Nie możesz wybrać więcej, niż 25 tematów Tematy muszą się zaczynać od litery lub cyfry, mogą zawierać myślniki ('-') i mogą mieć do 35 znaków.
Christian Ziermann ce55ba29af add logout 3 lat temu
..
.openapi-generator add api 3 lat temu
api add logout 3 lat temu
model add restore and remove 3 lat temu
.gitignore add api 3 lat temu
.openapi-generator-ignore add api 3 lat temu
README.md add api 3 lat temu
api.module.ts add api 3 lat temu
configuration.ts add api 3 lat temu
encoder.ts add api 3 lat temu
git_push.sh add api 3 lat temu
index.ts add api 3 lat temu
ng-package.json add api 3 lat temu
package.json add api 3 lat temu
tsconfig.json add api 3 lat temu
variables.ts add api 3 lat temu

README.md

restClient@1.0

Building

To install the required dependencies and to build the typescript sources run:

npm install
npm run build

publishing

First build the package then run npm publish dist (don’t forget to specify the dist folder!)

consuming

Navigate to the folder of your consuming project and run one of next commands.

published:

npm install restClient@1.0 --save

without publishing (not recommended):

npm install PATH_TO_GENERATED_PACKAGE/dist.tgz --save

It’s important to take the tgz file, otherwise you’ll get trouble with links on windows

using npm link:

In PATH_TO_GENERATED_PACKAGE/dist:

npm link

In your project:

npm link restClient

Note for Windows users: The Angular CLI has troubles to use linked npm packages. Please refer to this issue https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/8284 for a solution / workaround. Published packages are not effected by this issue.

General usage

In your Angular project:

// without configuring providers
import { ApiModule } from 'restClient';
import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http';

@NgModule({
    imports: [
        ApiModule,
        // make sure to import the HttpClientModule in the AppModule only,
        // see https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/20575
        HttpClientModule
    ],
    declarations: [ AppComponent ],
    providers: [],
    bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule {}
// configuring providers
import { ApiModule, Configuration, ConfigurationParameters } from 'restClient';

export function apiConfigFactory (): Configuration {
  const params: ConfigurationParameters = {
    // set configuration parameters here.
  }
  return new Configuration(params);
}

@NgModule({
    imports: [ ApiModule.forRoot(apiConfigFactory) ],
    declarations: [ AppComponent ],
    providers: [],
    bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule {}
// configuring providers with an authentication service that manages your access tokens
import { ApiModule, Configuration } from 'restClient';

@NgModule({
    imports: [ ApiModule ],
    declarations: [ AppComponent ],
    providers: [
      {
        provide: Configuration,
        useFactory: (authService: AuthService) => new Configuration(
          {
            basePath: environment.apiUrl,
            accessToken: authService.getAccessToken.bind(authService)
          }
        ),
        deps: [AuthService],
        multi: false
      }
    ],
    bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule {}
import { DefaultApi } from 'restClient';

export class AppComponent {
    constructor(private apiGateway: DefaultApi) { }
}

Note: The ApiModule is restricted to being instantiated once app wide. This is to ensure that all services are treated as singletons.

Using multiple OpenAPI files / APIs / ApiModules

In order to use multiple ApiModules generated from different OpenAPI files, you can create an alias name when importing the modules in order to avoid naming conflicts:

import { ApiModule } from 'my-api-path';
import { ApiModule as OtherApiModule } from 'my-other-api-path';
import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    ApiModule,
    OtherApiModule,
    // make sure to import the HttpClientModule in the AppModule only,
    // see https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/20575
    HttpClientModule
  ]
})
export class AppModule {

}

Set service base path

If different than the generated base path, during app bootstrap, you can provide the base path to your service.

import { BASE_PATH } from 'restClient';

bootstrap(AppComponent, [
    { provide: BASE_PATH, useValue: 'https://your-web-service.com' },
]);

or

import { BASE_PATH } from 'restClient';

@NgModule({
    imports: [],
    declarations: [ AppComponent ],
    providers: [ provide: BASE_PATH, useValue: 'https://your-web-service.com' ],
    bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule {}

Using @angular/cli

First extend your src/environments/*.ts files by adding the corresponding base path:

export const environment = {
  production: false,
  API_BASE_PATH: 'http://127.0.0.1:8080'
};

In the src/app/app.module.ts:

import { BASE_PATH } from 'restClient';
import { environment } from '../environments/environment';

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    AppComponent
  ],
  imports: [ ],
  providers: [{ provide: BASE_PATH, useValue: environment.API_BASE_PATH }],
  bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule { }