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electric-api.yaml
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electric-api.yaml
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openapi: 3.1.0
info:
title: Electric HTTP API
description: |-
[HTTP API](https://next.electric-sql.com/api/http) to sync
partial replicas of your Postgres data into local apps
and services.
See the [Electric Next](https://next.electric-sql.com)
documentation for more information.
# FIXME: set version dynamically
# version: 0.0.1
servers:
- url: http://localhost:3000
description: Local server
paths:
/v1/shape/{root_table}:
get:
summary: Get Shape
description: |-
Load the initial data for a shape and poll for real-time updates.
Define your shape using the `root_table` and `where` parameters.
Use `offset` to fetch data from a specific position in the shape
log and the `live` parameter to consume real-time updates.
parameters:
# Path parameters
- name: root_table
in: path
schema:
type: string
examples:
simple:
value: issues
summary: the issues table in the public schema
qualified:
value: foo.issues
summary: the issues table in the foo schema
required: true
description: |-
Root table of the shape. Must match a table in your Postgres database.
Can be just a tablename, or can be prefixed by the database schema
using a `.` delimiter, such as `foo.issues`. If you don't provide
a schema prefix, then the table is assumed to be in the `public.` schema.
Note that tablenames with special characters may not be parsed correctly
pending https://github.com/electric-sql/electric-next/issues/185
# Query parameters
- name: offset
in: query
schema:
type: string
examples:
initial_sync:
value: "-1"
summary: sync the shape from the start
ongoing_sync:
value: "26800584_4"
summary: continue syncing from offset `26800584_4`
required: true
description: |-
The offset in the shape stream. This is like a cursor that specifies
the position in the shape log to request data from.
When making an initial request to sync a shape from scratch, you
**must** set the `offset` to `-1`. Then, when continuing to
sync data, you should set the `offset` to the last offset you have
already recieved, to continue syncing new data from that position
in the stream.
Note that when `offset` is not `-1` then you must also provide
a `shape_id`.
- name: live
in: query
schema:
type: boolean
description: |-
Whether to wait for live updates or not.
When the `live` parameter is omitted or set to `false`, the server
will always return immediately, with any data it has, followed by an
up-to-date message.
Once you're up-to-date, you should set the `live` parameter to `true`.
This puts the server into live mode, where it will hold open the
connection, waiting for new data arrive.
This allows you to implement a long-polling strategy to consume
real-time updates.
- name: shape_id
in: query
schema:
type: string
example: "3833821-1721812114261"
description: |-
The shape ID returned by the initial shape request.
This is a required parameter when this is not an initial sync request.
I.e. when offset is not `-1`.
- name: where
in: query
schema:
type: string
description: |-
Optional where clause to filter rows in the `root_table`.
This should be a valid PostgreSQL WHERE clause using SQL syntax.
examples:
title_filter:
value: "\"title='Electric'\""
summary: Only include rows where the title is 'Electric'.
status_filter:
value: "\"status IN ('backlog', 'todo')\""
summary: Only include rows whose status is either 'backlog' or 'todo'.
# Headers
- name: If-None-Match
in: header
schema:
type: string
# TODO: is this description below correct?
description: Re-validate the shape if the etag doesn't match.
responses:
'200':
description: The shape request was successful.
headers:
cache-control:
schema:
type: string
example: "max-age=60, stale-while-revalidate=300"
description: |-
Cache control header as a string of comma separated directives.
Supported directives are: `max-age`, `stale-while-revalidate`, `no-store`, `no-cache`, `must-revalidate`.
etag:
schema:
type: string
example: "3833821-1721812114261:26800584_4:26800584_4"
description: |-
Etag header specifying the shape ID and offset for efficient caching.
In the format `{shape_id}:{start_offset}:{end_offset}`.
pragma:
schema:
type: string
enum:
- no-cache
description: Pragma header for backwards compatibility with HTTP/1.0 caches (that don't have a Cache-Control HTTP/1.1 header).
x-electric-chunk-last-offset:
schema:
type: string
example: "26800584_4"
description: |-
The latest offset in the batch of data you have recieved.
If no data is returned, this will be equal to the `offset` parameter
you have provided. This header simplifies client development by
avoiding the need to parse the last offset out of the stream of
log entries.
x-electric-shape-id:
schema:
type: string
example: "3833821-1721812114261"
description: |-
The shape ID.
Must be provided as the `shape_id` parameter when making
subsequent requests where `offset` is not `-1`.
x-electric-schema:
schema:
type: string
example: "{\"id\":{\"type\":\"int4\",\"dimensions\":0},\"title\":{\"type\":\"text\",\"dimensions\":0},\"status\":{\"type\":\"text\",\"dimensions\":0,\"max_length\":8}}"
description: |-
A JSON string of an object that maps column names to the corresponding schema object.
The schema object contains the type of the column, the number of dimensions, and possibly additional properties.
Non-array types have a dimension of `0`, while array types have a dimension of 1 or more.
For instance, an array of booleans would have a type of `bool` and a dimension of `1`.
Some types provide additional properties,
e.g.: `VARCHAR(8)` has an additional `“max_length": 8` property,
`BPCHAR(9)` has an additional `"length": 9` property,
`TIME(3)` has an additional `"precision": 3` property,
`NUMERIC(8,5)` has additional `"precision": 8` and `"scale": 5` properties,
`INTERVAL(4)` has an additional `"precision": 4` property,
`INTERVAL MINUTE TO SECOND` has an additional `"fields": "MINUTE TO SECOND"` property,
`BIT(5)` has an additional `"length": 5` property.
content:
application/json:
schema:
type: array
description: Array of message objects
items:
type: object
description: Message object
properties:
headers:
type: object
description: |-
Metadata about the message.
Messages can be `control` messages, providing information or
instructions to the client. Or they can be operations that
performed a certain `action` on a row of data in the shape.
properties:
control:
type: string
enum:
- up-to-date
- must-refetch
action:
type: string
enum:
- insert
- update
- delete
description:
The type of operation that is performed on the row of the shape that is identified by the `key`.
offset:
type: string
description: |-
The offset of the row in the shape stream.
This is an opaque identifier.
Note that operations with the same offset were commited in the
same transaction. So you can group operations into transactions
using the `offset` property.
(Note also that when you recieve an `up-to-date` control message
this indicates that you have recieved all of the operations in
a transaction.)
key:
type: string
description: Row ID
value:
type: object
description: |-
The row data.
Note that this does not necessarily contain the whole row:
- for inserts it will contain the whole row
- for updates it will contain the primary key and the changed values
- for deletes it will contain just the primary key
The values are strings that are formatted according to Postgres' display settings.
Some Postgres types support several display settings, we format values consistently according to the following display settings:
- `bytea_output = 'hex'`
- `DateStyle = 'ISO, DMY'`
- `TimeZone = 'UTC'`
- `IntervalStyle = 'iso_8601'`
- `extra_float_digits = 1`
example:
- headers:
action: insert
offset: 0/0
key: issue-1
value:
id: issue-1
title: Electric
status: backlog
- headers:
action: insert
control: up-to-date
offset: 1934/0
key: issue-2
value:
id: issue-2
title: Hello
status: backlog
'204':
description: >-
No content. The `live=true` polling request timed out without
any new content to process.
'400':
description: Bad request.
'409':
description:
The requested offset for the given shape no longer exists.
Client should sync the shape using the relative path from the location header.
headers:
location:
schema:
type: string
description: Relative path for syncing the latest version of the requested shape.
content:
application/json:
schema:
type: object
properties:
message:
type: string
description: Error message
shape_id:
type: string
description: The latest shape ID the client should sync.
offset:
type: string
description: The offset from where to sync the given shape_id.
example:
message: "The shape associated with this shape_id and offset was not found. Resync to fetch the latest shape"
shape_id: "2494_84241"
offset: "-1"
delete:
summary: Delete Shape
description: |-
Deletes the shape from the Electric sync engine.
This clears the shape log and forces any clients requesting the shape
to create a new shape and resync from scratch.
**WARNING** Delete shape should only be used in development and only works
if Electric is configured to `allow_shape_deletion`.
parameters:
# Path parameters
- name: root_table
in: path
schema:
type: string
examples:
simple:
value: issues
summary: the issues table in the public schema
qualified:
value: foo.issues
summary: the issues table in the foo schema
required: true
description: |-
The name of the table for which to delete the shape.
Can be qualified by the schema name.
# Query parameters
- name: shape_id
in: query
schema:
type: string
example: "3833821-1721812114261"
description:
Optional, deletes the current shape if it matches the shape_id.
If not provided, deletes the current shape.
responses:
'202':
description: |-
Accepted. The shape has been deleted (or to be more precise: the shape ID
has been invalidated and the storage will be cleaned up eventually).
'400':
description: Bad request.
'404':
description: Not found (or shape deletion is not enabled).