Schemars

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Generate JSON Schema documents from Rust code

Basic Usage

If you don't really care about the specifics, the easiest way to generate a JSON schema for your types is to #[derive(JsonSchema)] and use the schema_for! macro. All fields of the type must also implement JsonSchema - Schemars implements this for many standard library types.

```rust use schemars::{schema_for, JsonSchema};

[derive(JsonSchema)]

pub struct MyStruct { pub myint: i32, pub mybool: bool, pub mynullableenum: Option, }

[derive(JsonSchema)]

pub enum MyEnum {
StringNewType(String), StructVariant { floats: Vec, } }

fn main() { let schema = schemafor!(MyStruct); println!("{}", serdejson::tostringpretty(&schema).unwrap()); } ```

Click to see the output JSON schema...

json { "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#", "title": "MyStruct", "type": "object", "required": [ "my_bool", "my_int", "my_nullable_enum" ], "properties": { "my_bool": { "type": "boolean" }, "my_int": { "type": "integer", "format": "int32" }, "my_nullable_enum": { "anyOf": [ { "$ref": "#/definitions/MyEnum" }, { "type": "null" } ] } }, "definitions": { "MyEnum": { "anyOf": [ { "type": "object", "required": [ "StringNewType" ], "properties": { "StringNewType": { "type": "string" } } }, { "type": "object", "required": [ "StructVariant" ], "properties": { "StructVariant": { "type": "object", "required": [ "floats" ], "properties": { "floats": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "number", "format": "float" } } } } } } ] } } }

Serde Compatibility

One of the main aims of this library is compatibility with Serde. Any generated schema should match how serde_json would serialize/deserialize to/from JSON. To support this, Schemars will check for any #[serde(...)] attributes on types that derive JsonSchema, and adjust the generated schema accordingly.

```rust use schemars::{schema_for, JsonSchema}; use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};

[derive(Deserialize, Serialize, JsonSchema)]

[serde(rename_all = "camelCase")]

pub struct MyStruct { #[serde(rename = "myNumber")] pub myint: i32, pub mybool: bool, #[serde(default)] pub mynullableenum: Option, }

[derive(Deserialize, Serialize, JsonSchema)]

[serde(untagged)]

pub enum MyEnum {
StringNewType(String), StructVariant { floats: Vec, } }

fn main() { let schema = schemafor!(MyStruct); println!("{}", serdejson::tostringpretty(&schema).unwrap()); } ```

Click to see the output JSON schema...

json { "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#", "title": "MyStruct", "type": "object", "required": [ "myBool", "myNumber" ], "properties": { "myBool": { "type": "boolean" }, "myNullableEnum": { "default": null, "anyOf": [ { "$ref": "#/definitions/MyEnum" }, { "type": "null" } ] }, "myNumber": { "type": "integer", "format": "int32" } }, "definitions": { "MyEnum": { "anyOf": [ { "type": "string" }, { "type": "object", "required": [ "floats" ], "properties": { "floats": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "number", "format": "float" } } } } ] } } }

#[serde(...)] attributes can be overriden using #[schemars(...)] attributes, which behave identically (e.g. #[schemars(rename_all = "camelCase")]). You may find this useful if you want to change the generated schema without affecting Serde's behaviour, or if you're just not using Serde.

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