Important
For Zod v3 support, please use the v7.3.4 version. However keep in mind that we do not intend to actively support that version going forward Install with: npm install @asteasolutions/[email protected]
A library that uses zod schemas to generate an Open API Swagger documentation.
We keep a changelog as part of the GitHub releases.
We at Astea Solutions made this library because we use zod for validation in our APIs and are tired of the duplication to also support a separate OpenAPI definition that must be kept in sync. Using zod-to-openapi, we generate OpenAPI definitions directly from our zod schemas, thus having a single source of truth.
Simply put, it turns this:
const UserSchema = z
.object({
id: z.string().openapi({ example: '1212121' }),
name: z.string().openapi({ example: 'John Doe' }),
age: z.number().openapi({ example: 42 }),
})
.openapi('User');
registry.registerPath({
method: 'get',
path: '/users/{id}',
summary: 'Get a single user',
request: {
params: z.object({ id: z.string() }),
},
responses: {
200: {
description: 'Object with user data.',
content: {
'application/json': {
schema: UserSchema,
},
},
},
},
});into this:
components:
schemas:
User:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: string
example: '1212121'
name:
type: string
example: John Doe
age:
type: number
example: 42
required:
- id
- name
- age
/users/{id}:
get:
summary: Get a single user
parameters:
- in: path
name: id
schema:
type: string
required: true
responses:
'200':
description: Object with user data
content:
application/json:
schema:
$ref: '#/components/schemas/User'and you can still use UserSchema and the request.params object to validate the input of your API.
npm install @asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi
# or
yarn add @asteasolutions/zod-to-openapiTo keep openapi definitions natural, we add an openapi method to all Zod objects. Its idea is to provide a convenient way to provide OpenApi specific data.
It has three overloads:
.openapi({ [key]: value })- this way we can specify any OpenApi fields. For examplez.number().openapi({ example: 3 })would addexample: 3to the generated schema..openapi("<schema-name>")- this way we specify that the underlying zod schema should be "registered" i.e added intocomponents/schemaswith the provided<schema-name>.openapi("<schema-name>", { [key]: value })- this unites the two use cases above so that we can specify both a registration<schema-name>and additional metadata
For this to work, you need to call extendZodWithOpenApi once in your project.
This should be done only once in a common-entrypoint file of your project (for example an index.ts/app.ts). If you're using tree-shaking with Webpack, mark that file as having side-effects.
It can be bit tricky to achieve this in your codebase, because require is synchronous and import is a async.
Starting from v8 (and zod v4) you can also use zod's .meta to provide metadata and we will read it accordingly.
With zod's new option for generating JSON schemas and maintaining registries we've added a pretty much seamless support for all metadata information coming from .meta calls as if that was metadata passed into .openapi.
So the following 2 schemas produce exactly the same results:
const schema = z
.string()
.openapi('Schema', { description: 'Name of the user', example: 'Test' });
const schema2 = z
.string()
.meta({ id: 'Schema2', description: 'Name of the user', example: 'Test' });Note: This also means that you unless you are using some of our more complicated scenarios you could even generate a schema without using
extendZodWithOpenApiin your codebase and only rely on.metato provide additional metadata information and schema names (using theidproperty).
- When extending registered schemas that are both registered and want the extended one to use
anyOfi.e:
const schema = z.object({ name: z.string() }).openapi('Schema');
const schema2 = schema.extend({ age: z.number() }).openapi('Schema2'); // this one would have anyOf and a reference to the first one- Defining parameter metadata. So for example when doing:
registry.registerPath({
// ...
request: {
query: z.object({
name: z.string().openapi({
description: 'Schema level description',
param: { description: 'Param level description' },
}),
}),
},
});the result would be:
"parameters": [
{
"schema": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Schema level description" // comes directly from description
},
"required": true,
"description": "Param level description", // comes from param.description
"name": "name",
"in": "query"
}
],import { extendZodWithOpenApi } from '@asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi';
import { z } from 'zod';
extendZodWithOpenApi(z);
// We can now use `.openapi()` to specify OpenAPI metadata
z.string().openapi({ description: 'Some string' });//zod-extend.ts
import { extendZodWithOpenApi } from '@asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi';
import { z } from 'zod';
extendZodWithOpenApi(z);
// package.json
"scripts": {
"start": "tsx --import ./zod-extend.ts ./index.ts",
import { extendZodWithOpenApi } from '@asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi';
import { z } from 'zod';
extendZodWithOpenApi(z);
const { startServer } = require('./server/start');
startServer();
The OpenAPIRegistry is a utility that can be used to collect definitions which would later be passed to a OpenApiGeneratorV3 or OpenApiGeneratorV31 instance.
import {
OpenAPIRegistry,
OpenApiGeneratorV3,
} from '@asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi';
const registry = new OpenAPIRegistry();
// Register definitions here
const generator = new OpenApiGeneratorV3(registry.definitions);
return generator.generateComponents();There are two generators that can be used - OpenApiGeneratorV3 and OpenApiGeneratorV31. They share the same interface but internally generate schemas that correctly follow the data format for the specific Open API version - 3.0.x or 3.1.x. The Open API version affects how some components are generated.
For example: changing the generator from OpenApiGeneratorV3 to OpenApiGeneratorV31 would result in following differences:
z.string().nullable().openapi({refId: 'name'});# 3.1.0
# nullable is invalid in 3.1.0 but type arrays are invalid in previous versions
name:
type:
- 'string'
- 'null'
# 3.0.0
name:
type: 'string'
nullable: trueBoth generators take a single argument in their constructors - an array of definitions - i.e results from the registry or regular zod schemas.
The public methods of both generators are as follows:
generateComponents will generate only the /components section of an OpenAPI document (e.g. only schemas and parameters), not generating actual routes.
generateDocument will generate the whole OpenAPI document.
An OpenApi schema should be registered by using the .openapi method and providing a name:
const UserSchema = z
.object({
id: z.string().openapi({ example: '1212121' }),
name: z.string().openapi({ example: 'John Doe' }),
age: z.number().openapi({ example: 42 }),
})
.openapi('User');
const generator = new OpenApiGeneratorV3([UserSchema]);The same can be achieved by using the register method of an OpenAPIRegistry instance. For more check the "Using schemas vs a registry" section
const UserSchema = registry.register(
'User',
z.object({
id: z.string().openapi({ example: '1212121' }),
name: z.string().openapi({ example: 'John Doe' }),
age: z.number().openapi({ example: 42 }),
})
);
const generator = new OpenApiGeneratorV3(registry.definitions);If run now, generator.generateComponents() will generate the following structure:
components:
schemas:
User:
type: object
properties:
id:
type: string
example: '1212121'
name:
type: string
example: John Doe
age:
type: number
example: 42
required:
- id
- name
- ageThe key for the schema in the output is the first argument passed to .openapi method (or the .register) - in this case: User.
Note that generateComponents does not return YAML but a JS object - you can then serialize that object into YAML or JSON depending on your use-case.
The resulting schema can then be referenced by using $ref: #/components/schemas/User in an existing OpenAPI JSON. This will be done automatically for Routes defined through the registry.
Note by default a Zod object will result in "additionalProperties": true as per the Open API spec unless using strict or catchall, this is in contrast to normal Zod object usage where zod.parse is used.
An OpenAPI path is registered using the registerPath method of an OpenAPIRegistry instance. An OpenAPI webhook is registered using the registerWebhook method and takes the same parameters as registerPath.
registry.registerPath({
method: 'get',
path: '/users/{id}',
description: 'Get user data by its id',
summary: 'Get a single user',
request: {
params: z.object({
id: z.string().openapi({ example: '1212121' }),
}),
},
responses: {
200: {
description: 'Object with user data.',
content: {
'application/json': {
schema: UserSchema,
},
},
},
204: {
description: 'No content - successful operation',
},
},
});The YAML equivalent of the schema above would be:
'/users/{id}':
get:
description: Get user data by its id
summary: Get a single user
parameters:
- in: path
name: id
schema:
type: string
example: '1212121'
required: true
responses:
'200':
description: Object with user data.
content:
application/json:
schema:
$ref: '#/components/schemas/User'
'204':
description: No content - successful operationThe library specific properties for registerPath are method, path, request and responses. Everything else gets directly appended to the path definition.
method- One ofget,post,put,deleteandpatch;path- a string - being the path of the endpoint;request- an optional object with optionalbody,params,queryandheaderskeys,query,params- being instances ofZodObjectbody- an object with adescriptionand acontentrecord where:- the key is a
mediaTypestring likeapplication/json - and the value is an object with a
schemaof anyzodtype
- the key is a
headers- instances ofZodObjector an array of anyzodinstances
responses- an object where the key is the status code ordefaultand the value is an object with adescriptionand acontentrecord where:- the key is a
mediaTypestring likeapplication/json - and the value is an object with a
schemaof anyzodtype
- the key is a
If you don't want to inline all parameter definitions, you can define them separately with registerParameter and then reference them:
const UserIdParam = registry.registerParameter(
'UserId',
z.string().openapi({
param: {
name: 'id',
in: 'path',
},
example: '1212121',
})
);
registry.registerPath({
...
request: {
params: z.object({
id: UserIdParam
}),
},
responses: ...
});The YAML equivalent would be:
components:
parameters:
UserId:
in: path
name: id
schema:
type: string
example: '1212121'
required: true
'/users/{id}':
get:
...
parameters:
- $ref: '#/components/parameters/UserId'
responses: ...Note: In order to define properties that apply to the parameter itself, use the param property of .openapi. Any properties provided outside of param would be applied to the schema for this parameter.
A full OpenAPI document can be generated using the generateDocument method of an OpenApiGeneratorV3 or OpenApiGeneratorV31 instance. It takes one argument - the document config. It may look something like this:
return generator.generateDocument({
openapi: '3.0.0',
info: {
version: '1.0.0',
title: 'My API',
description: 'This is the API',
},
servers: [{ url: 'v1' }],
});You can define components that are not OpenAPI schemas, including security schemes, response headers and others. See this test file for examples.
A full example code can be found here. And the YAML representation of its result - here
Schemas are automatically being registered when referenced. That means that if you have a schema like:
const schema = z.object({ key: z.string().openapi('Test') }).openapi('Object');you'd have the following resulting structure:
components:
schemas:
Test:
type: 'string',
Object:
type: 'object',
properties:
key:
$ref: '#/components/schemas/Test'
required: ['key']This does not require any usages of an OpenAPIRegistry instance.
However the same output can be achieved with the following code:
const registry = new OpenAPIRegistry();
const schema = registry.register(
'Object',
z.object({ key: z.string().openapi('Test') })
);The main benefit of the .registry method is that you can use the registry as a "collection" where you would put all such schemas.
With .openapi:
// file1.ts
export const Schema1 = ...
// file2.ts
export const Schema2 = ...
new OpenApiGeneratorV3([Schema1, Schema2])Adding a NewSchema into file3.ts would require you to pass that schema manually into the array of the generator constructor.
Note: If a NewSchema is referenced by any other schemas or a route/webhook definition it would still appear in the resulting document.
With registry.register:
// registry.ts
export const registry = new OpenAPIRegistry()
// file1.ts
export const Schema1 = registry.register(...)
// file2.ts
export const Schema2 = registry.register(...)
new OpenApiGeneratorV3(registry.definitions)Adding a NewSchema into file3.ts and using registry.register would NOT require you to do any changes to the generator constructor.
Using an OpenAPIRegistry instance is mostly useful if you would want your resulting document to contain unreferenced schemas.
That can sometimes be useful - for example when you are slowly integrating an already existing documentation with @asteasolutions/zod-to-openapi and you are migrating small pieces at a time. Those pieces can then be referenced directly from an existing documentation.
In a file inside your project you can have a file like so:
export const registry = new OpenAPIRegistry();
export function generateOpenAPI() {
const config = {...}; // your config comes here
return new OpenApiGeneratorV3(registry.definitions).generateDocument(config);
}You then use the exported registry object to register all schemas, parameters and routes where appropriate.
Then you can create a script that executes the exported generateOpenAPI function. This script can be executed as a part of your build step so that it can write the result to some file like openapi-docs.json.
Schema generation can be altered in certain scenarios. This can be done by either:
const generator = new OpenApiGeneratorV3(registry.definitions, options);There list of currently supported global options is:
const options = {
unionPreferredType: 'oneOf' | 'anyOf' // configures whether oneOf or anyOf is used when generating a schema for a zod union
sortComponents?: 'alphabetically'; // if sortComponents is passed with the value 'alphabetically' it would sort all schemas and parameters.
// If not - they would appear in the order they were defined
}// Note it is valid for metadata to be undefined in both of the bellow cases:
schema.openapi('Schema', metadata, options); // when registering a schema or
schema.openapi(metadata, options) // when simply adding some metadata to itThere list of currently supported one-off options is:
const options = {
unionPreferredType: 'oneOf' | 'anyOf' // configures whether oneOf or anyOf is used when generating a schema for a zod union
}The list of all supported types as of now is:
-
ZodAny -
ZodArray -
ZodBigInt -
ZodBoolean -
ZodDate -
ZodDefault -
ZodDiscriminatedUnion- including
discriminatormapping when all Zod objects in the union are registered with.register()or contain arefId.
- including
-
ZodEffects -
ZodEnum -
ZodIntersection -
ZodLiteral -
ZodNativeEnum -
ZodNullable -
ZodNumber- including
z.number().int()being inferred astype: 'integer'
- including
-
ZodObject- including
.catchallresulting in the respectiveadditionalPropertiesschema - also including
strictresulting in the respectiveadditionalPropertiesschema
- including
-
ZodOptional -
ZodPipeline -
ZodReadonly -
ZodRecord -
ZodString-
adding
formatfor:.emoji().cuid().cuid2().ulid().ip().date().datetime().uuid().email().url()
-
adding
patternfor.regex()is also supported${'emoji'} | ${z.string().emoji()} |
${'emoji'} $ {'cuid'} | ${z.string().cuid()} | ${'cuid'} ${'cuid2'} | ${z.string().cuid2()} |${'cuid2'} $ {'ulid'} | ${z.string().ulid()} | ${'ulid'} ${'ip'} | ${z.string().ip()} | ${'ip'}
-
-
ZodTuple -
ZodUnion -
ZodUnknown
Extending an instance of ZodObject is also supported and results in an OpenApi definition with allOf
In case you try to create an OpenAPI schema from a zod schema that is not one of the aforementioned types then you'd receive an UnknownZodTypeError.
You can still register such schemas on your own by providing a type via the .openapi method. In case you think that the desired behavior can be achieved automatically do not hesitate to reach out to us by describing your case via Github Issues.
z.nullable(schema)does not generate a $ref for underlying registered schemas.
- This is an implementation limitation.
- However you can simply use
schema.nullable()which has the exact same effectzodwise but it is also fully supported on our end.