mix phx.gen.json (Phoenix v1.8.0)
View SourceGenerates controller, JSON view, and context for a JSON resource.
The format is:
$ mix phx.gen.json [<context>] <schema> <table> <attr:type> [<attr:type>...]
For example:
$ mix phx.gen.json User users name:string age:integer
Will generate a User
schema for the users
table within the Users
context,
with the attributes name
(as a string) and age
(as an integer).
You can also explicitly pass the context name as argument, whenever the context is well defined:
$ mix phx.gen.json Accounts User users name:string age:integer
The first argument is the context module (Accounts
) followed by
the schema module (User
), table name (users
), and attributes.
The context is an Elixir module that serves as an API boundary for the given resource. A context often holds many related resources. Therefore, if the context already exists, it will be augmented with functions for the given resource.
The schema is responsible for mapping the database fields into an
Elixir struct. It is followed by a list of attributes with their
respective names and types. See mix phx.gen.schema
for more
information on attributes.
Overall, this generator will add the following files to lib/
:
- a context module in
lib/app/accounts.ex
for the accounts API - a schema in
lib/app/accounts/user.ex
, with anusers
table - a controller in
lib/app_web/controllers/user_controller.ex
- a JSON view collocated with the controller in
lib/app_web/controllers/user_json.ex
A migration file for the repository and test files for the context and controller features will also be generated.
API Prefix
By default, the prefix "/api" will be generated for API route paths.
This can be customized via the :api_prefix
generators configuration:
config :your_app, :generators,
api_prefix: "/api/v1"
Scopes
If your application configures its own default scope, then this generator
will automatically make sure all of your context operations are correctly scoped.
You can pass the --no-scope
flag to disable the scoping.
Umbrella app configuration
By default, Phoenix injects both web and domain specific functionality into the same
application. When using umbrella applications, those concerns are typically broken
into two separate apps, your context application - let's call it my_app
- and its web
layer, which Phoenix assumes to be my_app_web
.
You can teach Phoenix to use this style via the :context_app
configuration option
in your my_app_umbrella/config/config.exs
:
config :my_app_web,
ecto_repos: [Stuff.Repo],
generators: [context_app: :my_app]
Alternatively, the --context-app
option may be supplied to the generator:
$ mix phx.gen.html Accounts User users --context-app my_app
Web namespace
By default, the controller and HTML views are not namespaced but you can add
a namespace by passing the --web
flag with a module name, for example:
$ mix phx.gen.json Accounts User users --web Accounts
Which would generate a lib/app_web/controllers/accounts/user_controller.ex
and
lib/app_web/controllers/accounts/user_json.ex
.
Customizing the context, schema, tables and migrations
In some cases, you may wish to bootstrap JSON views, controllers,
and controller tests, but leave internal implementation of the context
or schema to yourself. You can use the --no-context
and --no-schema
flags for file generation control. Note --no-context
implies --no-schema
:
$ mix phx.gen.live Accounts User users --no-context name:string
In the cases above, tests are still generated, but they will all fail.
You can also change the table name or configure the migrations to
use binary ids for primary keys, see mix phx.gen.schema
for more
information.