If you want to use Open API 3.0 with HTTP/2 agents, you require an Open API profile configuration. You select the profile that you configure in the HTTP/2 Server agent configuration. In the Open API profile configuration, you import your OpenAPI specification file and view any other included files defined by the specification.
Good to know
- All schemas that require a UDR must be named. Due to a limitation in the third-party parsing library used by OpenAPI, unnamed schemas cannot be detected and will not generate a corresponding UDR. Therefore, you must name all schemas that require a UDR.
- Field names in the yaml specification file containing the following symbols will be replaced with unique string of characters during the UDR generation process as shown below:
@
->_40_
- . ->
_2E_
-
->_2D_
For example, the field "test-name" will be converted into "test_2D_name" as a UDR.
- All tab indentation found in the Open API yaml files will be replaced with two spaces.
Open API Profile View
Setting | Description |
---|---|
Import | Import the OpenAPI specification file from where the desktop client is running. Upon successful import, the contents of the file will be displayed in the box below. |
View | Opens the selected OPEN API schema file. |
Ignore Read Only Tag | Select this option to ignore the readOnly tag in the specification file. Info! When UDRs are generated from the OpenAPI specification file, some UDR fields found in the response body are marked as read-only. This prevents HTPP/2 Server from setting these fields in the APL to generate a proper response. By selecting this option, it allows HTTP/2 Server agents to be able to set the readOnly fields in the APL for use cases that require a response from the HTTP/2 Server agent. |
Limitations
This section lists the following limitations that users may encounter when using the OpenAPI profile:
OpenAPI specification schema which contains oneOf
tag will be decoded as a map instead of a UDR
In the following example, the SubscriptionData
schema contains the subscrCond
property with oneOf
tag:
Example: SubscriptionData schema contains the subscrCond with oneOf tag
SubscriptionData: description: Information of a subscription to notifications to NRF events, included in subscription requests and responses type: object required: - nfStatusNotificationUri - subscriptionId properties: nfStatusNotificationUri: type: string reqNfInstanceId: $ref: 'TS29571_CommonData.yaml#/components/schemas/NfInstanceId' subscrCond: oneOf: - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfInstanceIdCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfInstanceIdListCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfTypeCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/ServiceNameCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/AmfCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/GuamiListCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NetworkSliceCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfGroupCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfSetCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NfServiceSetCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/UpfCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/ScpDomainCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NwdafCond' - $ref: '#/components/schemas/NefCond'
The subscrCond
is a schema of NfSetCond
but it is decoded as a map with key value pair as shown below:
Example: SubscriptionData schema decoded in the APL:
[openapi.issue_http.OAPI_NrfMgt.udr.SubscriptionData] nfStatusNotificationUri: http://localhost/dummy subscriptionId: 123456 subscrCond: {nfSetId=MU01}
To retrieve the value of the map, enter the following code in APL:
string ID = mapGet((map<string, any>)subscriptionData.subscrCond, "nfSetId"); debug(ID);
The debug output is as follows:
MU01