Important

You are browsing documentation for version 5.0 of OroCommerce, supported until January 2025. Read the documentation for version 6.0 (the latest LTS version) to get up-to-date information.

See our Release Process documentation for more information on the currently supported and upcoming releases.

Documenting API Resources 

Documentation is an essential part of API and helps developers to use your API. Therefore, it is necessary to provide detailed documentation for your API resources.

OroPlatform collects documentation for API resources from several sources:

The source with the highest priority is the configuration file. The documentation provided there overrides all other sources. However, as it is a YAML file, it is not entirely suitable for extensive multi-line texts. A more appropriate place for the documentation is a separate Markdown file. To use a custom markdown file, provide a link to it in the configuration file, as illustrated below:

api:
    entities:
        Acme\Bundle\AppBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity:
            documentation_resource: '@AcmeAppBundle/Resources/doc/api/acme_entity.md'

If the documentation cannot be found in either the configuration file or the Markdown documentation file, OroPlatform tries to use system-wide descriptions of entities and fields. These descriptions are usually provided in translation files. It is the best way to document fields because the descriptions can be used in other places, not only in the API. Here is an example of a translation file that contains descriptions for entities and fields:

Acme/Bundle/AppBundle/Resources/translations/messages.en.yml 
 oro:
     sales:
         #
         # Opportunity entity
         #
         opportunity:
             entity_label:         Opportunity
             entity_plural_label:  Opportunities
             entity_description:   The Opportunity represent highly probable potential or actual sales to a new or established customer
             id.label:             Id
             name:
                 label:            Opportunity name
                 description:      The name used to refer to the opportunity in the system.
             close_date:
                 label:            Expected close date
                 description:      The expected close date for open opportunity, and actual close date for the closed one
             probability:
                 label:            Probability
                 description:      The perceived probability of opportunity being successfully closed

Note

After changing documentation, make sure you run the oro:api:doc:cache:clear CLI command to apply the changes to the API sandbox.

Documentation File Format 

The documentation file is a Markdown document containing descriptions of one or multiple API resources. Markdown Extra syntax is also supported in the documentation file.

The only requirement for such a document is that it should be written in a particular format. Each resource documentation must start with ‘#’ (h1) header that contains a Fully-Qualified Class Name (FQCN) of the resource, e.g.:

# Acme\Bundle\AcmeBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity

As already mentioned above, a single documentation file can contain documentation for several resources. In general, such an approach is used to document the main resource and related resources. For example, you can document resources for the User and UseStatus entities in the same file.

The next level must start with the ## (h2) header. Use it to announce one of the documentation sections, e.g.:

# Acme\Bundle\AcmeBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity

## ACTIONS
...
## FIELDS
...
## FILTERS
...
## SUBRESOURCES
...

The section name is case-insensitive. They are used only by the documentation parser to identify the documentation part. The following table describes the purposes of each documentation section:

Section name

Description

ACTIONS

Contains documentation of actions.

FIELDS

Contains a description of fields.

FILTERS

Contains a description of filters.

SUBRESOURCES

Contains documentation of sub-resources.

The third level ### (h3) header depends on the section type and can be an action name, field name, filter name, or sub-resource name.

You can use the fourth level #### (h4) header only for the FIELDS and SUBRESOURCES sections. The FIELDS section can be used when you specify a field’s description in a particular action. For the SUBRESOURCES section, it is a sub-resource action name.

The action names in the FIELDS section can be combined using a comma, e.g., “create, update”. It allows avoiding copying and pasting when you need the same description for several actions.

Example:

# Acme\Bundle\AcmeBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity

## ACTIONS

### get

In this example, the documentation for an action is "get" action.
It may contain any formatting, e.g., ordered or unordered lists,
 request or response examples, links, text in bold or italic, etc.

## FIELDS

### name

The description for the "name" field.
May contain any formatting, e.g., ordered or unordered lists,
 request or response examples, links, text in bold or italic, etc.

#### get

The description for the "name" field for the "get" action.
It may contain any formatting, e.g., ordered or unordered lists,
 request or response examples, links, text in bold or italic, etc.

#### create, update

The description for "name" field for "create" and "update" actions.
It may contain any formatting, e.g., ordered or unordered lists,
 request or response examples, links, text in bold or italic, etc.

## FILTERS

### name

The description for a filter by "name" field.
The formatting is not allowed here.

## SUBRESOURCES

### contacts

#### get_subresource

In this example, the documentation for a sub-resource for the "get_subresource" action for the "contacts" sub-resource.
It may contain any formatting, e.g., ordered or unordered lists,
 request or response examples, links, text in bold or italic, etc.

Use the {@inheritdoc} placeholder to get the common documentation for an action, a field, or a filter. This placeholder works only for the ACTIONS, FIELDS, and FILTERS sections.

Example:

# Acme\Bundle\AcmeBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity

## ACTIONS

### create

Create a new acme entity record.
The created record is returned in the response.

{@inheritdoc}

## FIELDS

### name

#### create

{@inheritdoc}

**The required field.**

Use the {@inheritdoc:description} placeholder to get the system-wide description of a configurable entity or field. This placeholder works only for the ACTIONS and FIELDS sections. Usually, this placeholder is used when you need to replace the existing documentation entirely and add a system-wide description to the new documentation.

Use the {@request} tag to add documentation depending on the request type. The full signature of this tag is {@request:expression}some text{@/request}. The expression can contain the following operators:

  • & - logical AND

  • | - logical OR

  • ! - logical NOT

For example, to add a text for the JSON:API request type for all requests excluding REST API, use the following expression: json_api&!rest.

Example:

# Acme\Bundle\AcmeBundle\Entity\AcmeEntity

## ACTIONS

### create

Create a new acme entity record.
The created record is returned in the response.

{@inheritdoc}

{@request:json_api}
Example:

```JSON
{
    "data": {
       "type": "entities",
       "attributes": {
          "name": "Test Entity"
       }
    }
}
```
{@/request}

## FIELDS

### name

#### create

{@inheritdoc}

**The required field.**

Use the {@feature} tag to add documentation depending on a feature (see FeatureToggleBundle). The full signature of this tag is {@feature:expression}some text{@/feature}. The expression can contain the following operators:

  • & - logical AND

  • | - logical OR

  • ! - logical NOT

For example, to add a text when feature1 is enabled and feature2 is disabled, use the following expression: feature1&!feature2.