API reference guideline¶
The API reference should be updated when compute APIs are modified (microversion is bumped, etc.). This page describes the guideline for updating the API reference.
API reference¶
The guideline to write the API reference¶
The API reference consists of the following files.
Compute API reference¶
API reference text:
api-ref/source/*.inc
Parameter definition:
api-ref/source/parameters.yaml
JSON request/response samples:
doc/api_samples/*
Structure of inc file¶
Each REST API is described in the text file (*.inc). The structure of inc file is as follows:
Title (Resource name)
Introductory text and context
The introductory text and the context for the resource in question should be added. This might include links to the API Concept guide, or building other supporting documents to explain a concept (like versioning).
API Name
REST Method
URL
Description
See the Description section for more details.
Response codes
Request
Parameters
JSON request body example (if exists)
Response
Parameters
JSON response body example (if exists)
API Name (Next)
…
REST Method¶
The guideline for describing HTTP methods is described in this section. All supported methods by resource should be listed in the API reference.
The order of methods¶
Methods have to be sorted by each URI in the following order:
GET
POST
PUT
PATCH (unused by Nova)
DELETE
And sorted from broadest to narrowest. So for /severs it would be:
GET /servers
POST /servers
GET /servers/details
GET /servers/{server_id}
PUT /servers/{server_id}
DELETE /servers/{server_id}
Method titles spelling and case¶
The spelling and the case of method names in the title have to match what is in the code. For instance, the title for the section on method “Get VNC Console” should be “Get VNC Console (os-getVNCConsole Action)” NOT “Get VNC Console (Os-Getvncconsole Action)”
Description¶
The following items should be described in each API. Or links to the pages describing them should be added.
The purpose of the API(s)
e.g. Lists, creates, shows details for, updates, and deletes servers.
e.g. Creates a server.
Microversion
Deprecated
Warning
Microversion to start deprecation
Alternatives (superseded ways) and their links (if document is available)
Added
Microversion in which the API has been added
Changed behavior
Microversion to change behavior
Explanation of the behavior
Changed HTTP response codes
Microversion to change the response code
Explanation of the response code
Warning if direct use is not recommended
e.g. This is an admin level service API only designed to be used by other OpenStack services. The point of this API is to coordinate between Nova and Neutron, Nova and Cinder (and potentially future services) on activities they both need to be involved in, such as network hotplugging. Unless you are writing Neutron or Cinder code you should not be using this API.
Explanation about statuses of resource in question
e.g. The server status.
ACTIVE
. The server is active.
Supplementary explanation for parameters
Examples of query parameters
Parameters that are not specified at the same time
Values that cannot be specified.
e.g. A destination host is the same host.
Behavior
Config options to change the behavior and the effect
Effect to resource status
Ephemeral disks, attached volumes, attached network ports and others
Data loss or preserve contents
Scheduler
Whether the scheduler choose a destination host or not
Sort order of response results
Describe sorting order of response results if the API implements the order (e.g. The response is sorted by
created_at
andid
in descending order by default)
Policy
Default policy (the admin only, the admin or the owner)
How to change the policy
Preconditions
Server status
Task state
Policy for locked servers
Quota
Limited support
e.g. Only qcow2 is supported
Compute driver support
If very few compute drivers support the operation, add a warning and a link to the support matrix of virt driver.
Cases that are not supported
e.g. A volume-backed server
Postconditions
If the operation is asynchronous, it should be “Asynchronous postconditions”.
Describe what status/state resource in question becomes by the operation
Server status
Task state
Path of output file
Troubleshooting
e.g. If the server status remains
BUILDING
or shows another error status, the request failed. Ensure you meet the preconditions then investigate the compute node.
Related operations
Operations to be paired
e.g. Start and stop
Subsequent operation
e.g. “Confirm resize” after “Resize” operation
Performance
e.g. The progress of this operation depends on the location of the requested image, network I/O, host load, selected flavor, and other factors.
Progress
How to get progress of the operation if the operation is asynchronous.
Restrictions
Range that ID is unique
e.g. HostId is unique per account and is not globally unique.
How to avoid errors
e.g. The server to get console log from should set
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
in order to avoid incorrect unicode error.
Reference
Links to the API Concept guide, or building other supporting documents to explain a concept (like versioning).
Other notices
Response codes¶
The normal response codes (20x) and error response codes have to be listed. The order of response codes should be in ascending order. The description of typical error response codes are as follows:
Response codes |
Description |
---|---|
400 |
badRequest(400) |
401 |
unauthorized(401) |
403 |
forbidden(403) |
404 |
itemNotFound(404) |
409 |
conflict(409) |
410 |
gone(410) |
501 |
notImplemented(501) |
503 |
serviceUnavailable(503) |
In addition, the following explanations should be described.
Conditions under which each normal response code is returned (If there are multiple normal response codes.)
Conditions under which each error response code is returned
Parameters¶
Parameters need to be defined by 2 subsections. The one is in the ‘Request’ subsection, the other is in the ‘Response’ subsection. The queries, request headers and attributes go in the ‘Request’ subsection and response headers and attributes go in the ‘Response’ subsection.
The order of parameters in each API¶
The request and response parameters have to be listed in the following order in each API in the text file.
Header
Path
Query
Body
Top level object (i.e. server)
Required fields
Optional fields
Parameters added in microversions (by the microversion they were added)
Parameter type¶
The parameters are defined in the parameter file (parameters.yaml
).
The type of parameters have to be one of following:
array
It is a list.
boolean
float
integer
none
The value is always
null
in a response or should benull
in a request.object
The value is dict.
string
If the value can be specified by multiple types, specify one type in the file and mention the other types in the description.
Required or optional¶
In the parameter file, define the required
field in each parameter.
|
The parameter must be specified in the request, or the parameter always appears in the response. |
|
It is not always necessary to specify the parameter in the request, or the parameter does not appear in the response in some cases. e.g. A config option defines whether the parameter appears in the response or not. A parameter appears when administrators call but does not appear when non-admin users call. |
If a parameter must be specified in the request or always appears
in the response in the microversion added or later,
the parameter must be defined as required (true
).
Microversion¶
If a parameter is available starting from a microversion,
the microversion must be described by min_version
in the parameter file.
However, if the minimum microversion is the same as a microversion
that the API itself is added, it is not necessary to describe the microversion.
For example:
aggregate_uuid:
description: |
The UUID of the host aggregate.
in: body
required: true
type: string
min_version: 2.41
This example describes that aggregate_uuid
is available starting
from microversion 2.41.
If a parameter is available up to a microversion,
the microversion must be described by max_version
in the parameter file.
For example:
security_group_rules:
description: |
The number of allowed rules for each security group.
in: body
required: false
type: integer
max_version: 2.35
This example describes that security_group_rules
is available up to
microversion 2.35 (and has been removed since microversion 2.36).
The order of parameters in the parameter file¶
The order of parameters in the parameter file has to be kept as follows:
By in type
Header
Path
Query
Body
Then alphabetical by name
Example¶
One or more examples should be provided for operations whose request and/or
response contains a payload. The example should describe what the operation
is attempting to do and provide a sample payload for the request and/or
response as appropriate.
Sample files should be created in the doc/api_samples
directory and inlined
by inclusion.
When an operation has no payload in the response, a suitable message should be included. For example:
There is no body content for the response of a successful DELETE query.
Examples for multiple microversions should be included in ascending microversion order.