Example API TypeScript SDK
Example TypeScript SDK generated from spec repo workflow
README
Example API TypeScript SDK
This SDK is generated from the spec-repo-downstream-sdks example.
Overview
This repository demonstrates a downstream SDK that is automatically generated when changes are made to a central spec repository. The workflow:
- A PR is created in the spec repo with OpenAPI spec changes
- The spec repo workflow triggers this repo's
generate-sdk-from-spec.yamlworkflow - This workflow generates the SDK and creates a PR for review
Installation
npm install @speakeasy-sdks/example-api
Usage
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const client = new ExampleAPI();
// List users
const users = await client.users.listUsers();
// Get a specific user
const user = await client.users.getUser({ id: "user-123" });
Related
Summary
Example API: A simple example API to demonstrate spec repo SDK generation workflow
Table of Contents
SDK Installation
[!TIP]
To finish publishing your SDK to npm and others you must run your first generation action.
The SDK can be installed with either npm, pnpm, bun or yarn package managers.
NPM
npm add https://github.com/speakeasy-api/examples-downstream-spec-sdk-typescript
PNPM
pnpm add https://github.com/speakeasy-api/examples-downstream-spec-sdk-typescript
Bun
bun add https://github.com/speakeasy-api/examples-downstream-spec-sdk-typescript
Yarn
yarn add https://github.com/speakeasy-api/examples-downstream-spec-sdk-typescript
[!NOTE]
This package is published as an ES Module (ESM) only. For applications using
CommonJS, useawait import()to import and use this package.
Requirements
For supported JavaScript runtimes, please consult RUNTIMES.md.
SDK Example Usage
Example
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const exampleAPI = new ExampleAPI();
async function run() {
const result = await exampleAPI.listUsers();
console.log(result);
}
run();
Available Resources and Operations
Available methods
ExampleAPI SDK
- listUsers - List all users
- createUser - Create a user
- getUser - Get a user
Standalone functions
All the methods listed above are available as standalone functions. These
functions are ideal for use in applications running in the browser, serverless
runtimes or other environments where application bundle size is a primary
concern. When using a bundler to build your application, all unused
functionality will be either excluded from the final bundle or tree-shaken away.
To read more about standalone functions, check FUNCTIONS.md.
Available standalone functions
createUser- Create a usergetUser- Get a userlistUsers- List all users
Retries
Some of the endpoints in this SDK support retries. If you use the SDK without any configuration, it will fall back to the default retry strategy provided by the API. However, the default retry strategy can be overridden on a per-operation basis, or across the entire SDK.
To change the default retry strategy for a single API call, simply provide a retryConfig object to the call:
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const exampleAPI = new ExampleAPI();
async function run() {
const result = await exampleAPI.listUsers({
retries: {
strategy: "backoff",
backoff: {
initialInterval: 1,
maxInterval: 50,
exponent: 1.1,
maxElapsedTime: 100,
},
retryConnectionErrors: false,
},
});
console.log(result);
}
run();
If you'd like to override the default retry strategy for all operations that support retries, you can provide a retryConfig at SDK initialization:
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const exampleAPI = new ExampleAPI({
retryConfig: {
strategy: "backoff",
backoff: {
initialInterval: 1,
maxInterval: 50,
exponent: 1.1,
maxElapsedTime: 100,
},
retryConnectionErrors: false,
},
});
async function run() {
const result = await exampleAPI.listUsers();
console.log(result);
}
run();
Error Handling
ExampleAPIError is the base class for all HTTP error responses. It has the following properties:
| Property | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
error.message |
string |
Error message |
error.statusCode |
number |
HTTP response status code eg 404 |
error.headers |
Headers |
HTTP response headers |
error.body |
string |
HTTP body. Can be empty string if no body is returned. |
error.rawResponse |
Response |
Raw HTTP response |
Example
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
import * as errors from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api/models/errors";
const exampleAPI = new ExampleAPI();
async function run() {
try {
const result = await exampleAPI.listUsers();
console.log(result);
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof errors.ExampleAPIError) {
console.log(error.message);
console.log(error.statusCode);
console.log(error.body);
console.log(error.headers);
}
}
}
run();
Error Classes
Primary error:
ExampleAPIError: The base class for HTTP error responses.
Less common errors (6)
Network errors:
ConnectionError: HTTP client was unable to make a request to a server.RequestTimeoutError: HTTP request timed out due to an AbortSignal signal.RequestAbortedError: HTTP request was aborted by the client.InvalidRequestError: Any input used to create a request is invalid.UnexpectedClientError: Unrecognised or unexpected error.
Inherit from ExampleAPIError:
ResponseValidationError: Type mismatch between the data returned from the server and the structure expected by the SDK. Seeerror.rawValuefor the raw value anderror.pretty()for a nicely formatted multi-line string.
Server Selection
Override Server URL Per-Client
The default server can be overridden globally by passing a URL to the serverURL: string optional parameter when initializing the SDK client instance. For example:
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const exampleAPI = new ExampleAPI({
serverURL: "https://api.example.com",
});
async function run() {
const result = await exampleAPI.listUsers();
console.log(result);
}
run();
Custom HTTP Client
The TypeScript SDK makes API calls using an HTTPClient that wraps the native
Fetch API. This
client is a thin wrapper around fetch and provides the ability to attach hooks
around the request lifecycle that can be used to modify the request or handle
errors and response.
The HTTPClient constructor takes an optional fetcher argument that can be
used to integrate a third-party HTTP client or when writing tests to mock out
the HTTP client and feed in fixtures.
The following example shows how to use the "beforeRequest" hook to to add a
custom header and a timeout to requests and how to use the "requestError" hook
to log errors:
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
import { HTTPClient } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api/lib/http";
const httpClient = new HTTPClient({
// fetcher takes a function that has the same signature as native `fetch`.
fetcher: (request) => {
return fetch(request);
}
});
httpClient.addHook("beforeRequest", (request) => {
const nextRequest = new Request(request, {
signal: request.signal || AbortSignal.timeout(5000)
});
nextRequest.headers.set("x-custom-header", "custom value");
return nextRequest;
});
httpClient.addHook("requestError", (error, request) => {
console.group("Request Error");
console.log("Reason:", `${error}`);
console.log("Endpoint:", `${request.method} ${request.url}`);
console.groupEnd();
});
const sdk = new ExampleAPI({ httpClient: httpClient });
Debugging
You can setup your SDK to emit debug logs for SDK requests and responses.
You can pass a logger that matches console's interface as an SDK option.
[!WARNING]
Beware that debug logging will reveal secrets, like API tokens in headers, in log messages printed to a console or files. It's recommended to use this feature only during local development and not in production.
import { ExampleAPI } from "@speakeasy-sdks/example-api";
const sdk = new ExampleAPI({ debugLogger: console });