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Dropshot API manager

This crate provides most of the scaffolding to manage OpenAPI documents generated by Dropshot, using its support for API traits.

For more information about API traits, see Oxide RFD 479.

Note

The OpenAPI manager relies on symbolic links for some of its functionality. If you're on Windows, you'll need to ensure that symlink support is enabled.

  • Enable developer mode, which allows non-administrators to create symlinks.

  • Run git config --global core.symlinks true.

  • Disable CRLF conversions within Git by checking in a .gitattributes file with:

    # Disable CRLF conversions on Windows.
    * -text
    

Who this is for

The Dropshot API manager was built for our needs at Oxide. But it is generally usable by many projects that use Dropshot. The manager is useful to you, if you:

  • Use Dropshot for your HTTP APIs

  • Define your APIs using API traits rather than plain functions

  • Organize your code using the archetypal strategy, where the API trait lives in its own crate

    flowchart LR
        dropshot_api_manager([<b>Dropshot API manager</b>]) --> api
        types[base types]
        api[Dropshot API trait] --> types
        logic --> api
    
        subgraph production_impl [implementation]
        binary([server binary]) --> logic
        logic[logic, database storage, etc]@{ shape: processes }
    end
    
    Loading
  • Commit the generated OpenAPI documents to source control; Git is required if you use versioned APIs (see below)

  • All generated OpenAPI documents live in the same directory

Examples

A fully working end-to-end example is available. You're welcome to copy part or all of the example as desired.

Basic usage

Dropshot's OpenAPI manager consists of two crates:

Requirements

You need to provide:

  • The API traits for your APIs (see API crates below). These may depend on dropshot-api-manager-types.
  • A binary crate that integrates your API traits with dropshot-api-manager, called the integration point.

Tip

We recommend you set up an easy way to run your binary. The quickest way is to add an alias to .cargo/config.toml:

[alias]
openapi = "run -p my-openapi-bin --"

If you use the cargo xtask framework, you may choose to put the integration point within the xtask binary. However, at Oxide we've generally seen quicker compile times putting the integration point into a separate binary, and setting up a minimal xtask that just runs this binary.

Your chosen alias is passed into the OpenAPI manager, and it will be displayed as part of user guidance. In the examples below, we'll use cargo openapi, as set up by the alias.

In addition, if you have versioned APIs (see below):

  • The OpenAPI manager must be run within a Git repository.
  • You must also ensure that git is available on the command line, or that the GIT environment variable is set to the location of the Git binary.

API crates

The OpenAPI manager requires as inputs a set of API crates. An API crate is a Rust library that consists of the API trait, and possibly supporting types. In general, each OpenAPI document should have a separate API crate, though it is acceptable to have multiple closely-related OpenAPI documents within the same crate.

In general, to keep compile times down, the API crate should have as few dependencies as possible. For an archetypal way to organize code, see the dependency graph in RFD 479's Choosing between functions and traits.

Managing OpenAPI documents

For OpenAPI documents to be managed by this tool, the corresponding interfaces must be defined via API traits rather than traditional Dropshot function-based servers.

Adding new APIs

If you're defining a new service fronted by OpenAPI, first create an API crate (see API crates above).

  1. Add the API crate to the workspace's Cargo.toml.
  2. Following the example in RFD 479's Trait definition, define the API trait.

In the implementation crate:

  1. Add a dependency on the API crate.
  2. Following the example in RFD 479's API implementation, provide an implementation of the trait.

Proceed to adding this API's OpenAPI document.

Adding new OpenAPI documents

Deciding on a versioning strategy

When adding an API, you may need to decide on a versioning strategy for the document.

In simpler cases where clients are known to always match servers, the OpenAPI manager supports a lockstep versioning strategy. If you're unsure, start with a lockstep strategy.

For cases where clients and servers can potentially have be mismatched, such as when the server is updated to a new version but the client is not, Dropshot supports a more complex versioned strategy. See RFD 532 ("Versioning for internal HTTP APIs") for a more complete discussion.

For versioned APIs: copy the following template into the API crate near the top, above the #[dropshot::api_description]:

api_versions!([
    // WHEN CHANGING THE API (part 1 of 2):
    //
    // +- Pick a new semver and define it in the list below.  The list MUST
    // |  remain sorted, which generally means that your version should go at
    // |  the very top.
    // |
    // |  Duplicate this line, uncomment the *second* copy, update that copy for
    // |  your new API version, and leave the first copy commented out as an
    // |  example for the next person.
    // v
    // (next_int, IDENT),
    (1, INITIAL),
]);

// WHEN CHANGING THE API (part 2 of 2):
//
// The call to `api_versions!` above defines constants of type
// `semver::Version` that you can use in your Dropshot API definition to specify
// the version when a particular endpoint was added or removed.  For example, if
// you used:
//
//     (1, INITIAL)
//
// Then you could use `VERSION_INITIAL` as the version in which endpoints were
// added or removed.

For both lockstep and versioned APIs: once the API crate is defined, update the OpenAPI manager to manage the new OpenAPI document(s). Within this directory:

  1. In your repository's integration point's Cargo.toml, add a dependency on the API crate.
  2. Add the crate to the list of APIs managed by the OpenAPI manager. For versioned APIs, the api_versions macro defines a supported_versions() function, which you'll need to use

To ensure everything works well, run cargo openapi generate. Your OpenAPI document should be generated on disk and listed in the output.

Performing validation

By default, the Dropshot API manager does not do any kind of validation or linting on the generated document, beyond the basic checks performed by Dropshot itself. If desired, the API manager can be configured to perform global validation on all documents, as well as extra validation on some of them.

For global validation, set the validation function on the ManagedApis struct. For an example, see the validate function within the end-to-end example.

For extra validation on some documents, it's recommended that you put them on the trait, within the API crate.

  1. In the API crate, add dependencies on openapiv3 and dropshot-api-manager-types.
  2. Define a function with signature `fn validate_api(spec: &openapiv3::OpenAPI, mut cx: dropshot_api_manager_types::ValidationContext<'_>) which performs the extra validation steps.
  3. In the list of managed APIs, set the extra_validation field to this function.

Currently, the validator can do two things:

  1. Via the ValidationContext::report_error function, report validation errors.
  2. Via the ValidationContext::record_file_contents function, assert the contents of other generated files.

Iterating on lockstep APIs

Assuming you're starting from a fresh branch from main, the general workflow for making changes to a lockstep API looks like this:

  1. Make whatever changes you want to the API crate (the trait definition)
  2. In whichever order you want:
  • Update the server(s) (the trait impl). You can immediately see what's needed with cargo check.
  • Update the client. To do this, run cargo openapi generate to regenerate the OpenAPI document. Then cargo check will tell you how the client needs to be updated.
  1. Repeat steps 1-2 as needed.

Iterating on versioned APIs

This workflow is modeled after the lockstep one, but it's a little trickier because of the considerations around online update. Check out the Dropshot API Versioning docs for important background.

Again, we assume you're starting from a fresh branch from "main".

  1. Pull up the api_versions! call for your API, in the root of the API crate.

  2. Follow the instructions there to pick a new version number (the next unused integer) and an identifier. For this example, suppose you find:

    api_versions!([
      (1, INITIAL),
    ])

    You'll change this to:

    api_versions!([
        (2, MY_CHANGE),
        (1, INITIAL),
    ])

    Among other things, the api_versions! call turns these identifiers into named constants that you'll use in the next step. For example, (1, INITIAL) defines a constant VERSION_INITIAL and (2, MY_CHANGE) defines the constant VERSION_MY_CHANGE.

  3. Also in the API crate, make your API changes. However, you have to preserve the behavior of previous versions of the API. For some examples, see Dropshot's versioning example.

    • If you're adding a new endpoint, then your new endpoint's #[endpoint] attribute should say versions = VERSION_MY_CHANGE.. (meaning "introduced in version VERSION_MY_CHANGE").

    • If you're removing an endpoint, then you want to change the endpoint's #[endpoint] attribute to say versions = ..VERSION_MY_CHANGE (meaning "removed in version VERSION_MY_CHANGE). (If the endpoint was previously introduced in some other version, then the new value might say versions = VERSION_OTHER..VERSION_MY_CHANGE instead of versions = ..VERSION_MY_CHANGE.)

    • If you're changing the arguments or return type of an endpoint, you'll need to treat this as a separate add/remove:

      • Do not change the existing endpoint's arguments or return type at all.
      • Mark the existing endpoint as removed in VERSION_MY_CHANGE as described above.
      • Define new Rust types for the new version's arguments or return type (whichever are changing).
      • Define a new endpoint using the new types and introduced in VERSION_MY_CHANGE, as described above.
  4. As with lockstep crates, you can do either of these in whichever order you want:

    • Update the server(s) (the trait impl). You can immediately see what's needed with cargo check.
    • Update the client. To do this, run cargo openapi generate to regenerate the OpenAPI document(s). Then cargo check will tell you how the client(s) need to be updated.
  5. Repeat steps 3-4 as needed. You should not repeat steps 1-2 as you iterate.

As of this writing, every API has exactly one Rust client package and it's always generated from the latest version of the API. Per RFD 532, this is sufficient for APIs that are server-side-only versioned. For APIs that will be client-side versioned, you may need to create additional Rust packages that use Progenitor to generate clients based on older OpenAPI documents. This has not been done before but is believed to be straightforward.

More about versioned APIs

The idea behind versioned APIs is:

  • This is an API where the client and server can be mismatched at runtime when the system is upgraded.
  • Thus: for the system to keep working across an upgrade, the server must support both the old and the new versions.
  • To ensure that the server supports older versions, we check those OpenAPI documents into source control and this tool verifies that the server remains compatible with these older versions.

For much more on this, see RFD 532 "Versioning for internal HTTP APIs".

For a versioned API, the set of all supported versions is defined by the api_versions! macro in the API crate. More precisely: in configuring the OpenAPI manager tool to know about a versioned API, you use the supported_versions() function defined by the macro. This is critical: the OpenAPI documents in the openapi directory are not the source of truth about what versions are supported. The Rust api_versions! call is.

Each of these supported versions is either blessed (meaning it's been committed-to -- i.e., shipped, or potentially deployed on a system that we care about upgrading smoothly) or locally-added. Currently, blessed versions are not allowed to change at all. In the near future, we hope to relax this a bit so that they can be changed in ways that are provably compatible (e.g., doc changes).

When you run cargo openapi check or cargo openapi generate, the tool loads OpenAPI documents from three sources:

  • blessed documents: these are generally the OpenAPI documents in "main" in the openapi directory. (More precisely, by default, these are loaded from the merge-base between HEAD and main. You can override this.) By definition, these only contain blessed versions (since locally-added versions won't be present in "main").
  • local documents: these are the OpenAPI documents in openapi in your working tree. These include both blessed versions and locally-added versions.
  • generated documents: these are the OpenAPI documents generated by Dropshot from your API traits.

Putting all this together, the tool is pretty straightforward. For each supported version of a versioned API:

  • If there is a blessed file for that version, then the version is blessed. The generated file must exactly match the blessed one. If not, the tool cannot fix this. You have to undo whatever changes you made that affected the blessed version. (See above on how to make changes to the API trait without affecting older versions.)
  • If there is no blessed file for that version, then the version is locally-added. There should be exactly one local file for it and it should exactly match the generated file. The tool can fix any problems here by removing all local files and generating a new one based on the generated one.
  • The tool also ensures that a "latest" symlink exists and points to the highest-numbered OpenAPI document.
flowchart TD
    HaveSupportedVersion["Have supported version<br/>(explicit list in Rust code)"]
    QIsLockstep{"Is this a lockstep API?"}
    IsLockstep["Make the local OpenAPI document match the generated one."]
    QHaveBlessedSpec{"Is there an OpenAPI document in the blessed source (upstream)?"}
    HaveBlessed["Verify that the generated OpenAPI document is compatible with the blessed document."]
    NoBlessed["Make the local OpenAPI document match the generated one (and remove any others)"]
    IsLatest{"Is it the latest version of this API?"}
    NeedSymlink["Make the 'latest' symlink for this API refer to this version's OpenAPI document."]

    HaveSupportedVersion --> QIsLockstep
    QIsLockstep -->|"Yes"|IsLockstep
    QIsLockstep -->|"No, it's versioned"|QHaveBlessedSpec
    QHaveBlessedSpec -->|"Yes, it's a blessed version"| HaveBlessed
    QHaveBlessedSpec -->|"No, it's a locally-added version"| NoBlessed
    HaveBlessed --> IsLatest
    NoBlessed --> IsLatest
    IsLatest --> |"Yes"|NeedSymlink
Loading

You generally don't need to think about any of this to use the tool. Like with lockstep APIs, you just use cargo openapi generate to update the local files. The only ways you're likely to run into trouble are:

  1. You forgot to define a new version. In this case, you'll get an error about having changed a blessed version. To fix this, you'll need to follow the steps above to make changes that don't affect older versions.
  2. You defined a new version, but forgot to annotate the API endpoints with what version they were added or removed in. Again, you'll get an error about having changed a blessed version and you'll need to follow the steps above to fix it.
  3. You merge with an upstream that adds new versions.

Merging with upstream changes to versioned APIs

When you merge with commits that added one or more versions to the same API that you also changed locally:

  • Git will report a merge conflict in the "latest" symlink. Just remove the symlink altogether (with rm). This will be regenerated correctly below.

  • Git will report a merge conflict in the API crate in the api_versions! call. You will need to resolve this by hand. This is the most important part to get right. Generally, this is easy: you'll take all the versions that are present upstream, choose a new number for your locally-added version, and make sure that your locally-added one remains the latest one (first in the list).

  • Less commonly: you may have other merge conflicts in the API crate or the server implementation. This would happen if specific endpoints were changed both upstream and locally. The details here are situation-dependent. You'll have to resolve these by hand.

    Aside from merge conflicts from specific endpoints that were changed both upstream and in your local version, you generally should not need to change any of the API crate as part of the merge. (This is why we use identifiers for the semvers that go in the versions argument -- so that the value can change after a merge without having to go update all the endpoints you changed.)

  • When you've resolved all conflicts, run cargo openapi generate to regenerate files for locally-added versions and clean up any stale files.

Most commonly, this boils down to:

  • rm the "latest" symlink
  • fix up the api_versions! call in the API crate
  • run cargo openapi generate

If you get any of this wrong, the tool should clearly report the problem. For example, if you mis-order the versions in the list, you'll get an error about them not being sequential. If you mismerge the API trait in such a way that changes a blessed version, as always, the tool will detect that and report it.

Retiring old versions of versioned APIs

Of course, we don't need or want to support each version of an API forever. RFD 532 proposes supporting the one shipped in the last release, plus all the intermediate ones shipped in the current release. The specific policy doesn't really matter here.

To retire an old version:

  1. Remove it from api_versions!.
  2. Remove any references to its VERSION_ identifier (these will show up as compile errors when you run cargo openapi generate).
  3. Run cargo openapi generate to remove the old files.

Converting lockstep APIs to be versioned

An existing lockstep API can be made versioned. You would do this when transitioning an API to support online update. We'll use a hypothetical example with a dns-server API defined in a dns-server-api crate:

  1. Initially, its OpenAPI document is stored in openapi/dns-server.json.

  2. Run git rm -f openapi/dns-server.json.

  3. Run mkdir openapi/dns-server.

  4. Update the API crate (dns-server-api/src/lib.rs) to use the new api_versions! macro. See the instructions under Adding new OpenAPI documents above.

  5. Within the integration point, update the OpenAPI manager configuration to specify that the API is now versioned. You'll use the supported_versions() function defined by the api_versions! macro.

  6. Run cargo openapi generate. This will generate a new file under openapi/dns-server for your initial server version, along with a "latest" symlink.

    You will probably see this warning:

    Loading blessed OpenAPI documents from git revision "main" path "openapi"
    Warning skipping file "dns-server.json": this API is not a lockstep API
    

    This is okay. It's saying: this is a versioned API, but the file we found upstream (i.e., in "main") suggests it's lockstep. That's expected when you're doing this conversion.

  7. Update references to the OpenAPI document elsewhere in the repo. For example, if you have a Progenitor-generated client for the OpenAPI document, it was likely reading form openapi/dns-server.json. The client should be updated to now generate it from openapi/dns-server/dns-server-latest.json.

That should be it! Now, when iterating on the API, you'll need to follow the procedure described above for versioned APIs (which is slightly more complicated than the one for lockstep APIs).

In principle, this process could be reversed to convert an API from versioned to lockstep, but this almost certainly has runtime implications that would need to be considered.

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OpenAPI manager for Dropshot

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