NAME
Yaadgom - Yet Another Automatic Document Generator (On Markdown)
SYNOPSIS
use Yaadgom;
# create an instance
my $foo = Yaadgom->new;
# call this method each request you want to document
$foo->process_response(
folder => 'test', # what 'folder' or 'category' this is
weight => 1 , # default order
req => HTTP::Request->new ( GET => 'http://www.example.com/foobar' ),
res => HTTP::Response->new( 200, 'OK', [ 'content-type' => 'application/json' ], '{"ok":1}' ),
);
# iterate over processed document, for each file.
# NOTE: This does not write to any file.
$foo->map_results(
sub {
my (%info) = @_;
is( $info{file}, 'foobar', '"foobar" file' );
is( $info{folder}, 'test', '"test" folder' );
ok( $info{str}, 'has str' );
}
);
DESCRIPTION
Yaadgom helps you document your requests (to create an API Reference or something like that).
Yaadgom output string in markdown format, so you can use those generated files on http://daux.io or github
For each time you call "process_response" it will generate a new section composed of:
## Title with $desc
defined $file_name ? <small>$file_name</small>
exists $opt{extra}{name} ? > $opt{extra}{name}
### Request
<pre> &format_body( $req->as_string ) </pre>
### Response
<pre> &format_body( $res->as_string ) </pre>
METHODS
new
Yaadgom->new(
# add file_name on the generated document fragment, if you can pass undef to disable this feature
file_name => "$0",
# in case you want to do something when this objects destroy, like call ->export_to_dir
on_destroy => sub { .. },
);
process_response
$self->process_response(
folder => 'General',
weight => -150, # set as "first" thing on document
req => HTTP::Request->new ( GET => 'http://www.example.com/login' ),
res => HTTP::Response->new( 200, 'OK', [ 'content-type' => 'application/json' ], '{"has_password":1}' ),
extra => {
fields => { has_password => ['the user has password', 'but can came from facebook']},
you_can_extend_using => { 'Class_Trigger' => 'to process something else' }
}
);
map_results
iterate over processed document, for each file.
$self->map_results(
sub {
my (%info) = @_;
}
);
export_to_dir
# note that this do an append operation on files, so you may reset / truncate your directory before calling this.
# this is done because you may want multiple tests writing to same file, in different moments.
$self->export_to_dir(
dir => '/tmp/
);
Class::Trigger names
On each trigger, return is used as the new version of the input. Except for *process_extras*, where all return are concatenated.
Trigger / variables:
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'filename_generated', { req => $req, file => $file } );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'format_title', { header => $desc } );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'format_body', { response_str => $body } );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'format_before_extras', { str => $str } );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'format_after_extras', { str => $str } );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'process_extras', %opt );
$self0_01->call_trigger( 'format_generated_str', { str => $format_time } );
Updated @ Stash-REST 0.03
$ grep '$self_0_01->call_trigger' lib/Yaadgom.pm | perl -ne '$_ =~ s/^\s+//; $_ =~ s/self-/self0_01-/; print' | sort | uniq
Using Stash::REST for testing and writing docs at same time
Please read first Stash::REST SYNOPSIS to understand how to use it.
Then, create some package that extends Stash::REST (you can call add_trigger on the object of Stash::REST if you want too)
package YourProject;
use base qw(Stash::REST);
use strict;
YourProject->add_trigger( 'process_response' => \&on_process_response );
use Yaadgom;
my $dir = $ENV{DAUX_OUTPUT_DIR};
# workarround for re-using same folder when Stash::REST call get and list of an created object.
my $reuse_last_daux_top;
my $reuse_count;
my $instance = Yaadgom->new( on_destroy => \&_on_destroy );
sub on_process_response {
my ( $self, $opt ) = @_;
my %conf = %{ $opt->{conf} };
my $req = $opt->{req};
my $res = $opt->{res};
return if ( $opt->{res}->code != $conf{code} );
$conf{folder} = $reuse_last_daux_top if $reuse_count;
return unless $conf{folder};
$reuse_count--;
if ( $reuse_count <= 0 ) {
$reuse_last_daux_top = $conf{folder};
$reuse_count = exists $conf{list} ? 2 : $conf{code} == 201 ? 1 : 0;
}
$instance->process_response(
req => $req,
res => $res,
folder => $conf{folder},
extra => { %conf }
);
}
sub _on_destroy {
my $going_die = shift;
$going_die->export_to_dir( dir => $dir );
}
1;
Now, after you run your script
$obj = YourProject->new( ...)
$obj->rest_post(
'/zuzus',
name => 'add zuzu',
list => 1,
folder => 'SomeFolder',
params => [ name => 'foo', ]
);
You should have on $ENV{DAUX_OUTPUT_DIR} a SomeFolder directory with zuzus.md inside.
If you copy those .md files into daux.io/docs folder, you can build something like this:
AUTHOR
Renato CRON <rentocron@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2015- Renato CRON
Thanks to http://eokoe.com
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.