OpenAPI Schemas¶
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/nova/+spec/openapi
We would like to start documenting our APIs in an industry-standard, machine-readable manner. Doing so opens up many opportunities for both OpenStack developer and OpenStack users alike, notably the ability to both auto-generate and auto-validate both client tooling and documentation alike. Of the many API description languages available, OpenAPI (fka “Swagger”) appears to be the one with both the largest developer mindshare and the one that would be the best fit for OpenStack due to the existing tooling used in many OpenStack services, thus we would opt to use this format.
Problem description¶
The history of API description languages has been mainly a history of
half-baked ideas, unnecessary complication, and in general lots of failure.
This history has been reflected in OpenStack’s own history of attempting to
document APIs, starting with our early use of WADL through to our experiments
with Swagger 2.0 and RAML, leading to today’s use of our custom os_api_ref
project, built on reStructuredText and Sphinx.
It is only in recent years that things have started to stabilise somewhat, with the development of widely used API description languages like OpenAPI, RAML and API Blueprint, as well as supporting SaaS tools such as Postman and Apigee. OpenAPI in particular has seen broad adoption across multiple sectors, with sites as varied as CloudFlare and GitHub providing OpenAPI schemas for their APIs. OpenAPI has evolved significantly in recent years and now supports a wide variety of API patterns including things like webhooks. Even more beneficial for OpenStack, OpenAPI 3.1 is a full superset of JSON Schema meaning we have the ability to re-use much of the validation we already have.
Use Cases¶
As an end user, I would like to have access to machine-readable, fully validated documentation for the APIs I will be interacting with.
As an end user, I want statically viewable documentation hosted as part of the existing docs site without requiring a running instance of Nova.
As an SDK/client developer, I would like to be able to auto-generate bindings and clients, promoting consistency and minimising the amount of manual work needed to develop and maintain these.
As a Nova developer, I would like to have a verified API specification that I can use should I need to replace the web framework/libraries we use in the event they are no longer maintained.
Proposed change¶
This effort can be broken into a number of distinct steps:
Add a new decorator for removed APIs and actions
We have a number of APIs and actions that no longer have backing code and return
HTTP 410 (Gone)
orHTTP 400 (Bad Request)
, respectively. We will not add schemas for these in the initial attempt at this so we need some mechanism to indicate this. We will add a newremoved
decorator that will highlight these removed APIs and indicate the version they were removed in and the reason for their removal. We can later use this as a heuristic in our tests to skip schema checks for these methods.Add missing request body and query string schemas
There is already good coverage of both request bodies and query string parameters but it is not complete. A list of incomplete schemas is given at the end of this section. The additional schemas will merely validate what is already allowed, which will mean extensive use of
"additionalProperties": true
or empty schemas. Put another way, an API that currently ignores unexpected request body fields or query string parameters will continue to ignore them. We may wish to make these stricter, as we did for most APIs in microversion 2.75, but that is a separate issue that should be addressed separately.Once these specs are added, tests will be added to ensure all non-deprecated and non-removed API resources have appropriate schemas.
Add response body schemas
These will be sourced from existing OpenAPI schemas, currently published at github.com/gtema/openstack-openapi, from Tempest’s API schemas, and where necessary from new schemas auto-generated from JSON response bodies generated in tests and manually modified handle things like enum values.
Once these are added, tests will be added to ensure all non-deprecated and non-removed API resources have appropriate response body schemas. In addition, we will add a new configuration option that will control how we do verification at the API layer,
[api] response_validation
. This will be an enum value with three options:error
Raise a HTTP 500 (Server Error) in the event that an API returns an “invalid” response.
This will be the default in CI i.e. for our unit, functional and integration tests. This should not be used in production. The help text of the option will indicate this and we will set the
advanced
option.warn
Log a warning about an “invalid” response, prompting operations to file a bug report against Nova.
This will be initial (and likely forever) default in production.
ignore
Disable API response body validation entirely. This is an escape hatch in case we mess up.
Note
The development of tooling required to gather these JSON Schema schemas and generate an OpenAPI schema will not be developed inside Nova and is therefore not covered by this spec. Nova will merely consume the resulting tooling for use in documentation. It is intended that the same tool will be usable across any OpenStack project that uses the same web frameworks (in Nova’s case, WebOb + Routes).
Note
The impact of middleware that modifies either the request or response will
not be accounted for in this change. This is because these are configurable
and they cannot be guaranteed to exist in a given deployment. Examples
include the sizelimit
middleware from oslo.middlware
and the
auth_token
middleware from keystonemiddleware
.
Alternatives¶
Use a different tool
We could use a different tool than OpenAPI to publish our specs. In a manner of speaking we already do this - albeit not in a machine-readable manner - through our use of os-api-ref.
This idea has been rejected because OpenAPI is clearly the best tool for the It is the most widely used API description language available today and aligns well with our existing use of JSON Schema for API validation. While it does not support OpenStack’s microversion API design pattern out-of-the-box, previous experiments have demonstrated that it is extensible enough to add this.
Maintain these specs out-of-tree
We could use a separate repo to store and maintain specs for Nova and the other OpenStack services.
This idea has been rejected because it prevents us testing the specs on each commit to Nova and means work that could be spread across multiple teams is instead focused on one small team. It will result in more bugs and a lag between changes to the Nova API and changes to the out-of-tree specs. It will result in duplication of effort across Nova, Tempest, and the specs projects.
Publish the spec via an API resource rather than in our docs
We could publish the spec via a new, unversioned API endpoint such as
/spec
. AGET
request to this would return the full spec, either statically generated at deployment time or dynamically generated (and then cached) at runtime.This is rejected because it brings limited advantages and multiple disadvantages. Nova’s API is designed to be backwards-compatible and non-extensible. As such, a user with the latest version of the spec should be able to use it to communicate with any OpenStack deployment running a version of Nova that supports microversions. It is also expected that the “master” version of the spec will continuously improve as things are tightened up, documentation is improved, and bugs or mistakes are corrected. We want consumers of the spec to see these changes immediately rather than wait for their deployment to be updated. Finally, OpenStack’s previous forays into discoverable APIs, such as Keystone’s use of JSONHome or Glance’s attempts to publish resource schemas, have seen limited take-up outside of the projects themselves. Taken together, this all suggests there is no reason or advantage to publishing deployment-specific specs and users would be better served by fetching the latest version of the spec from the api-ref documentation published on docs.openstack.org (which, one should note, is itself intentionally unversioned).
Data model impact¶
None.
REST API impact¶
There will be no direct REST API impact. Users will see HTTP 500 error if they
set [api] response_validation = error
and encounter an invalid response,
however, we will not encourage use of this option in production and will
instead focus on validating this ourselves in CI.
We may wish to address issues that are uncovered as we add schemas, but this work is considered secondary to this effort and can be tackled separately.
Security impact¶
None.
Notifications impact¶
None.
Other end user impact¶
This should be very beneficial for users who are interested in developing client and bindings for OpenStack. In particular, this should (after an initial effort in code generation) reduce the workload of the SDK team as well as teams outside of OpenStack that work on client tooling such as the Gophercloud team.
Performance Impact¶
There will be a minimal impact on API performance when validation is enabled as we will now verify both requests and responses for all API resources. Given our existing extensive use of JSON Schema for API validation, it is expected that this should not be a significant issue.
Other deployer impact¶
As noted previously, there will be one new config option, [api]
response_validation
. Operators may see increased warnings in their logs due
to incomplete schemas, but most if not all of these issues should be ironed out
by our CI coverage.
Developer impact¶
Developers working on the API microversions will now be encouraged to provide JSON Schema schemas for both requests and responses.
Upgrade impact¶
None.
Implementation¶
Assignee(s)¶
- Primary assignee:
stephenfinucane
- Other contributors:
gtema
Feature Liaison¶
None.
Work Items¶
Add missing request body schemas
Add tests to validate existence of request body schemas
Add missing query string schemas
Add tests to validate existence of query string schemas
Add response body schemas
Add decorator to validate response body schemas against response
Add tests to validate existence of response body schemas
Dependencies¶
The actual generation of an OpenAPI documentation will be achieved via a
separate tool. It is not yet determined if this tool will live inside an
existing project, such as os_api_ref
or openstacksdk
, or inside a
wholly new project. In any case, it is envisaged that this tool will handle
OpenStack-specific nuances like microversions that don’t map 1:1 to OpenAPI
concepts in a consistent and documented fashion.
Testing¶
Unit tests will ensure that schemas eventually exist for request bodies, query strings, and response bodies.
Unit, functional and integration tests will all work together to ensure that
response body schemas match real responses by setting [api]
response_validation
to error
.
Documentation Impact¶
Initially there should be no impact as we will continue to use os_api_ref
as-is for our api-ref
docs. Eventually we will replace or extend this
extension to generate documentation from our OpenAPI schema.
References¶
APIs missing schemas¶
These are the APIs that are currently (as of 2024-04-11, commit 1bca24aeb
)
missing API request body schemas and query string schemas.
Missing request body schemas
AdminActionsController._inject_network_info
AdminActionsController._reset_network
AgentController.create
AgentController.update
BareMetalNodeController._add_interface
BareMetalNodeController._remove_interface
BareMetalNodeController.create
CellsController.create
CellsController.sync_instances
CellsController.update
CertificatesController.create
CloudpipeController.create
CloudpipeController.update
ConsolesController.create
DeferredDeleteController._force_delete
DeferredDeleteController._restore
FixedIPController.reserve
FixedIPController.unreserve
FloatingIPBulkController.create
FloatingIPBulkController.update
FloatingIPController.create
FloatingIPBulkController.create
FloatingIPBulkController.update
FloatingIPController.create
FloatingIPDNSDomainController.update
FloatingIPDNSEntryController.update
LockServerController._unlock
NetworkAssociateActionController._associate_host
NetworkAssociateActionController._disassociate_host_only
NetworkAssociateActionController._disassociate_project_only
NetworkController._disassociate_host_and_project
NetworkController.add
NetworkController.create
PauseServerController._pause
PauseServerController._unpause
RemoteConsolesController.get_rdp_console
RescueController._unrescue
SecurityGroupActionController._addSecurityGroup
SecurityGroupActionController._removeSecurityGroup
SecurityGroupController.create
SecurityGroupController.update
SecurityGroupDefaultRulesController.create
SecurityGroupRulesController.create
ServersController._action_confirm_resize
ServersController._action_revert_resize
ServersController._start_server
ServersController._stop_server
ShelveController._shelve
ShelveController._shelve_offload
SuspendServerController._resume
SuspendServerController._suspend
TenantNetworkController.create
Missing request query string schemas
AgentController.index
AggregateController.index
AggregateController.show
AvailabilityZoneController.detail
AvailabilityZoneController.index
BareMetalNodeController.index
BareMetalNodeController.show
CellsController.capacities
CellsController.detail
CellsController.index
CellsController.info
CellsController.show
CertificatesController.show
CloudpipeController.index
ConsoleAuthTokensController.show
ConsolesController.index
ConsolesController.show
ExtensionInfoController.index
ExtensionInfoController.show
FixedIPController.show
FlavorAccessController.index
FlavorExtraSpecsController.index
FlavorExtraSpecsController.show
FlavorsController.show
FloatingIPBulkController.index
FloatingIPBulkController.show
FloatingIPController.index
FloatingIPController.show
FloatingIPDNSDomainController.index
FloatingIPDNSEntryController.show
FloatingIPPoolsController.index
FpingController.index
FpingController.show
HostController.reboot
HostController.show
HostController.shutdown
HostController.startup
HypervisorsController.detail
HypervisorsController.index
HypervisorsController.search
HypervisorsController.servers
HypervisorsController.show
HypervisorsController.statistics
HypervisorsController.uptime
IPsController.index
IPsController.show
ImageMetadataController.index
ImageMetadataController.show
ImagesController.detail
ImagesController.index
ImagesController.show
InstanceActionsController.index
InstanceActionsController.show
InstanceUsageAuditLogController.index
InstanceUsageAuditLogController.show
InterfaceAttachmentController.index
InterfaceAttachmentController.show
NetworkController.index
NetworkController.show
QuotaClassSetsController.show
QuotaSetsController.defaults
QuotaSetsController.detail
QuotaSetsController.show
SecurityGroupController.show
SecurityGroupDefaultRulesController.index
SecurityGroupDefaultRulesController.show
ServerDiagnosticsController.index
ServerGroupController.show
ServerMetadataController.index
ServerMetadataController.show
ServerMigrationsController.index
ServerMigrationsController.show
ServerPasswordController.index
ServerSecurityGroupController.index
ServerTagsController.index
ServerTagsController.show
ServerTopologyController.index
ServerVirtualInterfaceController.index
ServersController.show
SnapshotController.show
TenantNetworkController.index
TenantNetworkController.show
VersionsController.show
VolumeAttachmentController.show
VolumeController.show
Note
We should emphasise that many - but not all - of the aforementioned APIs are either deprecated or removed. We may wish not to add schemas for these, though by doing so we will lose the ability to generate documentation or clients for these APIs from the OpenAPI spec.
History¶
Release Name |
Description |
---|---|
2024.2 Dalmatian |
Introduced |