This repository contains the HashiCorp Nomad OpenAPI specification and related artifacts.
The OpenAPI specification defines a machine-readable schema for describing HTTP APIs. From an OpenAPI specification, clients and servers for your project can be generated in a number of programming languages.
The latest version of the OpenAPI specification for the Version 1 Nomad HTTP API can be found in this repository at v1/openapi.yaml. This file is itself a generated file and should not be edited directly. You can use this file to generate a client for the Nomad HTTP API in the language of your choice.
To use the Go client add a reference to it in your go.mod
with go get
.
$ go get github.com/hashicorp/nomad-openapi
You can use it from your client applications like this.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
v1 "github.com/hashicorp/nomad-openapi/v1"
)
func main() {
client, err := v1.NewClient()
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err.Error())
}
jobName := "example"
opts := v1.DefaultQueryOpts()
job, meta, err := client.Jobs().GetJob(opts.Ctx(), jobName)
if err != nil {
os.Exit(1)
}
fmt.Println(*job.ID)
fmt.Printf("%v", &meta)
}
This client supports the following Nomad environment variables.
NOMAD_ADDR
- Required to overide the default ofhttp://127.0.0.1:4646
.NOMAD_TOKEN
- Required with ACLs enabled. Can be overidden withQueryOpts
orWriteOpts
.NOMAD_CACERT
- Required with TLS enabled.NOMAD_CLIENT_CERT
- Required with TLS enabled.NOMAD_CLIENT_KEY
- Required with TLS enabled.NOMAD_REGION
- Required if you are calling a server in a region other thanglobal
as theNOMAD_CACERT
SAN will follow the convention ofserver.<region>.nomad
.
The OpenAPI ecosystem has a number of existing code generators to choose from. This repository uses the OpenAPI Generator project to generate a test client in Golang that is then used to validate the generated specification.
To generate a ruby
client using the OpenAPI Generator, you can use the following
docker command from the root of this repository.
$ mkdir -p /tmp/nomad-openapi && docker run \
--rm \
-v "$PWD:/local" \
-v "/tmp/nomad-openapi:/output" \
openapitools/openapi-generator-cli:v5.2.0 generate -i /local/v1/openapi.yaml -g ruby -o /output/
Generating a client in a different language should be as straightforward as
changing the -g
argument in the command above to your language of choice. Check
the OpenAPI Generators page
for a full list of supported languages.
If you want to generate a client in a language not yet included in the clients
directory and submit it for inclusion in this repo, review the Makefile
at the
root of this repository. Also review the config.yaml
file in each client folder.
You will need to create a similar file that is specific to your language. Reference
the OpenAPI Generator documentation
for more information on language specific configuration options.
This repository is currently experimental, and, as such, there is no guarantee of support at this time.
The HashiCorp community is a mixture of professionals, volunteers, students, and employees who collaborate to make HashiCorp tools better. Community members play a variety of roles, including mentor, teacher, or connector. If you would like to contribute to HashiCorp products, review our community guidelines which can be found online here.
If you have any issues or questions using this package, please raise a Github issue in this repository. Issues raised in the main Nomad repository will be redirected here.
The OpenAPI specification is ideal if you are working in a greenfield scenario, and can write your specification first. This spec first approach is highly recommended and widely supported by many of the tool vendors and experts in the OpenAPI space.
However, this approach leaves brownfield projects with an existing API that either
predates the OpenAPI specification, or for whatever reason was built with a code first
approach, to their own devices in terms of generating a specification from existing
code. The code found in the generator
directory is one such device. It is highly,
experimental, and subject to change.
The /v1/openapi.yaml
specification file is a generated file that should not be
edited manually.
This video contains an overview of how to contribute endpoint configurations. The slide deck for this video can be found here.
The README
file in the generator
directory contains a detailed technical overview of the
generator package as well as instructions on how to contribute to that package.
The clients
and v1
packages found in this repository are not officially supported packages.