zulip/docs/documentation/api.md

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Documenting REST API endpoints

This document explains the system for documenting Zulip's REST API. This documentation is an essential resource both for users and the developers of Zulip's mobile and terminal apps. We carefully designed a system for both displaying it and helping ensure it stays up to date as Zulip's API changes.

Our API documentation is defined by a few sets of files:

  • Most data describing API endpoints and examples is stored in our OpenAPI configuration at zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml.
  • The top-level templates live under templates/zerver/api/*, and are written using the markdown framework that powers our user docs, with some special extensions for rendering nice code blocks and example responses.
  • The text for the Python examples comes from a test suite for the Python API documentation (zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.py; run via tools/test-api). The generate_code_example macro will magically read content from that test suite and render it as the code example. This structure ensures that Zulip's API documentation is robust to a wide range of possible typos and other bugs in the API documentation.
  • The REST API index (templates/zerver/help/include/rest-endpoints.md) in the broader /api left sidebar (templates/zerver/api/sidebar_index.md).

This first section is focused on explaining how the API documentation system is put together; when actually documenting an endpoint, you'll want to also read the [Step by step guide][#step-by-step-guide].

How it works

To understand how this documentation system works, start by reading an existing doc file (templates/zerver/api/render-message.md is a good example; accessible live here or in the development environment at http://localhost:9991/api/render-message).

We highly recommend looking at those resouces while reading this page.

If you look at the documentation for existing endpoints, you'll notice that a typical endpoint's documentation is divided into four sections:

  • The top-level Description
  • Usage examples
  • Arguments
  • Responses

The rest of this guide describes how each of these sections works.

Description

At the top of any REST endpoint documentation page, you'll want to explain what the endpoint does in clear English. Including important notes on how to use it correctly or what it's good or bad for, with links to any alternative endpoints the user might want to consider. These sections should almost always contain a link to the documentation of the relevant feature in /help/.

We plan to migrate to storing this description content in the description field in zulip.yaml; currently, the description section in zulip.yaml is not used for anything.

Usage examples

We display usage examples in three languages: Python, JavaScript and curl; we may add more in the future. Every endpoint should have Python and curl documentation; JavaScript is optional as we don't consider that API library to be fully supported. The examples are defined using a special Markdown extension (zerver/lib/bugdown/api_code_examples.py). To use this extension, one writes a Markdown file block that looks something like this:

{start_tabs}
{tab|python}
{generate_code_example(python)|/messages/render:post|example}
{tab|curl}
curl -X POST {{ api_url }}/v1/messages/render \
...
{tab|javascript}
...
{end_tabs}

For JavaScript and curl examples, we just have the example right there in the markdown file. It is critical that these examples be tested manually by copy-pasting the result; it is very easy and very embarrassing to have typos result in incorrect documentation. Additionally, JavaScript examples should conform to the coding style and structure of Zulip's existing JavaScript examples.

For the Python examples, you'll write the example in zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.py, and it'll be run and verified automatically in Zulip's automated test suite. The code there will look something like this:

def render_message(client):
    # type: (Client) -> None

    # {code_example|start}
    # Render a message
    request = {
        'content': '**foo**'
    }
    result = client.render_message(request)
    # {code_example|end}

    validate_against_openapi_schema(result, '/messages/render', 'post', '200')

This is an actual Python function which (if registered correctly) will be run as part of the tools/test-api test suite. The validate_against_opanapi_schema function will verify that the result of that request is as defined in the examples in zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml. To register a function correctly:

  • You need to add it to the TEST_FUNCTIONS map; this declares the relationship between function names like render_message and OpenAPI endpoints like /messages/render:post.
  • The render_message function needs to be called from test_messages (or one of the other functions at the bottom of the file). The final function, test_the_api, is what actually runs the tests.
  • Test that your code actually runs in tools/test-api; a good way to do this is to break your code and make sure tools/test-api fails.

You will still want to manually test the example using Zulip's Python API client by copy-pasting from the website; it's easy to make typos and other mistakes where variables are defined outside the tested block, and the tests are not foolproof.

The code that renders /api pages will extract the block between the # {code_example|start} and # {code_example|end} comments, and substitute it in place of {generate_code_example(python)|/messages/render:post|example} wherever that string appears in the API documentation.

Arguments

We have a separate Markdown extension to document the arguments that an API endpoint expects. You'll see this in files like templates/zerver/api/render-message.md via the following Markdown directive (implemented in zerver/lib/bugdown/api_arguments_table_generator.py):

{generate_api_arguments_table|zulip.yaml|/messages/render:post}

Just as in the usage examples, the /messages/render key must match a URL definition in zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml, and that URL definition must have a post HTTP method defined.

Displaying example payloads/responses

If you've already followed the steps in the Usage examples section, this part should be fairly trivial.

You can use the following Markdown directive to render the fixtures defined in the OpenAPI zulip.yaml for a given endpoint and status code:

{generate_code_example|/messages/render:post|fixture(200)}

Step by step guide

This section offers a step-by-step process for adding documentation for a new API endpoint. It assumes you've read and understood the above.

  1. Start by adding OpenAPI format data to zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml for the endpoint. If you copy-paste (which is helpful to get the indentation structure right), be sure to update all the content that you copied to correctly describe your endpoint!

    In order to do this, you need to figure out how the endpoint in question works by reading the code! To understand how arguments are specified in Zulip backend endpoints, read our REST API tutorial, paying special attention to the details of REQ and has_request_variables.

    Once you understand that, the best way to determine the supported arguments for an API endpoint is to find the corresponding URL pattern in zprojects/urls.py, look up the backend function for that endpoint in zerver/views/, and inspect its arguments declared using REQ.

    You can check your formatting using two helpful tools.

    • tools/check-swagger will verify the syntax of zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml.
    • test-backend zerver/tests/test_openapi.py; this test compares your documentation against the code and can find many common mistakes in how arguments are declared.
  2. Add a function for the endpoint you'd like to document to zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.py. render_message is a good example to follow. There are generally two key pieces to your test: (1) doing an API query and (2) verifying its result has the expected format using validate_against_openapi_schema.

  3. Make the desired API call inside the function. If our Python bindings don't have a dedicated method for a specific API call, you may either use client.call_endpoint or add a dedicated function to the zulip PyPI package. Ultimately, the goal is for every endpoint to be documented the latter way, but it's useful to be able to write working documentation for an endpoint that isn't supported by python-zulip-api yet.

  4. Add the function to the TEST_FUNCTIONS dict and one of the test_* functions at the end of zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.py; these will ensure your function will be called when running test-api.

  5. Capture the JSON response returned by the API call (the test "fixture"). The easiest way to do this is add an appropriate print statement (usually json.dumps(result, indent=4, sort_keys=True)), and then run tools/test-api. You can also use http://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ to format the JSON fixtures. Add the fixture to the example subsection of the responses section for the endpoint in zerver/openapi/zulip.yaml.

  6. Run ./tools/test-api to make sure your new test function is being run and the tests pass.

  7. Now, inside the function, isolate the lines of code that call the API and could be displayed as a code example. Wrap the relevant lines in # {code_example|start} ... relevant lines go here ... # {code_example|end} comments. The lines inside these comments are what will be displayed as the code example on our /api page.

  8. Finally, write the markdown file for your API endpoint under templates/zerver/api/. This is usually pretty easy to template off existing endpoints; but refer to the system explanations above for details.

  9. Add the markdown file to the index in templates/zerver/help/include/rest-endpoints.md.

  10. Test your endpoint, pretending to be a new user in a hurry. You should make sure that copy-pasting the code in your examples works, and post an example of the output in the pull request.

Why a custom system?

Given that our documentation is written in large part using the OpenAPI format, why maintain a custom markdown system for displaying it? There's several major benefits to this system:

  • It is extremely common for API documentation to become out of date as an API evolves; this automated testing system helps make it possible for Zulip to maintain accurate documentation without a lot of manual management.
  • Every Zulip server can host correct API documentation for its version, with the key variables (like the Zulip server URL) already pre-susbtituted for the user.
  • We're able to share implementation language and visual styling with our Helper Center, which is especially useful for the extensive non-REST API documentation pages (e.g. our bot framework).
  • Open source systems for displaying OpenAPI documentation (such as Swagger) have poor UI, whereas Cloud systems that accept OpenAPI data, like readme.io, make the above things much more difficult to manage.

Using the standard OpenAPI format gives us flexibility, though; if the state of third-party tools improves, we don't need to redo most of the actual documentation work in order to migrate tools.