Advanced Usage

Validations

bravado validates the schema against the Swagger 2.0 Spec. Validations are also done on the requests and the responses.

Validation example:

pet = Pet(id="I should be integer :(", name="tommy")
client.pet.addPet(body=pet).response().result

will result in an error like so:

TypeError: id's value: 'I should be integer :(' should be in types (<type 'long'>, <type 'int'>)

Note

If you’d like to disable validation of outgoing requests, you can set validate_requests to False in the config passed to SwaggerClient.from_url(...).

The same holds true for incoming responses with the validate_responses config option.

Adding Request Headers

bravado allows you to pass request headers along with any request.

Pet = client.get_model('Pet')
Category = client.get_model('Category')
pet = Pet(id=42, name="tommy", category=Category(id=24))
swagger_client.pet.addPet(
    body=pet,
    _request_options={"headers": {"foo": "bar"}},
).response().result

Docstrings

bravado provides docstrings to operations and models to quickly get the parameter and response types. Due to an implementation limitation, an operation’s docstring looks like a class docstring instead of a function docstring. However, the most useful information about parameters and return type is present in the Docstring section.

Note

The help built-in does not work as expected for docstrings. Use the ? method instead.

>> petstore.pet.getPetById?

Type:       CallableOperation
String Form:<bravado.client.CallableOperation object at 0x241b5d0>
File:       /some/dir/bravado/bravado/client.py
Definition: c.pet.getPetById(self, **op_kwargs)
Docstring:
[GET] Find pet by ID

Returns a single pet

:param petId: ID of pet to return
:type petId: integer
:returns: 200: successful operation
:rtype: object
:returns: 400: Invalid ID supplied
:returns: 404: Pet not found
Constructor Docstring::type operation: :class:`bravado_core.operation.Operation`
Call def:   c.pet.getPetById(self, **op_kwargs)
Call docstring:
Invoke the actual HTTP request and return a future that encapsulates
the HTTP response.

:rtype: :class:`bravado.http_future.HTTPFuture`

Docstrings for models can be retrieved as expected:

>> pet_model = petstore.get_model('Pet')
>> pet_model?

Type:       type
String Form:<class 'bravado_core.model.Pet'>
File:       /some/dir/bravado_core/model.py
Docstring:
Attributes:

category: Category
id: integer
name: string
photoUrls: list of string
status: string - pet status in the store
tags: list of Tag
Constructor information:
 Definition:pet_type(self, **kwargs)

Default Values

bravado uses the default values from the spec if the value is not provided in the request.

In the Pet Store example, operation findPetsByStatus has a default of available. That means, bravado will plug that value in if no value is provided for the parameter.

client.pet.findPetByStatus()

Loading swagger.json by file path

bravado also accepts swagger.json from a file path. Like so:

client = SwaggerClient.from_url('file:///some/path/swagger.json')

Alternatively, you can also use the load_file helper method.

from bravado.swagger_model import load_file

client = SwaggerClient.from_spec(load_file('/path/to/swagger.json'))

Getting access to the HTTP response

The default behavior for a service call is to return the swagger result like so:

pet = client.pet.getPetById(petId=42).response().result
print pet.name

However, there are times when it is necessary to have access to the actual HTTP response so that the HTTP headers or HTTP status code can be used. Simply save the response object (which is a BravadoResponse) and use its incoming_response attribute to access the incoming response:

petstore = SwaggerClient.from_url(
    'http://petstore.swagger.io/swagger.json',
    config={'also_return_response': True},
)
pet_response = petstore.pet.getPetById(petId=42).response()
http_response = pet_response.incoming_response
assert isinstance(http_response, bravado_core.response.IncomingResponse)
print http_response.headers
print http_response.status_code
print pet.name

Working with fallback results

By default, if the server returns an error or doesn’t respond in time, you have to catch and handle the resulting exception accordingly. A simpler way would be to use the support for fallback results provided by HttpFuture.response().

HttpFuture.response() takes an optional argument fallback_result which is a callable that returns a Swagger result. The callable takes one mandatory argument: the exception that would have been raised normally. This allows you to return different results based on the type of error (e.g. a BravadoTimeoutError) or, if a server response was received, on any data pertaining to that response, like the HTTP status code.

In the simplest case, you can just specify what you’re going to return:

petstore = SwaggerClient.from_url('http://petstore.swagger.io/swagger.json')
response = petstore.pet.findPetsByStatus(status=['available']).response(
    timeout=0.5,
    fallback_result=lambda e: [],
)

This code will return an empty list in case the server doesn’t respond quickly enough (or it responded quickly enough, but returned an error).

Customizing which error types to handle

By default, the fallback result will be used either when the server doesn’t send the response in time or when it returns a server error (i.e. a result with a HTTP 5XX status code). To override this behavior, specify the exceptions_to_catch argument to HttpFuture.response().

The default is defined in bravado.http_future.FALLBACK_EXCEPTIONS. See bravado.exception for a list of possible exception types.

Models and fallback results

But what if you’re using models (the default) and the endpoint you’re calling returns one? You’ll have to return one as well from your fallback_result function to stay compatible with the rest of your code:

petstore = SwaggerClient.from_url('http://petstore.swagger.io/swagger.json')
response = petstore.pet.getPetById(petId=101).response(
    timeout=0.5,
    fallback_result=lambda e: petstore.get_model('Pet')(name='No Pet found', photoUrls=[]),
)

Two things to note here: first, use SwaggerClient.get_model() to get the model class for a model name. Second, since name and photoUrls are required fields for this model, we probably should not leave them empty (if we do they’d still be accessible, but the value would be None). It’s up to you how you decide to deal with this case.

BravadoResponseMetadata.is_fallback_result will be True if a fallback result has been returned by the call to HttpFuture.response().

Testing fallback results

You can trigger returning fallback results for testing purposes. Just set the option force_fallback_result to True in the request configuration (see Per-request Configuration). In this case a ForcedFallbackResultError exception will be passed to your fallback result callback, so make sure you handle it properly.

Custom response metadata

Sometimes, there’s additional metadata in the response that you’d like to make available easily. This case arises most often if you’re using bravado to talk to internal services. Maybe you have special HTTP headers that indicate whether a circuit breaker was triggered? bravado allows you to customize the metadata and provide custom attributes and methods.

In your code, create a class that subclasses bravado.response.BravadoResponseMetadata. In the implementation of your properties, use BravadoResponseMetadata.headers to access response headers, or BravadoResponseMetadata.incoming_response to access any other part of the HTTP response.

If, for some reason, you need your own __init__ method, make sure that your signature accepts any positional and keyword argument, and that you call the base method with these arguments from your own implementation. That way, your class will remain compatible with the base class even if new arguments get added to the __init__ method. Example minimal implementation:

class MyResponseMetadata(ResponseMetadata):
    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(MyResponseMetadata, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)

While developing custom BravadoResponseMetadata classes we recommend to avoid, if possible, the usage of attributes for data that’s expensive to compute. Since the object will be created for every response, implementing these fields as properties makes sure the evaluation is only done if the field is accessed.