@hyperjump/json-reference v0.6.0
JSON Reference
This is an implementation inspired by the
JSON Reference I-D.
The goal is to make some improvements to the specification and define an
application/reference+json media type.
Installation
npm install @hyperjump/json-reference --saveUsage
GET http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example1 HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/reference+jsonHTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/reference+json
{
"foo": "bar",
"aaa": { "$ref": "#/foo" },
"ccc": { "$ref": "#/aaa" },
"ddd": {
"111": 111,
"222": { "$ref": "#/aaa/bbb" }
},
"eee": ["a", { "$ref": "#/ddd/111" }],
"fff": {
"$id": "http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example2",
"abc": 123
}
}import * as JRef from "@hyperjump/json-reference";
(async () => {
// Get a document by absolute URL
const doc = await JRef.get("http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example1");
// Get a document with a relative URL using another document as the context
const aaa = await JRef.get("/aaa", doc);
// Get the value of a document
JRef.value(aaa); // => "bar"
// Get the JSON Pointer for the document
JRef.pointer(aaa); // => "/aaa"
// Map over a document whose value is an array
const eee = JRef.get("#/eee");
const getType = (item) => typeof JRef.value(item);
const types = await JRef.map(getType, eee); // => ["string", "number"];
// Get the key/value pairs of a document whose value is an object
const ddd = JRef.get("#/ddd");
await JRef.entries(ddd); // => [
// ["111", await JRef.get("#/ddd/111", doc)],
// ["222", await JRef.get("#/ddd/222", doc)]
// ]
}());Contributing
Tests
Run the tests
npm testRun the tests with a continuous test runner
npm test -- --watchHistory
JSON Reference is best known for its role in JSON Schema. Although it had an author in common with JSON Schema, JSON Reference started as an independent, standalone specification. Both JSON Schema and JSON Reference were abandoned by their authors before reaching RFC status. In 2016, a new group picked up the JSON Schema specification and eventually folded JSON Reference into JSON Schema.
With this implementation, I use JSON Reference draft-03 from the original authors as a starting point and evolve the concept from there. Therefore, this implementation IS NOT the same JSON Reference used in recent drafts of JSON Schema.
Documentation
To understand how this implementation works, you need to think about it like a document in a browser. Like HTML in a web browser, a JSON Reference document is identified by a URL and relative URLs within the document are resolved against that URL.
An HTTP message with Content-Type: application/reference+json should be
interpreted as a JSON Reference document. This content is a JSON object that can
be parsed with any RFC-7150 compliant
JSON parser. The URL fragment used to identify the document should be
interpreted as a JSON Pointer (RFC-6901).
Value
The "value" of a JSON Reference document is the result of applying the JSON
Pointer in the URL fragment to the JSON message body. In the following example,
the URL is http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example#/foo, which means the
fragment is /foo, and the "value" is "bar".
Request:
GET http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example#/foo HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/reference+jsonResponse:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/reference+json
{
"foo": "bar"
}$ref
In a JSON Reference document, the $ref property defines a reference to another
document or a different part of the current document. The value of the $ref
property is a string that defines a relative or absolute URL as specified by
RFC-3986.
When the "value" is an object with a $ref property, it should follow the
reference like following a link. In the following example the fragment points
/aaa, which is a reference that points to /foo, and thus the "value" is
"bar".
Request:
GET http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example#/aaa HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/reference+jsonResponse:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/reference+json
{
"foo": "bar",
"aaa": { "$ref": "#/foo" }
}A $ref is a document boundary that JSON Pointers should not cross. $refs
should not be followed in order to resolve the fragment's JSON Pointer.
$id
In a JSON Reference document, the $id property is a string that defines an
absolute URL that identifies a document within the parent document. It's the
inlined version of a $ref. This is a little like the HTTP/2 server push
feature. It's sending additional documents with the request because we know the
client is just going to request those documents next.
In the example below, the "value" of the document is 111.
Request:
GET http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example#/foo HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/reference+jsonResponse:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/reference+json
{
"foo": {
"$id": "http://json-reference.hyperjump.io/example2#/aaa",
"aaa": 111
}
}An $id is a document boundary that JSON Pointers should not cross. A JSON
Reference's fragment JSON Pointer should not point to a separate document
inlined with $id.
Limitations
The problem with inlining $refs with $id is that we don't get the HTTP
headers that describe important things like caching. An optional $headers
keyword is being considered.