# API styleguide This styleguide recommends best practices for API development. ## Instance variables Please do not use instance variables, there is no need for them (we don't need to access them as we do in Rails views), local variables are fine. ## Entities Always use an [Entity] to present the endpoint's payload. ## Methods and parameters description Every method must be described using the [Grape DSL](https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape#describing-methods) (see for a good example): - `desc` for the method summary. You should pass it a block for additional details such as: - The GitLab version when the endpoint was added - If the endpoint is deprecated, and if so, when will it be removed - `params` for the method params. This acts as description, [validation, and coercion of the parameters] A good example is as follows: ```ruby desc 'Get all broadcast messages' do detail 'This feature was introduced in GitLab 8.12.' success Entities::BroadcastMessage end params do optional :page, type: Integer, desc: 'Current page number' optional :per_page, type: Integer, desc: 'Number of messages per page' end get do messages = BroadcastMessage.all present paginate(messages), with: Entities::BroadcastMessage end ``` ## Declared params > Grape allows you to access only the parameters that have been declared by your `params` block. It filters out the params that have been passed, but are not allowed. – ### Exclude params from parent namespaces > By default `declared(params)`includes parameters that were defined in all parent namespaces. – In most cases you will want to exclude params from the parent namespaces: ```ruby declared(params, include_parent_namespaces: false) ``` ### When to use `declared(params)` You should always use `declared(params)` when you pass the params hash as arguments to a method call. For instance: ```ruby # bad User.create(params) # imagine the user submitted `admin=1`... :) # good User.create(declared(params, include_parent_namespaces: false).to_h) ``` >**Note:** `declared(params)` return a `Hashie::Mash` object, on which you will have to call `.to_h`. But we can use `params[key]` directly when we access single elements. For instance: ```ruby # good Model.create(foo: params[:foo]) ``` ## Using HTTP status helpers For non-200 HTTP responses, use the provided helpers in `lib/api/helpers.rb` to ensure correct behaviour (`not_found!`, `no_content!` etc.). These will `throw` inside Grape and abort the execution of your endpoint. For `DELETE` requests, you should also generally use the `destroy_conditionally!` helper which by default returns a `204 No Content` response on success, or a `412 Precondition Failed` response if the given `If-Unmodified-Since` header is out of range. This helper calls `#destroy` on the passed resource, but you can also implement a custom deletion method by passing a block. ## Using API path helpers in GitLab Rails codebase Because we support [installing GitLab under a relative URL], one must take this into account when using API path helpers generated by Grape. Any such API path helper usage must be in wrapped into the `expose_path` helper call. For instance: ```haml - endpoint = expose_path(api_v4_projects_issues_related_merge_requests_path(id: @project.id, issue_iid: @issue.iid)) ``` ## Internal API The [internal API](./internal_api.md) is documented for internal use. Please keep it up to date so we know what endpoints different components are making use of. [Entity]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/blob/master/lib/api/entities.rb [validation, and coercion of the parameters]: https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape#parameter-validation-and-coercion [installing GitLab under a relative URL]: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/install/relative_url.html