A powerful, reusable package for generating comprehensive OpenAPI documentation with Flask-Pydantic-Spec
Project description
Flask OpenAPI Documentation Package
A powerful, reusable package for generating comprehensive OpenAPI documentation with Flask-Pydantic-Spec. Features custom metadata, security schemes, and flexible configuration options.
✨ Features
- Flexible Configuration: Easy-to-use configuration system for API metadata
- Custom Security Schemes: Support for multiple authentication types
- Tag-based Organization: Group endpoints by functionality
- Route Format Control: Choose between Flask (
<string:param>) and OpenAPI ({param}) formats - Automatic Schema Registration: Seamless Pydantic model integration
- Backward Compatibility: Drop-in replacement for existing setups
- Zero Dependencies: Only requires
flask-pydantic-specandpydantic
🚀 Quick Start
Basic Usage
from flask import Flask
from quas_docs import FlaskOpenAPISpec, DocsConfig, SecurityScheme, endpoint
# Create configuration
config = DocsConfig(
title="My API",
version="0.0.1",
description="A sample API with comprehensive documentation",
contact=ContactInfo(
email="api@example.com",
name="API Team"
)
)
# Initialize the spec
spec = FlaskOpenAPISpec(config)
# Create Flask app
app = Flask(__name__)
# Add endpoints with metadata
@app.post("/users")
@endpoint(
request_body=CreateUserRequest,
security=SecurityScheme.BEARER_AUTH,
tags=["Users"],
summary="Create New User",
description="Creates a new user account with validation"
)
def create_user():
return {"message": "User created"}
# Initialize documentation
spec.init_app(app)
Dynamic Configuration Methods
from quas_docs import FlaskOpenAPISpec, DocsConfig
# Method 1: From dictionary (recommended)
config = DocsConfig.from_dict({
'title': 'My API',
'version': '2.0.0',
'description': 'API built with dynamic configuration',
'contact': {
'email': 'dev@mycompany.com',
'name': 'Development Team',
'url': 'https://mycompany.com'
},
'security_schemes': {
'BearerAuth': {'description': 'JWT authentication'},
'ApiKeyAuth': {
'scheme_type': 'apiKey',
'location': 'header',
'parameter_name': 'X-API-Key',
'description': 'API key authentication'
}
},
'preserve_flask_routes': True
})
# Method 2: From environment variables
config = DocsConfig.from_env(prefix="MY_API_")
# Method 3: Create default and customize
config = DocsConfig.create_default()
config.title = "Custom API"
config.version = "2.0.0"
# Method 4: Manual construction
config = DocsConfig(
title="Custom API",
version="2.0.0",
description="Custom API with specific requirements"
)
📋 Configuration Options
DocsConfig Class
@dataclass
class DocsConfig:
# Basic API Information
title: str = "Flask API"
version: str = "0.0.1"
description: Optional[str] = None
terms_of_service: Optional[str] = None
# Contact Information
contact: Optional[ContactInfo] = None
# License Information
license_name: Optional[str] = None
license_url: Optional[str] = None
# Server Information
servers: List[Dict[str, str]] = field(default_factory=list)
# Security Schemes
security_schemes: Dict[str, SecuritySchemeConfig] = field(default_factory=dict)
# Customization Options
preserve_flask_routes: bool = True # Keep <string:param> format
clear_auto_discovered: bool = True # Remove auto-discovered duplicates
add_default_responses: bool = True # Add default response schemas
# External Documentation
external_docs_url: Optional[str] = None
external_docs_description: Optional[str] = None
Security Schemes
from quas_docs import SecuritySchemeConfig
# API Key Authentication
api_key_config = SecuritySchemeConfig(
name="ApiKeyAuth",
scheme_type="apiKey",
location="header",
parameter_name="X-API-Key",
description="API key authentication"
)
# Bearer Token Authentication
bearer_config = SecuritySchemeConfig(
name="BearerAuth",
scheme_type="apiKey",
location="header",
parameter_name="Authorization",
description="JWT Bearer token authentication"
)
# Add to configuration
config.add_security_scheme("ApiKeyAuth", api_key_config)
config.add_security_scheme("BearerAuth", bearer_config)
Contact Information
from quas_docs import ContactInfo
contact = ContactInfo(
email="api@example.com",
name="API Development Team",
url="https://example.com/contact"
)
config.contact = contact
🎯 Endpoint Decoration
The @endpoint Decorator
@endpoint(
request_body=Optional[Type[BaseModel]], # Pydantic model for request body
security=Optional[SecurityScheme], # Security requirement
tags=Optional[List[str]], # Organization tags
summary=Optional[str], # Brief description
description=Optional[str], # Detailed description
query_params=Optional[List[QueryParameter]], # Query parameters for GET endpoints
deprecated=bool, # Mark as deprecated
**extra_metadata # Custom metadata
)
Examples
# Basic endpoint with request body
@app.post("/auth/login")
@endpoint(
request_body=LoginRequest,
tags=["Authentication"],
summary="User Login",
description="Authenticate user with email and password"
)
@spec.validate(resp=Response(HTTP_200=ApiResponse))
def login():
return AuthController.login()
# Secured endpoint with query parameters
@app.get("/users")
@endpoint(
security=SecurityScheme.BEARER_AUTH,
tags=["Users"],
summary="List Users",
description="Get paginated list of users with filtering options",
query_params=[
QueryParameter("page", "integer", required=False, description="Page number", default=1),
QueryParameter("per_page", "integer", required=False, description="Items per page", default=10),
QueryParameter("search", "string", required=False, description="Search by name or email"),
QueryParameter("active", "boolean", required=False, description="Filter by active status", default=True),
]
)
@spec.validate(resp=Response(HTTP_200=UsersListResponse))
def list_users():
return UserController.list()
# Public endpoint with custom metadata
@app.get("/health")
@endpoint(
tags=["System"],
summary="Health Check",
description="Check API health status",
custom_field="health-check" # Custom metadata
)
def health_check():
return {"status": "healthy"}
🔧 Advanced Configuration
Custom Response Schemas
# The package automatically adds default response schemas
# You can disable this behavior:
config.add_default_responses = False
# Custom response schemas are preserved from @spec.validate decorators
@app.post("/users")
@endpoint(tags=["Users"])
@spec.validate(resp=Response(
HTTP_201=CreateUserResponse,
HTTP_400=ErrorResponse,
HTTP_409=ConflictResponse
))
def create_user():
return UserController.create()
Route Format Control
# Keep Flask format: /users/<string:user_id>
config.preserve_flask_routes = True
# Use OpenAPI format: /users/{user_id}
config.preserve_flask_routes = False
Servers Configuration
# Add multiple servers
config.add_server("https://api.example.com", "Production")
config.add_server("https://staging-api.example.com", "Staging")
config.add_server("http://localhost:5000", "Development")
External Documentation
config.external_docs_url = "https://docs.example.com"
config.external_docs_description = "Complete API Documentation"
Environment Variable Configuration
Set environment variables and load them automatically:
# .env file or environment
export API_TITLE="My Project API"
export API_VERSION="1.2.0"
export API_DESCRIPTION="API for my awesome project"
export API_CONTACT_EMAIL="api@myproject.com"
export API_CONTACT_NAME="API Team"
export API_CONTACT_URL="https://myproject.com/contact"
export API_LICENSE_NAME="MIT"
export API_PRESERVE_FLASK_ROUTES="true"
# Load configuration from environment
config = DocsConfig.from_env() # Uses API_ prefix by default
# Or use custom prefix
config = DocsConfig.from_env(prefix="MYAPI_")
📦 Integration Examples
Replace Existing Setup
If you have an existing Flask app with manual OpenAPI setup:
# OLD WAY
from flask_pydantic_spec import FlaskPydanticSpec
spec = FlaskPydanticSpec('flask', title='My API', version='0.0.1')
# NEW WAY
from quas_docs import FlaskOpenAPISpec, DocsConfig
config = DocsConfig(title='My API', version='0.0.1')
spec_instance = FlaskOpenAPISpec(config)
spec = spec_instance.spec # For backward compatibility
Multiple APIs
# API 1: Public API
public_config = DocsConfig(
title="Public API",
version="0.0.1",
preserve_flask_routes=True
)
public_spec = FlaskOpenAPISpec(public_config)
# API 2: Admin API
admin_config = DocsConfig(
title="Admin API",
version="0.0.1",
preserve_flask_routes=False
)
admin_spec = FlaskOpenAPISpec(admin_config)
Custom Project Setup
# projects/my_project/docs_config.py
from quas_docs import DocsConfig, ContactInfo, SecuritySchemeConfig
def create_my_project_config():
config = DocsConfig(
title="My Project API",
version="2.1.0",
description="Custom project with specific requirements",
contact=ContactInfo(
email="dev@myproject.com",
name="Development Team",
url="https://myproject.com"
)
)
# Add custom security schemes
config.add_security_scheme("ApiKey", SecuritySchemeConfig(
name="ApiKey",
parameter_name="X-API-Key",
description="Project-specific API key"
))
config.add_server("https://api.myproject.com", "Production")
config.add_server("http://localhost:8000", "Development")
return config
# projects/my_project/app.py
from quas_docs import FlaskOpenAPISpec
from .docs_config import create_my_project_config
config = create_my_project_config()
spec = FlaskOpenAPISpec(config)
🔄 Migration Guide
From Manual Setup
- Copy the docs/ folder to your project
- Replace your existing docs setup:
# Replace your old setup with: from quas_docs import FlaskOpenAPISpec, DocsConfig, endpoint, SecurityScheme config = DocsConfig.from_dict({ 'title': 'Your API Name', 'version': '0.0.1', # ... your settings }) spec_instance = FlaskOpenAPISpec(config) spec = spec_instance.spec # For @spec.validate decorators
- Use the @endpoint decorator:
@endpoint( request_body=YourModel, security=SecurityScheme.BEARER_AUTH, tags=["Your Tag"], summary="Your Summary" )
- Initialize documentation:
spec_instance.init_app(app)
Clean v1.0 Design
The package follows a clean, modern approach:
- Single
@endpointdecorator for all metadata - Configuration-driven setup
- No legacy compatibility code
- Streamlined API surface
📝 Best Practices
- Use meaningful tags to organize endpoints logically
- Provide clear summaries and descriptions for better developer experience
- Configure contact information for API support
- Use appropriate security schemes for different endpoint types
- Test documentation in both Swagger UI and Redoc
- Version your APIs properly using semantic versioning
🐛 Troubleshooting
Common Issues
Issue: Endpoints appear in "default" category
Solution: Ensure clear_auto_discovered = True in config
Issue: Route parameters show wrong format
Solution: Set preserve_flask_routes in config
Issue: Security schemes not working Solution: Verify security scheme names match those in config
Issue: Missing response schemas
Solution: Check add_default_responses setting and @spec.validate decorators
📄 License
MIT License - feel free to use in your projects!
🤝 Contributing
- Fork the repository
- Create a feature branch
- Add tests for new functionality
- Submit a pull request
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Filter files by name, interpreter, ABI, and platform.
If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.
Copy a direct link to the current filters
File details
Details for the file quas_docs-0.0.5.tar.gz.
File metadata
- Download URL: quas_docs-0.0.5.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 18.1 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: uv/0.9.5
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
6996f9e560950919f1d08d6df6b306bdf24d448bc3bcdb3f4d0b5335ad1ee1ac
|
|
| MD5 |
cc67bf1843c861c80b9d5468d698d8ae
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
dc2798c0cfe3113c3e5dfcb710b9eeb2ae2b630d36e79cc2e11ad10ed7fcea8d
|
File details
Details for the file quas_docs-0.0.5-py3-none-any.whl.
File metadata
- Download URL: quas_docs-0.0.5-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 13.5 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: uv/0.9.5
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
3d20efc85b8d22ea15f73d763cc7129b8153d1200a3ec7f25bf68845b026c191
|
|
| MD5 |
91ff1a56e2e60701fa88799326563cbe
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
253c7c1e60b322e003c0b670ac310887bec9996f2b2912ec7fe89a4feb7604b4
|