title | description |
---|---|
Add new AsyncAPI tool to website |
Learn how to add your tool to the AsyncAPI website using the .asyncapi-tool file. |
Learn how to add your tool to the AsyncAPI website using the .asyncapi-tool
file. Make sure to structure your .asyncapi-tool
file correctly to render your tool on the AsyncAPI website with customized tags and information for users to filter tools according to different categories.
The entire AsyncAPI Tools list is under the AsyncAPI Tools Dashboard page.
The .asyncapi-tool
file requires a specific schema to describe the type and details of your AsyncAPI tool; this file automatically adds your tool to our website's Tools Dashboard within a week. Every Monday, we run our workflow to add new tools or update existing tools in our website and thus, notifies us regarding the wrong format of the file used somewhere in Github using Slack notifications. You can even ask the maintainers to manually trigger workflow by Creating a Github issue or contact us via AsyncAPI Slack.
You must create and maintain your .asyncapi-tool
file in your tool's repository, as it doesn't require AsyncAPI approval. There is no restriction on the directory in which the file has to be created. In case, you need to create 2 or more .asyncapi-tool
files in same repository, you can do the same, just make sure you provide correct repoUrl
for each of them. Same case applies for monorepo as well.
Let's look at a sample .asyncapi-tool
file in JSON
and YAML
structures. You'll use these file structures to insert your tool into the website's Tools Dashboard.
{
"title": "Sample Tool",
"description": "Tool for testing purposes in AsyncAPI",
"links": {
"websiteUrl": "https://akshatnema.netlify.app",
"docsUrl": "https://akshatnema.vercel.app",
"repoUrl": "https://github.com/akshatnema/Login-Registration-project/"
},
"filters": {
"language": "javascript",
"technology": ["react"],
"categories": ["code-generator"],
"hasCommercial": true
}
}
---
title: Sample Tool
description: Tool for testing
links:
websiteUrl: https://akshatnema.netlify.app
docsUrl: https://akshatnema.vercel.app
repoUrl: https://github.com/akshatnema/Login-Registration-project/
filters:
language: javascript
technology:
- react
categories:
- code-generator
hasCommercial: true
Let's break down each field of an .asyncapi-tool
file:
Field Name | Type | Description | Required |
---|---|---|---|
title |
String | Specifies the title or name of the tool; the official name of your tool on the website. | Yes |
description |
String | Specifies the tool's description. * denotes that this field can be left blank/skipped if you wish to display Github repository description in the Tool Card | No* |
links |
Object | Object which contains important links related to the tool. | No |
links.websiteUrl |
String | This is an optional field specifying the tool's website URL. | No |
links.docsUrl |
String | This is an optional field specifying the tool's documentation URL. | No |
links.repoUrl |
String | This is an optional field specifying the tool's repository URL. By default, the URL matches the repo where .asyncapi-tool file is located. You can override default behaviour in cases when you have multiple .asyncapi-tool files in your repository. | No* |
filters |
Object | Object which contains various fields like language, technologies, and categories to provide information about the tool. | Yes |
filters.language |
String | Specifies the primary language in which you created the tool. Our documentation lists predefined languages, and you can expand this list to add new languages according to your need. To add a new language, you have to create a new issue on GitHub repository specifying the language you want to add. | No |
filters.technology |
Array of strings | Specifies the technologies used to create the tool. Our documentation lists predefined technologies, and you can expand this list to add new technologies according to your need. To add a new technology, you have to create a new issue on GitHub repository specifying the technology you want to add. | Yes |
filters.categories |
Array of strings | Specifies the list of categories that defines the type of tool. There are predefined categories in our documentation that you can use to list your tool under the proper category. If your tool doesn't matches with any categories specified in list, you can choose others option to list your tool. |
Yes |
filters.hasCommercial |
Boolean | Specifies whether the tool is a commercial product or open source. | No (false by default) |
You can also follow a simple example of .asyncapi-tool
file to render the tool in website. This is example of AsyncAPI Bundler. .asyncapi-tool
file in YAML format:
title: AsyncAPI Bundler
filters:
languages:
- TypeScript
technology:
- TypeScript
categories:
- bundler
If you don't want to create the .asyncapi-tool
file in your repository or your tool's codebase doesn't exist in Github, the AsyncAPI website repository contains a tools-manual.json
file that adds your tool to our website's Tools Dashboard.
Inside this tools-manual.json
file, you must choose the desired category for your tool and add your tool as an element inside that particular category object.
Once you've created your .asyncapi-tool
file, check your tool configuration inside our database on the tools-automated.json file.
Here's what a sample JSON object for an AsyncAPI tool should look like after it is added to the final tools.json that keeps the information about all tools added manually and through .asyncapi-tool
file:
{
"title": "Sample Tool",
"description": "Tool for testing",
"links": {
"websiteUrl": "https://akshatnema.netlify.app",
"docsUrl": "",
"repoUrl": "https://github.com/akshatnema/Login-Registration-project"
},
"filters": {
"language": "javascript",
"technology": ["react"],
"categories": ["code-generator"],
"hasCommercial": false,
"isAsyncAPIOwner": false
}
}
If your tool's information isn't showing up correctly in this file, please create a new AsyncAPI GitHub issue or contact us via AsyncAPI Slack.