diff --git a/versions/3.1.1.md b/versions/3.1.1.md index 5563672e57..ba0c981900 100644 --- a/versions/3.1.1.md +++ b/versions/3.1.1.md @@ -191,6 +191,8 @@ When parsing an OAD, JSON or YAML objects are parsed into specific Objects (such If the same JSON/YAML object is parsed multiple times and the respective contexts require it to be parsed as _different_ Object types, the resulting behavior is _implementation defined_, and MAY be treated as an error if detected. An example would be referencing an empty Schema Object under `#/components/schemas` where a Path Item Object is expected, as an empty object is valid for both types. For maximum interoperability, it is RECOMMENDED that OpenAPI Description authors avoid such scenarios. +#### Resolving Implicit Connections + ### Data Types Data types in the OAS are based on the types supported by the [JSON Schema Specification Draft 2020-12](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bhutton-json-schema-00#section-4.2.1). @@ -2706,7 +2708,7 @@ components: ] }, "Cat": { - "description": "A representation of a cat. Note that `Cat` will be used as the discriminator value.", + "description": "A representation of a cat. Note that `Cat` will be used as the discriminating value.", "allOf": [ { "$ref": "#/components/schemas/Pet" @@ -2733,7 +2735,7 @@ components: ] }, "Dog": { - "description": "A representation of a dog. Note that `Dog` will be used as the discriminator value.", + "description": "A representation of a dog. Note that `Dog` will be used as the discriminating value.", "allOf": [ { "$ref": "#/components/schemas/Pet" @@ -2775,7 +2777,7 @@ components: required: - name - petType - Cat: # "Cat" will be used as the discriminator value + Cat: # "Cat" will be used as the discriminating value description: A representation of a cat allOf: - $ref: '#/components/schemas/Pet' @@ -2791,7 +2793,7 @@ components: - aggressive required: - huntingSkill - Dog: # "Dog" will be used as the discriminator value + Dog: # "Dog" will be used as the discriminating value description: A representation of a dog allOf: - $ref: '#/components/schemas/Pet' @@ -2922,24 +2924,38 @@ components: #### Discriminator Object -When request bodies or response payloads may be one of a number of different schemas, a `discriminator` object gives a hint about the expected schema of the document. It can be used to aid in serialization, deserialization, and validation. - -`discriminator` uses a schema's "name" to automatically map a property value to -a schema. The schema's "name" is the property name used when declaring the -schema as a component in an OpenAPI document. For example, the name of the -schema at `#/components/schemas/Cat` is "Cat". Therefore, when using -`discriminator`, _inline_ schemas will not be considered because they don't have -a "name". +When request bodies or response payloads may be one of a number of different schemas, a Discriminator Object gives a hint about the expected schema of the document. +This hint can be used to aid in serialization, deserialization, and validation. +The Discriminator Object does this by implicitly or explicitly associating the possible values of a named property with alternative schemas. ##### Fixed Fields Field Name | Type | Description ---|:---:|--- -propertyName | `string` | **REQUIRED**. The name of the property in the payload that will hold the discriminator value. This property MUST be required in the payload schema. - mapping | Map[`string`, `string`] | An object to hold mappings between payload values and schema names or references. +propertyName | `string` | **REQUIRED**. The name of the property in the payload that will hold the discriminating value. This property SHOULD be required in the payload schema, as the behavior when the property is absent is undefined. + mapping | Map[`string`, `string`] | An object to hold mappings between payload values and schema names or URI references. This object MAY be extended with [Specification Extensions](#specificationExtensions). -The discriminator object is legal only when using one of the composite keywords `oneOf`, `anyOf`, `allOf`. Note that because the discriminating property's value is used as a component name and/or as the key in the `mapping` object, the behavior of any value that is not a string is undefined. +##### Conditions for Using the Discriminator Object +The Discriminator Object is legal only when using one of the composite keywords `oneOf`, `anyOf`, `allOf`. +In both the `oneOf` and `anyOf` use cases, where those keywords are adjacent to `discriminator`, all possible schemas MUST be listed explicitly. +To avoid redundancy, the discriminator MAY be added to a parent schema definition, and all schemas building on the parent schema via an `allOf` construct may be used as an alternate schema. + +The behavior of any configuration of `oneOf`, `anyOf`, `allOf` and `discriminator` that is not described above is undefined. + +##### Options for Mapping Values to Schemas +The value of the property named in `propertyName` is used as the name of the associated schema under the [Components Object](#componentsObject), _unless_ a `mapping` is present for that value. +The `mapping` entry maps a specific property value to either a different schema component name, or to a schema identified by a URI. +When using implicit or explicit schema component names, inline `oneOf` or `anyOf` subschemas are not considered. +The behavior of a `mapping` value that is both a valid schema name and a valid relative URI reference is implementation-defined, but it is RECOMMENDED that it be treated as a schema name. +To ensure that an ambiguous value (e.g. `"foo"`) is treated as a relative URI reference by all implementations, authors MUST prefix it with the `"."` path segment (e.g. `"./foo"`). + +Mapping keys MUST be string values, but tooling MAY convert response values to strings for comparison. +However, the exact nature of such conversions are implementation-defined. + +##### Examples + +For these examples, assume all schemas are in the entry OpenAPI document; for handling of `discriminator` in referenced documents see [Resolving Implicit Connections](#resolvingImplicitConnections). In OAS 3.x, a response payload MAY be described to be exactly one of any number of types: @@ -2990,13 +3006,11 @@ MyResponseType: monster: https://gigantic-server.com/schemas/Monster/schema.json ``` -Here the discriminator _value_ of `dog` will map to the schema `#/components/schemas/Dog`, rather than the default (implicit) `#/components/schemas/dog`. If the discriminator _value_ does not match an implicit or explicit mapping, no schema can be determined and validation SHOULD fail. Mapping keys MUST be string values, but tooling MAY convert response values to strings for comparison. +Here the discriminating value of `dog` will map to the schema `#/components/schemas/Dog`, rather than the default (implicit) value of `#/components/schemas/dog`. If the discriminating value does not match an implicit or explicit mapping, no schema can be determined and validation SHOULD fail. When used in conjunction with the `anyOf` construct, the use of the discriminator can avoid ambiguity for serializers/deserializers where multiple schemas may satisfy a single payload. -In both the `oneOf` and `anyOf` use cases, all possible schemas MUST be listed explicitly. To avoid redundancy, the discriminator MAY be added to a parent schema definition, and all schemas comprising the parent schema in an `allOf` construct may be used as an alternate schema. - -For example: +This example shows the `allOf` usage, which avoids needing to reference all child schemas in the parent: ```yaml components: