and insert_after.
class CustomOverwriter < Grape::Middleware::Base
def after
[200, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/plain' }, [@options[:message]]]
end
end
class API < Grape::API
use Overwriter
insert_before Overwriter, CustomOverwriter, message: 'Overwritten again.'
insert 0, CustomOverwriter, message: 'Overwrites all other middleware.'
get '/' do
end
endNote that when you're using Grape mounted on Rails you don't have to use Rails middleware because it's already included into your middleware stack.
You only have to implement the helpers to access the specific env variable.
By default you can access remote IP with request.ip. This is the remote IP address implemented by Rack. Sometimes it is desirable to get the remote IP Rails-style with ActionDispatch::RemoteIp.
Add gem 'actionpack' to your Gemfile and require 'action_dispatch/middleware/remote_ip.rb'. Use the middleware in your API and expose a client_ip helper. See this documentation for additional options.
class API < Grape::API
use ActionDispatch::RemoteIp
helpers do
def client_ip
env['action_dispatch.remote_ip'].to_s
end
end
get :remote_ip do
{ ip: client_ip }
end
endUse rack-test and define your API as app.
You can test a Grape API with RSpec by making HTTP requests and examining the response.
require 'spec_helper'
describe Twitter::API do
include Rack::Test::Methods
def app
Twitter::API
end
context 'GET /api/statuses/public_timeline' do
it 'returns an empty array of statuses' do
get '/api/statuses/public_timeline'
expect(last_response.status).to eq(200)
expect(JSON.parse(last_response.body)).to eq []
end
end
context 'GET /api/statuses/:id' do
it 'returns a status by id' do
status = Status.create!
get "/api/statuses/#{status.id}"
expect(last_response.body).to eq status.to_json
end
end
endThere's no standard way of sending arrays of objects via an HTTP GET, so POST JSON data and specify the correct content-type.
describe Twitter::API do
context 'POST /api/statuses' do
it 'creates many statuses' do
statuses = [{ text: '...' }, { text: '...'}]
post '/api/statuses', statuses.to_json, 'CONTENT_TYPE' => 'application/json'
expect(last_response.body).to eq 201
end
end
endYou can test with other RSpec-based frameworks, including Airborne, which uses rack-test to make requests.
require 'airborne'
Airborne.configure do |config|
config.rack_app = Twitter::API
end
describe Twitter::API do
context 'GET /api/statuses/:id' do
it 'returns a status by id' do
status = Status.create!
get "/api/statuses/#{status.id}"
expect_json(status.as_json)
end
end
endrequire 'test_helper'
class Twitter::APITest < MiniTest::Test
include Rack::Test::Methods
def app
Twitter::API
end
def test_get_api_statuses_public_timeline_returns_an_empty_array_of_statuses
get '/api/statuses/public_timeline'
assert last_response.ok?
assert_equal [], JSON.parse(last_response.body)
end
def test_get_api_statuses_id_returns_a_status_by_id
status = Status.create!
get "/api/statuses/#{status.id}"
assert_equal status.to_json, last_response.body
end
enddescribe Twitter::API do
context 'GET /api/statuses/public_timeline' do
it 'returns an empty array of statuses' do
get '/api/statuses/public_timeline'
expect(response.status).to eq(200)
expect(JSON.parse(response.body)).to eq []
end
end
context 'GET /api/statuses/:id' do
it 'returns a status by id' do
status = Status.create!
get "/api/statuses/#{status.id}"
expect(response.body).to eq status.to_json
end
end
endIn Rails, HTTP request tests would go into the spec/requests group. You may want your API code to go into
app/api - you can match that layout under spec by adding the following in spec/rails_helper.rb.
RSpec.configure do |config|
config.include RSpec::Rails::RequestExampleGroup, type: :request, file_path: /spec\/api/
endclass Twitter::APITest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
include Rack::Test::Methods
def app
Rails.application
end
test 'GET /api/statuses/public_timeline returns an empty array of statuses' do
get '/api/statuses/public_timeline'
assert last_response.ok?
assert_equal [], JSON.parse(last_response.body)
end
test 'GET /api/statuses/:id returns a status by id' do
status = Status.create!
get "/api/statuses/#{status.id}"
assert_equal status.to_json, last_response.body
end
endBecause helpers are mixed in based on the context when an endpoint is defined, it can
be difficult to stub or mock them for testing. The Grape::Endpoint.before_each method
can help by allowing you to define behavior on the endpoint that will run before every
request.
describe 'an endpoint that needs helpers stubbed' do
before do
Grape::Endpoint.before_each do |endpoint|
allow(endpoint).to receive(:helper_name).and_return('desired_value')
end
end
after do
Grape::Endpoint.before_each nil
end
it 'stubs the helper' do
# ...
end
endUse grape-reload.
Add API paths to config/application.rb.
# Auto-load API and its subdirectories
config.paths.add File.join('app', 'api'), glob: File.join('**', '*.rb')
config.autoload_paths += Dir[Rails.root.join('app', 'api', '*')]Create config/initializers/reload_api.rb.
if Rails.env.development?
ActiveSupport::Dependencies.explicitly_unloadable_constants << 'Twitter::API'
api_files = Dir[Rails.root.join('app', 'api', '**', '*.rb')]
api_reloader = ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker.new(api_files) do
Rails.application.reload_routes!
end
ActionDispatch::Callbacks.to_prepare do
api_reloader.execute_if_updated
end
endSee StackOverflow #3282655 for more information.
Grape has built-in support for ActiveSupport::Notifications which provides simple hook points to instrument key parts of your application.
The following are currently supported:
The main execution of an endpoint, includes filters and rendering.
- endpoint - The endpoint instance
The execution of the main content block of the endpoint.
- endpoint - The endpoint instance
- endpoint - The endpoint instance
- filters - The filters being executed
- type - The type of filters (before, before_validation, after_validation, after)
See the ActiveSupport::Notifications documentation for information on how to subscribe to these events.
Grape integrates with following third-party tools:
- New Relic - built-in support from v3.10.0 of the official newrelic_rpm gem, also newrelic-grape gem
- Librato Metrics - grape-librato gem
- Skylight - skylight gem, documentation
- AppSignal - appsignal-ruby gem, documentation
Grape is work of hundreds of contributors. You're encouraged to submit pull requests, propose features and discuss issues.
See CONTRIBUTING.
MIT License. See LICENSE for details.
Copyright (c) 2010-2015 Michael Bleigh, and Intridea, Inc.
