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A CLI tool to call REST APIs defined in OpenAPI 3.0 specs

Project description

papycli — Python CLI for OpenAPI 3.0 REST APIs

papycli is an interactive CLI that reads OpenAPI 3.0 specs and lets you call REST API endpoints directly from the terminal.

Features

  • Auto-generates a CLI from any OpenAPI 3.0 spec
  • Shell completion for bash and zsh
  • Register and switch between multiple APIs
  • Inspect API specs with papycli spec
  • Validate request parameters before sending with --check / --check-strict
  • Validate response body and status code against the OpenAPI spec with --response-check
  • Automatically coerces -p values to the correct JSON type (integer, number, boolean) based on the API spec
  • Log requests and responses to a file with papycli config log
  • Extend request processing with request filter plugins (papycli.request_filters entry point)
  • Inspect and transform responses with response filter plugins (papycli.response_filters entry point)

Requirements

Item Notes
Python 3.12 or later

Installation

pip install papycli

Enable Shell Completion

bash:

# Add to ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile
eval "$(papycli config completion-script bash)"

zsh:

# Add to ~/.zshrc
eval "$(papycli config completion-script zsh)"

Git Bash (Windows):

Git Bash uses MSYS path conversion, which can mangle the output of $() command substitution. Disable it before running the eval command:

# Add to ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile
export MSYS_NO_PATHCONV=1
eval "$(papycli config completion-script bash)"

Restart your shell or run source ~/.bashrc / source ~/.zshrc to apply.


Quick Start — Petstore Demo

This repository includes a demo using the Swagger Petstore.

1. Start the Petstore server

docker compose -f examples/petstore/docker-compose.yml up -d

The API will be available at http://localhost:8080/api/v3/.

2. Register the API

papycli config add examples/petstore/petstore-oas3.json

3. Try some commands

# List available endpoints
papycli summary

# GET /store/inventory
papycli get /store/inventory

# GET with a path parameter
papycli get /pet/99

# GET with a query parameter
papycli get /pet/findByStatus -q status available

# POST with body parameters
papycli post /pet -p name "My Dog" -p status available -p photoUrls "http://example.com/photo.jpg"

# POST with a raw JSON body
papycli post /pet -d '{"name": "My Dog", "status": "available", "photoUrls": ["http://example.com/photo.jpg"]}'

# Array parameter (repeat the same key)
papycli put /pet -p id 1 -p name "My Dog" -p photoUrls "http://example.com/a.jpg" -p photoUrls "http://example.com/b.jpg" -p status available

# Nested object (dot notation)
papycli put /pet -p id 1 -p name "My Dog" -p category.id 2 -p category.name "Dogs" -p photoUrls "http://example.com/photo.jpg" -p status available

# DELETE /pet/{petId}
papycli delete /pet/1

4. Tab completion

Once shell completion is enabled, tab completion is available:

$ papycli <TAB>
  get  post  put  patch  delete  config  spec  summary

$ papycli get <TAB>
  /pet/findByStatus  /pet/{petId}  /store/inventory  ...

$ papycli get /pet/findByStatus <TAB>
  -q  -p  -H  -d  --summary  --verbose  --check  --check-strict  --response-check

$ papycli get /pet/findByStatus -q <TAB>
  status

$ papycli get /pet/findByStatus -q status <TAB>
  available  pending  sold

$ papycli post /pet -p <TAB>
  name*  photoUrls*  status

$ papycli post /pet -p status <TAB>
  available  pending  sold

Adding Your Own API

Step 1 — Run config add

papycli config add your-api-spec.json

This command will:

  1. Resolve all $ref references in the OpenAPI spec
  2. Convert the spec to papycli's internal API definition format
  3. Save the result to $PAPYCLI_CONF_DIR/apis/<name>.json
  4. Create or update $PAPYCLI_CONF_DIR/papycli.conf

The API name is derived from the filename (e.g. your-api-spec.jsonyour-api-spec).

Step 2 — Set the base URL

If the spec contains servers[0].url, it is used automatically. Otherwise, edit $PAPYCLI_CONF_DIR/papycli.conf and set the url field:

{
  "default": "your-api-spec",
  "your-api-spec": {
    "openapispec": "your-api-spec.json",
    "apidef": "your-api-spec.json",
    "url": "https://your-api-base-url/"
  }
}

Managing Multiple APIs

# Register multiple APIs
papycli config add petstore-oas3.json
papycli config add myapi.json

# Switch the active API
papycli config use myapi

# Remove a registered API
papycli config remove petstore-oas3

# Show registered APIs and the current default
papycli config list

# Create a short alias command for the current default API
papycli config alias petcli

# List configured aliases
papycli config alias

# Delete an alias
papycli config alias -d petcli

Reference

# Configuration management commands
papycli config add <spec-file>             Register an API from an OpenAPI spec file
papycli config remove <api-name>           Remove a registered API
papycli config use <api-name>              Switch the active API
papycli config list                        List registered APIs and current configuration
papycli config log                         Show the current log file path
papycli config log <path>                  Set the log file path
papycli config log --unset                 Disable logging
papycli config alias [alias-name] [spec-name]  Create a command alias for a registered API
papycli config alias                       List configured aliases
papycli config alias -d <alias-name>       Delete an alias
papycli config completion-script <bash|zsh>  Print a shell completion script

# Inspection commands
papycli spec [resource]             Show the raw internal API spec (filter by resource path)
papycli spec --full [resource]      Output the stored OpenAPI spec (filter by resource path if given)
papycli summary [resource]          List available endpoints (filter by resource prefix)
                                      Required params marked with *, array params with []
papycli summary --csv               Output endpoints in CSV format

# API call commands
papycli <method> <resource> [options]

Methods:
  get | post | put | patch | delete

Options:
  -H <header: value>      Custom HTTP header (repeatable)
  -q <name> <value>       Query parameter (repeatable).
                            You can also embed query parameters directly in the
                            resource path: "/pet/findByStatus?status=available"
                            Inline parameters are sent before any -q parameters.
  -p <name> <value>       Body parameter (repeatable)
                            - Values are coerced to the correct JSON type
                              (integer, number, boolean) based on the API spec.
                              Strings are passed as-is.
                            - Repeat the same key to build a JSON array:
                              -p tags foo -p tags bar  →  {"tags":["foo","bar"]}
                            - Use dot notation to build a nested object:
                              -p category.id 1 -p category.name Dogs
                              →  {"category":{"id":"1","name":"Dogs"}}
  -d <json>               Raw JSON body (overrides -p)
  --summary               Show endpoint info without sending a request
  --check                 Validate params before sending (warn on stderr, request is still sent)
  --check-strict          Validate params before sending (warn on stderr, abort with exit 1 on failure)
  --response-check        Validate response status code and body against the OpenAPI spec
                            (warn on stderr; violations do not affect exit code)
  --verbose / -v          Show HTTP status line
  --version               Show version
  --help / -h             Show help

Environment variables:
  PAPYCLI_CONF_DIR         Path to the config directory (default: ~/.papycli)
  PAPYCLI_CUSTOM_HEADER    Custom HTTP headers applied to every request.
                             Separate multiple headers with newlines:
                             export PAPYCLI_CUSTOM_HEADER=$'Authorization: Bearer token\nX-Tenant: acme'
  PAPYCLI_DISABLE_DOTENV   Set to 1 to disable automatic .env file loading.
                             By default papycli loads .env from the current directory
                             and $PAPYCLI_CONF_DIR on startup. Disable this when running
                             in untrusted directories to prevent unintended env injection:
                             export PAPYCLI_DISABLE_DOTENV=1

Request Filter Plugins

You can intercept and transform outgoing requests by writing a request filter plugin.

A filter is a callable that receives a RequestContext and returns a modified RequestContext:

# my_plugin.py
from papycli.filters import RequestContext

def request_filter(ctx: RequestContext) -> RequestContext:
    ctx.headers["X-Request-ID"] = "my-id"
    return ctx

Register it in your package's pyproject.toml:

[project.entry-points."papycli.request_filters"]
my-filter = "my_plugin:request_filter"

Install the package and filters are applied automatically on every request, sorted by plugin name.

RequestContext fields:

Field Type Description
method str HTTP method (lowercase). Do not modify.
url str Full URL with path parameters expanded.
query_params list[tuple[str, str]] Query parameters.
body dict | list | str | int | float | bool | None JSON request body.
headers dict[str, str] Custom HTTP headers.
spec dict | None The matched operation spec entry from the API definition (read-only). None if not resolvable.

Response Filter Plugins

You can inspect and transform incoming responses by writing a response filter plugin.

A filter is a callable that receives a ResponseContext and returns a modified ResponseContext, or None to suppress the response output and stop the filter chain:

# my_plugin.py
from papycli.filters import ResponseContext

def response_filter(ctx: ResponseContext) -> ResponseContext | None:
    if isinstance(ctx.body, dict):
        ctx.body["_status"] = ctx.status_code
    return ctx

Returning None suppresses the response output entirely and prevents any subsequent filters from running — useful for silencing responses that match certain criteria.

Register it in your package's pyproject.toml:

[project.entry-points."papycli.response_filters"]
my-filter = "my_plugin:response_filter"

Install the package and the filters are applied automatically after every response, sorted by plugin name.

ResponseContext fields:

Field Type Description
method str HTTP method used for the request (lowercase).
url str Full URL of the request.
status_code int HTTP response status code.
reason str HTTP response reason phrase (e.g. "OK", "Not Found").
headers dict[str, str] Response headers.
body dict | list | str | int | float | bool | None Parsed response body. Modify this field to replace the response body.
request_body dict | list | str | int | float | bool | None Request body sent to the server (read-only). None for requests without a body.
schema dict | None The resolved OpenAPI Response Object for the matched status code (read-only). None if no matching definition exists.

Limitations

  • Request bodies are application/json only
  • Array parameters support scalar element types only (arrays of objects are not supported)

Development

git clone https://github.com/tmonj1/papycli.git
cd papycli
pip install -e ".[dev]"

Running Tests

These commands assume uv is installed. If you set up the environment with pip instead, omit the uv run prefix and run pytest directly.

Unit tests:

uv run pytest [--cov] [--cov-branch]

Integration tests:

The integration tests require the papycli binary to be present in .venv/bin/. Run uv sync first:

uv sync
uv run pytest -m integration --override-ini addopts= tests/integration/

Run all tests at once:

uv sync
uv run pytest --override-ini addopts=

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