Quickly generate a beautiful static HTML or Markdown page documenting a JSON schema
Documentation (with visual examples)
- Support for JSON Schema Draft-07
- Since the result is static, it is easier to host and faster to load
- HTML and Markdown output support
- Different templates to choose from. More details: HTML version - Markdown version
- Anchor links, allow to send a user to a specific section of the documentation
- Support for references (even circular!)
pip install json-schema-for-humans
Options for generation of the doc are documented using the library itself: HTML version - Markdown version
They can be supplied in various ways:
- Using a JSON or YAML configuration file with the CLI option
--config-file
- Using the CLI option
--config
- Using the
ConfigurationOption
object from code
More details are available in the appropriate sections below.
generate-schema-doc [OPTIONS] SCHEMA_FILES_OR_DIR [RESULT_FILE_OR_DIR]
SCHEMA_FILES_OR_DIR
can be:
- a path to a single schema file;
- a path to a directory, in this case all files with extensions json, yaml, or yml will be used;
- a glob pattern (starts from the current working directory); or
- a comma-separated list of the above
All schemas provided must be a valid JSON Schema (in JSON or YAML format)
Examples:
my_schema.json
my_folder
my_folder/my_schema.yaml,another_schema.json
**/*.yaml.*
The default value for RESULT_FILE_OR_DIR
depends on the context:
- the current working directory if more than one schema as been provided as input
schema_doc.html
if rendering a single schema as HTMLschema_doc.md
if rendering a single schema as Markdown
In a case where more than one schema is provided as input, RESULT_FILE_OR_DIR
must be a directory. The output documentation will have the same name as the input schema, but with a different extension (html
or md
).
To choose a template on the CLI, use --config template_name=[TEMPLATE_NAME]
.
For example --config template_name=js
(HTML) or --config template_name=md
(Markdown).
The list of available templates is documented here
Supply generation config parameters. The parameters are documented in the JSON schema config_schema.json
at the root of the repo or see the generated doc: HTML version - Markdown version.
Each parameter is in the format --config parameter_name=parameter_value
. Example: --config expand_buttons=true
. The parameter value must be valid JSON.
For flags, you can also omit the value for true
or prefix the parameter name with no_
for false
. Example: --config expand_buttons
or --config no_expand_buttons
.
Path to a JSON or YAML configuration file respecting the schema config_schema.json
.
Example: --config-file jsfh-conf.yaml
where jsfh-conf.yaml
is in the current directory and contains the following:
description_is_markdown: false
expand_buttons: true
copy_js: false
The following methods are available to import from json_schema_for_humans.generate
Method Name | Schema input | Output | CSS and JS copied? |
---|---|---|---|
generate_from_schema | schema_file as str or pathlib.Path |
Rendered doc as a str | No |
generate_from_filename | schema_file_name as str or pathlib.Path |
Rendered doc written to the file at path result_file_name |
Yes |
generate_from_file_object | schema_file as an open file object (read mode) |
Rendered doc written to the file at result_file , which must be an open file object (in write mode) |
Yes |
Notes:
- When using file objects, it is assumed that files are opened with encoding "utf-8"
- CSS and JS files are copied to the current working directory with names "schema_doc.css" and "schema_doc.min.js" respectively, if necessary
- Other parameters of these methods are analogous to the CLI parameters documented above.
To reduce the number of parameters to pass from function to function in the code, there is a GenerationConfiguration
object that should be used for providing options.
Example:
from json_schema_for_humans.generate import generate_from_filename
from json_schema_for_humans.generation_configuration import GenerationConfiguration
config = GenerationConfiguration(copy_css=False, expand_buttons=True)
generate_from_filename("my_schema.json", "schema_doc.html", config=config)
# Your doc is now in a file named "schema_doc.html". Next to it, "schema_doc.min.js" was copied, but not "schema_doc.css"
# Your doc will contain a "Expand all" and a "Collapse all" button at the top
generate_from_schema
has a loaded_schemas
parameter that can be used to pre-load schemas. This must be a dict with the key being the real path of the schema file and the value being the result of loading the schema (with json.load
or yaml.safe_load
, for example).
This should not be necessary in normal scenarios.
See the excellent Understanding JSON Schema to understand what are those checks
The following are supported:
- Types
- Regular expressions
- String length
- String format
- Numeric types multiples and range
- Constant and enumerated values
- Required properties
- Pattern properties
- Default values
- Array
minItems
,maxItems
,uniqueItems
,items
,prefixItems
,additionalItems
, andcontains
- Combining schema with
oneOf
,allOf
,anyOf
, andnot
- Examples
- Conditional subschemas
These are not supported at the moment (PRs welcome!):
- Property names and size
- Property dependencies
- Media
References are supported:
- To another part of the schema, e.g.
{ $ref: "#/definitions/something" }
- To a local file,
{"$ref": "references.json"}
,{"$ref": "references.json#/definitions/something"}
,{"$ref": "file:references.json"}
,{"$ref": "file:references.json#/definitions/something}
- To a URL,
{"$ref": "http://example.com/schema.json"}
,{"$ref": "http://example.com/schema.json#/definitions/something"}
You can have a description
next to a $ref
, it will be displayed in priority to the description from the referenced element.
If you have several attributes using the same definition, the definition will only be rendered once.
All other usages of the same definition will be replaced with an anchor link to the first render of the definition.
This can be turned off using --config no_link_to_reused_ref
. See With references
in the examples.
Templates control the style of the generated documentation.
This is the default template. It uses Bootstrap along with minimal Javascript to allow for the following:
- Properties are in expandable dynamic sections. You can include a button to expand or collapse all. (See doc: HTML version - Markdown version)
- Conditional subschemas (
anyOf
,oneOf
,allOf
) are in tabbed sections - Anchor links will scroll to, expand, and animate the target section
- Long descriptions are collapsed by default
When using this template, you need to include the Javascript file (schema_doc.min.js
) that is automatically copied next to the output HTML file (schema_doc.html
by default).
This schema is identical to the js template, but all CSS and JavaScript resources are bundled so that the generated documentation can be used in an offline setting.
Note: This template is a work in progress
It is sometimes not possible or desirable to include custom Javascript in documentation. This template addresses this issue by removing interactive elements in favor of simpler HTML.
At the moment, this means the whole documentation is generated without any collapsible sections, which may make it hard to understand the schema structure. Contributions are welcomed to improve it!
Note: This template is a work in progress
This template allows users to publish the generated documentation without hosting an HTTP server.
On GitHub, this format is rendered directly when browsing code.
A table of content is provided at the beginning of the file for easy navigation.
You can display some important information as badge using an option. See doc: HTML version - Markdown version
Contributions are welcomed to improve it!