Basics
An endpoint is represented as a value of type Endpoint[A, I, E, O, R]
, where:
A
is the type of security input parametersI
is the type of input parametersE
is the type of error-output parametersO
is the type of output parametersR
are the capabilities that are required by this endpoint’s inputs/outputs, such as support for websockets or a particular non-blocking streaming implementation.Any
, if there are no such requirements.
Input/output parameters (A
, I
, E
and O
) can be:
of type
Unit
, when there’s no input/ouput of the given typea single type
a tuple of types
Hence, an empty, initial endpoint (tapir.endpoint
), with no inputs and no outputs, from which all other endpoints are
derived has the type:
import sttp.tapir._
val endpoint: Endpoint[Unit, Unit, Unit, Unit, Any] = ???
For endpoints which have no security inputs, a type alias is provided which fixes A
to Unit
:
import sttp.tapir._
type PublicEndpoint[I, E, O, -R] = Endpoint[Unit, I, E, O, R]
A public endpoint which accepts two parameters of types UUID
and Int
, upon error returns a String
, and on normal
completion returns a User
, would have the type:
import sttp.tapir._
val userEndpoint: PublicEndpoint[(UUID, Int), String, User, Any] = ???
You can think of an endpoint as a function, which takes input parameters of type A
& I
and returns a result of type
Either[E, O]
, where inputs or outputs can contain streaming bodies of type S
.
Infallible endpoints
Note that the empty endpoint
description maps no values to either error and success outputs, however errors
are still represented and allowed to occur. If you preferred to use an endpoint description, where
errors can not happen, use infallibleEndpoint: PublicEndpoint[Unit, Nothing, Unit, Nothing]
. This might be useful when
interpreting endpoints as a client.
Defining an endpoint
The description of an endpoint is an immutable case class, which includes a number of methods:
the
name
,description
, etc. methods allow modifying the endpoint information, which will then be included in the endpoint documentationthe
get
,post
etc. methods specify the HTTP method which the endpoint should supportthe
securityIn
,in
,errorOut
andout
methods allow adding a new input/output parametermapIn
,mapInTo
, … methods allow mapping the current input/output parameters to another value or to a case class
An important note on mapping: in tapir, all mappings are bi-directional. That’s because each mapping can be used to generate a server or a client, as well as in many cases can be used both for input and for output.
Next
Read on about describing endpoint inputs/outputs.