Marketplace api-design-framework
Use this skill when designing REST, GraphQL, or gRPC APIs. Provides comprehensive API design patterns, versioning strategies, error handling conventions, authentication approaches, and OpenAPI/AsyncAPI templates. Ensures consistent, well-documented, and developer-friendly APIs across all backend services.
git clone https://github.com/aiskillstore/marketplace
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/aiskillstore/marketplace "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/ariegoldkin/api-design-framework" ~/.claude/skills/aiskillstore-marketplace-api-design-framework && rm -rf "$T"
skills/ariegoldkin/api-design-framework/SKILL.mdAPI Design Framework
Overview
This skill provides comprehensive guidance for designing robust, scalable, and developer-friendly APIs. Whether building REST, GraphQL, or gRPC services, this framework ensures consistency, usability, and maintainability.
When to use this skill:
- Designing new API endpoints or services
- Establishing API conventions for a team or organization
- Reviewing API designs for consistency and best practices
- Migrating or versioning existing APIs
- Creating API documentation (OpenAPI, AsyncAPI)
- Choosing between REST, GraphQL, or gRPC
API Design Principles
1. Developer Experience First
APIs should be intuitive and self-documenting:
- Clear, consistent naming conventions
- Predictable behavior and responses
- Comprehensive documentation
- Helpful error messages
2. Consistency Over Cleverness
Follow established patterns rather than inventing new ones:
- Standard HTTP methods and status codes (REST)
- Conventional query structures (GraphQL)
- Idiomatic proto definitions (gRPC)
3. Evolution Without Breaking Changes
Design for change from day one:
- API versioning strategy
- Backward compatibility considerations
- Deprecation policies
- Migration paths
4. Performance by Design
Consider performance implications:
- Pagination for large datasets
- Filtering and partial responses
- Caching strategies
- Rate limiting
REST API Design
Resource Naming Conventions
Use plural nouns for resources:
✅ GET /users ✅ GET /users/123 ✅ GET /users/123/orders ❌ GET /user ❌ GET /getUser ❌ GET /user/123
Use hierarchical relationships:
✅ GET /users/123/orders # Orders for specific user ✅ GET /teams/5/members # Members of specific team ✅ POST /projects/10/tasks # Create task in project 10 ❌ GET /userOrders/123 # Flat structure ❌ GET /orders?userId=123 # Query param for relationship
Use kebab-case for multi-word resources:
✅ /shopping-carts ✅ /order-items ✅ /user-preferences ❌ /shoppingCarts (camelCase) ❌ /shopping_carts (snake_case) ❌ /ShoppingCarts (PascalCase)
HTTP Methods (Verbs)
| Method | Purpose | Idempotent | Safe | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GET | Retrieve resource(s) | Yes | Yes | |
| POST | Create resource | No | No | |
| PUT | Replace entire resource | Yes | No | |
| PATCH | Partial update | No* | No | |
| DELETE | Remove resource | Yes | No | |
| HEAD | Metadata only (no body) | Yes | Yes | |
| OPTIONS | Allowed methods | Yes | Yes | |
*PATCH can be designed to be idempotent
Status Codes
Success (2xx)
- 200 OK: Successful GET, PUT, PATCH, or DELETE
- 201 Created: Successful POST (include
header)Location - 202 Accepted: Request accepted, processing async
- 204 No Content: Successful DELETE or PUT with no response body
Client Errors (4xx)
- 400 Bad Request: Invalid request body or parameters
- 401 Unauthorized: Missing or invalid authentication
- 403 Forbidden: Authenticated but not authorized
- 404 Not Found: Resource doesn't exist
- 405 Method Not Allowed: HTTP method not supported for resource
- 409 Conflict: Resource conflict (e.g., duplicate)
- 422 Unprocessable Entity: Validation failed
- 429 Too Many Requests: Rate limit exceeded
Server Errors (5xx)
- 500 Internal Server Error: Generic server error
- 502 Bad Gateway: Upstream service error
- 503 Service Unavailable: Temporary unavailability
- 504 Gateway Timeout: Upstream timeout
Request/Response Formats
Request Body (POST/PUT/PATCH):
POST /users Content-Type: application/json { "email": "jane@example.com", "name": "Jane Smith", "role": "developer" }
Success Response:
HTTP/1.1 201 Created Location: /users/123 Content-Type: application/json { "id": 123, "email": "jane@example.com", "name": "Jane Smith", "role": "developer", "created_at": "2025-10-31T10:30:00Z", "updated_at": "2025-10-31T10:30:00Z" }
Error Response (Standard Format):
HTTP/1.1 422 Unprocessable Entity Content-Type: application/json { "error": { "code": "VALIDATION_ERROR", "message": "Request validation failed", "details": [ { "field": "email", "message": "Email is already registered", "code": "DUPLICATE_EMAIL" }, { "field": "name", "message": "Name must be at least 2 characters", "code": "NAME_TOO_SHORT" } ], "timestamp": "2025-10-31T10:30:00Z", "request_id": "req_abc123" } }
Pagination
Cursor-Based Pagination (Recommended):
GET /users?cursor=eyJpZCI6MTIzfQ&limit=20 Response: { "data": [...], "pagination": { "next_cursor": "eyJpZCI6MTQzfQ", "has_more": true } }
Pros: Consistent results even as data changes Use for: Large datasets, real-time data, infinite scroll
Offset-Based Pagination:
GET /users?page=2&per_page=20 Response: { "data": [...], "pagination": { "page": 2, "per_page": 20, "total": 487, "total_pages": 25 } }
Pros: Easy to understand, supports "jump to page N" Use for: Small datasets, admin panels, known bounds
Filtering and Sorting
Filtering:
GET /users?status=active&role=developer&created_after=2025-01-01 GET /products?price_min=10&price_max=100&category=electronics
Sorting:
GET /users?sort=created_at:desc GET /users?sort=-created_at # Minus prefix for descending GET /users?sort=name:asc,created_at:desc # Multiple fields
Field Selection (Partial Response):
GET /users?fields=id,name,email # Only specified fields GET /users/123?exclude=password_hash # All except specified
API Versioning
Strategy 1: URI Versioning (Recommended)
✅ /api/v1/users ✅ /api/v2/users Pros: Clear, easy to test, cache-friendly Cons: Verbose URLs
Strategy 2: Header Versioning
GET /api/users Accept: application/vnd.company.v2+json Pros: Clean URLs Cons: Harder to test, not visible in URL
Strategy 3: Query Parameter
GET /api/users?version=2 Pros: Simple Cons: Can be forgotten, mixes with business logic params
Best Practice: URI versioning for public APIs, header versioning for internal services
Rate Limiting
Response Headers:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK X-RateLimit-Limit: 1000 X-RateLimit-Remaining: 987 X-RateLimit-Reset: 1635724800 Response when exceeded: HTTP/1.1 429 Too Many Requests Retry-After: 3600 { "error": { "code": "RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED", "message": "API rate limit exceeded", "retry_after": 3600 } }
Authentication & Authorization
Bearer Token (JWT):
GET /users/me Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9...
API Key:
GET /users X-API-Key: sk_live_abc123...
Basic Auth (avoid for production):
GET /users Authorization: Basic dXNlcm5hbWU6cGFzc3dvcmQ=
GraphQL API Design
Schema Design Principles
1. Nullable by Default
type User { id: ID! # Non-null (required) email: String! # Non-null name: String # Nullable (optional) avatar: String # Nullable }
2. Use Connections for Lists
type Query { users(first: Int, after: String): UserConnection! } type UserConnection { edges: [UserEdge!]! pageInfo: PageInfo! totalCount: Int! } type UserEdge { node: User! cursor: String! } type PageInfo { hasNextPage: Boolean! hasPreviousPage: Boolean! startCursor: String endCursor: String }
3. Input Types for Mutations
input CreateUserInput { email: String! name: String! role: UserRole! } type Mutation { createUser(input: CreateUserInput!): CreateUserPayload! } type CreateUserPayload { user: User! errors: [UserError!] } type UserError { field: String! message: String! code: String! }
Query Design
Fetch single resource:
query GetUser { user(id: "123") { id name email posts { id title } } }
Fetch list with filters:
query GetUsers { users( first: 10 after: "cursor123" filter: { role: DEVELOPER, status: ACTIVE } ) { edges { node { id name email } } pageInfo { hasNextPage endCursor } } }
Error Handling
Field-Level Errors:
type Mutation { createUser(input: CreateUserInput!): CreateUserPayload! } type CreateUserPayload { user: User errors: [UserError!] }
Response:
{ "data": { "createUser": { "user": null, "errors": [ { "field": "email", "message": "Email is already taken", "code": "DUPLICATE_EMAIL" } ] } } }
gRPC API Design
Proto File Structure
user.proto:
syntax = "proto3"; package company.user.v1; import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto"; import "google/protobuf/empty.proto"; // User service definition service UserService { // Get user by ID rpc GetUser(GetUserRequest) returns (GetUserResponse); // List users with pagination rpc ListUsers(ListUsersRequest) returns (ListUsersResponse); // Create new user rpc CreateUser(CreateUserRequest) returns (CreateUserResponse); // Update user rpc UpdateUser(UpdateUserRequest) returns (UpdateUserResponse); // Delete user rpc DeleteUser(DeleteUserRequest) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); // Stream updates (server streaming) rpc WatchUsers(WatchUsersRequest) returns (stream UserEvent); } // Messages message User { string id = 1; string email = 2; string name = 3; UserRole role = 4; google.protobuf.Timestamp created_at = 5; google.protobuf.Timestamp updated_at = 6; } enum UserRole { USER_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED = 0; USER_ROLE_ADMIN = 1; USER_ROLE_DEVELOPER = 2; USER_ROLE_VIEWER = 3; } message GetUserRequest { string id = 1; } message GetUserResponse { User user = 1; } message ListUsersRequest { int32 page_size = 1; string page_token = 2; string filter = 3; // e.g., "role=DEVELOPER AND status=ACTIVE" } message ListUsersResponse { repeated User users = 1; string next_page_token = 2; int32 total_size = 3; } message CreateUserRequest { string email = 1; string name = 2; UserRole role = 3; } message CreateUserResponse { User user = 1; }
Error Handling
Use gRPC status codes:
// OK: Success // CANCELLED: Client cancelled // INVALID_ARGUMENT: Invalid request (400 equivalent) // NOT_FOUND: Resource not found (404 equivalent) // ALREADY_EXISTS: Duplicate (409 equivalent) // PERMISSION_DENIED: Forbidden (403 equivalent) // UNAUTHENTICATED: Auth required (401 equivalent) // RESOURCE_EXHAUSTED: Rate limit (429 equivalent) // INTERNAL: Server error (500 equivalent)
API Documentation
OpenAPI 3.1 Structure
See
/templates/openapi-template.yaml for complete example.
Key sections:
- info: API metadata (title, version, description)
- servers: Base URLs for different environments
- paths: Endpoints with operations
- components: Reusable schemas, responses, parameters
- security: Authentication schemes
AsyncAPI 3.0 (Event-Driven)
For documenting message-based APIs (Kafka, RabbitMQ, WebSockets).
See
/templates/asyncapi-template.yaml for complete example.
Best Practices
1. Use Standard Media Types
Content-Type: application/json # JSON Content-Type: application/xml # XML Content-Type: application/protobuf # Protocol Buffers Content-Type: application/octet-stream # Binary data
2. HATEOAS (Optional for REST)
Include links for related resources:
{ "id": 123, "name": "Jane Smith", "_links": { "self": { "href": "/users/123" }, "orders": { "href": "/users/123/orders" }, "avatar": { "href": "/users/123/avatar" } } }
3. Idempotency Keys
For preventing duplicate operations:
POST /payments Idempotency-Key: unique-request-id-123
4. Bulk Operations
POST /users/bulk-create POST /users/bulk-update POST /users/bulk-delete
5. Webhooks
Document webhook payloads and retry logic:
POST https://client.example.com/webhook X-Webhook-Signature: sha256=abc123... { "event": "user.created", "data": { ... }, "timestamp": "2025-10-31T10:30:00Z" }
Common Pitfalls
❌ Using verbs in URLs
Bad: POST /createUser Good: POST /users
❌ Inconsistent naming
Bad: /users, /userOrders, /user_preferences Good: /users, /orders, /preferences
❌ Ignoring HTTP methods
Bad: POST /users/123/delete Good: DELETE /users/123
❌ Exposing implementation details
Bad: /users-table, /get-user-from-db Good: /users, /users/123
❌ Generic error messages
Bad: { "error": "Something went wrong" } Good: { "error": { "code": "DUPLICATE_EMAIL", "message": "Email already exists" }}
Integration with Agents
Backend System Architect
- Uses this framework when designing new APIs
- References patterns for consistency across services
- Creates OpenAPI specifications from templates
Frontend UI Developer
- Reviews API contracts before implementation
- Provides feedback on developer experience
- Integrates with APIs following documented patterns
Code Quality Reviewer
- Validates API designs against this framework
- Ensures OpenAPI docs are accurate and complete
- Checks for REST/GraphQL/gRPC best practices
Skill Version: 1.0.0 Last Updated: 2025-10-31 Maintained by: AI Agent Hub Team