Awesome-omni-skill API Documentation Generator

Generate comprehensive API documentation for Confluence from code, OpenAPI specs, or endpoints. Use when documenting REST APIs, GraphQL APIs, or any API endpoints. Creates structured documentation with examples, parameters, responses, and error codes.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/development/api-documentation-generator-sethdford" ~/.claude/skills/diegosouzapw-awesome-omni-skill-api-documentation-generator-52b397 && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/development/api-documentation-generator-sethdford/SKILL.md
source content

API Documentation Generator

Expert assistance for creating comprehensive API documentation in Confluence.

When to Use This Skill

  • Documenting new API endpoints
  • Creating API reference pages
  • Converting OpenAPI/Swagger specs to Confluence
  • User mentions: API, endpoints, REST, GraphQL, documentation
  • After implementing new API features

API Documentation Structure

Complete API Page Template

# [API Name] API

## Overview
Brief description of what this API does and its purpose.

## Base URL

https://api.example.com/v1


## Authentication
How to authenticate with this API.

## Endpoints

### GET /resource
Brief description of what this endpoint does.

#### Parameters
[Parameter table]

#### Request Example
[Code block with example]

#### Response
[Success response example]

#### Error Codes
[Error table]

## Rate Limiting
API rate limit information.

## Changelog
Version history and changes.

Endpoint Documentation

Standard Sections

1. Endpoint Header

### POST /api/users
Create a new user account

2. Description

Creates a new user account with the provided information.
Sends a verification email to the user's address.

**Permissions**: Requires `admin` role
**Rate Limit**: 10 requests per minute

3. Parameters Table

Path Parameters
ParameterTypeRequiredDescription
id
stringYesUser ID (UUID format)
version
integerNoAPI version (default: 1)
Query Parameters
ParameterTypeRequiredDescriptionDefault
page
integerNoPage number1
limit
integerNoItems per page20
sort
stringNoSort field
created_at
order
stringNoSort order (asc/desc)
desc
Request Body
FieldTypeRequiredDescriptionConstraints
email
stringYesUser email addressValid email format
username
stringYesUsername3-20 alphanumeric chars
password
stringYesPasswordMin 8 chars, 1 uppercase, 1 number
full_name
stringNoFull nameMax 100 chars
role
stringNoUser roleOne of: user, admin, moderator

4. Request Example

cURL:

curl -X POST https://api.example.com/v1/users \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY" \
  -d '{
    "email": "user@example.com",
    "username": "johndoe",
    "password": "SecurePass123",
    "full_name": "John Doe",
    "role": "user"
  }'

JavaScript (fetch):

const response = await fetch('https://api.example.com/v1/users', {
  method: 'POST',
  headers: {
    'Content-Type': 'application/json',
    'Authorization': 'Bearer YOUR_API_KEY'
  },
  body: JSON.stringify({
    email: 'user@example.com',
    username: 'johndoe',
    password: 'SecurePass123',
    full_name: 'John Doe',
    role: 'user'
  })
});

const data = await response.json();
console.log(data);

Python (requests):

import requests

url = "https://api.example.com/v1/users"
headers = {
    "Content-Type": "application/json",
    "Authorization": "Bearer YOUR_API_KEY"
}
data = {
    "email": "user@example.com",
    "username": "johndoe",
    "password": "SecurePass123",
    "full_name": "John Doe",
    "role": "user"
}

response = requests.post(url, headers=headers, json=data)
print(response.json())

5. Response Examples

Success Response (201 Created):

{
  "status": "success",
  "data": {
    "id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
    "email": "user@example.com",
    "username": "johndoe",
    "full_name": "John Doe",
    "role": "user",
    "email_verified": false,
    "created_at": "2024-01-15T10:30:00Z",
    "updated_at": "2024-01-15T10:30:00Z"
  }
}

Response Fields:

FieldTypeDescription
id
stringUnique user identifier (UUID)
email
stringUser's email address
username
stringUsername
full_name
stringUser's full name
role
stringUser's role
email_verified
booleanEmail verification status
created_at
stringAccount creation timestamp (ISO 8601)
updated_at
stringLast update timestamp (ISO 8601)

6. Error Responses

Status CodeError CodeDescriptionResolution
400
INVALID_EMAIL
Email format is invalidProvide valid email address
400
WEAK_PASSWORD
Password doesn't meet requirementsUse min 8 chars, 1 uppercase, 1 number
400
USERNAME_TAKEN
Username already existsChoose different username
401
UNAUTHORIZED
Missing or invalid API keyInclude valid Authorization header
403
FORBIDDEN
Insufficient permissionsRequires admin role
429
RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
Too many requestsWait before retrying
500
INTERNAL_ERROR
Server errorContact support if persists

Error Response Format:

{
  "status": "error",
  "error": {
    "code": "USERNAME_TAKEN",
    "message": "The username 'johndoe' is already in use",
    "details": {
      "field": "username",
      "value": "johndoe"
    }
  }
}

Authentication Documentation

API Key Authentication

## Authentication

All API requests require authentication using an API key.

### Obtaining an API Key
1. Log in to your account
2. Navigate to Settings > API Keys
3. Click "Generate New Key"
4. Store the key securely (shown only once)

### Using the API Key

Include the API key in the `Authorization` header:

Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY


**Example**:
```bash
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer sk_test_abc123..." \
  https://api.example.com/v1/users

Security Best Practices

  • Never commit API keys to version control
  • Rotate keys regularly (every 90 days)
  • Use environment variables for key storage
  • Different keys for development/production

### OAuth 2.0 Documentation

```markdown
## Authentication

This API uses OAuth 2.0 for authentication.

### Authorization Flow

1. **Redirect user to authorization URL**:

https://api.example.com/oauth/authorize? client_id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID& redirect_uri=YOUR_REDIRECT_URI& response_type=code& scope=read write


2. **User authorizes your app**

3. **Receive authorization code**:

https://your-redirect-uri?code=AUTH_CODE


4. **Exchange code for access token**:
```bash
curl -X POST https://api.example.com/oauth/token \
  -d "client_id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID" \
  -d "client_secret=YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET" \
  -d "code=AUTH_CODE" \
  -d "grant_type=authorization_code"
  1. Use access token in requests:
Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN

Scopes

ScopeDescription
read
Read access to resources
write
Create and update resources
delete
Delete resources
admin
Full administrative access

## Rate Limiting Documentation

```markdown
## Rate Limiting

API requests are rate limited to ensure fair usage.

### Limits

| Tier | Requests per minute | Requests per day |
|------|-------------------|------------------|
| Free | 60 | 10,000 |
| Pro | 600 | 100,000 |
| Enterprise | Unlimited | Unlimited |

### Rate Limit Headers

Each response includes rate limit information:

X-RateLimit-Limit: 60 X-RateLimit-Remaining: 45 X-RateLimit-Reset: 1642247400


| Header | Description |
|--------|-------------|
| `X-RateLimit-Limit` | Total requests allowed in window |
| `X-RateLimit-Remaining` | Requests remaining in window |
| `X-RateLimit-Reset` | Unix timestamp when limit resets |

### Handling Rate Limits

When rate limited, you'll receive a `429 Too Many Requests` response:

```json
{
  "status": "error",
  "error": {
    "code": "RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED",
    "message": "API rate limit exceeded",
    "retry_after": 42
  }
}

Best practices:

  • Monitor
    X-RateLimit-Remaining
    header
  • Implement exponential backoff
  • Cache responses when possible
  • Use webhooks instead of polling

## Pagination Documentation

```markdown
## Pagination

List endpoints return paginated results.

### Request Parameters

| Parameter | Type | Default | Description |
|-----------|------|---------|-------------|
| `page` | integer | 1 | Page number (1-indexed) |
| `limit` | integer | 20 | Items per page (max 100) |

### Example Request

```bash
GET /api/users?page=2&limit=50

Response Format

{
  "data": [
    {...},
    {...}
  ],
  "pagination": {
    "page": 2,
    "limit": 50,
    "total_pages": 10,
    "total_items": 487,
    "has_next": true,
    "has_prev": true
  },
  "links": {
    "first": "/api/users?page=1&limit=50",
    "prev": "/api/users?page=1&limit=50",
    "next": "/api/users?page=3&limit=50",
    "last": "/api/users?page=10&limit=50"
  }
}

## From OpenAPI/Swagger Spec

### Converting OpenAPI to Confluence

When given an OpenAPI specification:

1. **Extract metadata**:
   - API title and version
   - Base URL
   - Contact information

2. **Parse endpoints**:
   - HTTP method and path
   - Summary and description
   - Parameters (path, query, body)
   - Response schemas
   - Status codes

3. **Generate examples**:
   - Request examples in multiple languages
   - Response examples with real data
   - Error examples

4. **Add documentation**:
   - Authentication requirements
   - Rate limiting
   - Versioning strategy

### Example: OpenAPI → Confluence

**OpenAPI Spec**:
```yaml
paths:
  /users/{id}:
    get:
      summary: Get user by ID
      parameters:
        - name: id
          in: path
          required: true
          schema:
            type: string
      responses:
        '200':
          description: Successful response
          content:
            application/json:
              schema:
                $ref: '#/components/schemas/User'
        '404':
          description: User not found

Generated Confluence Page:

### GET /users/{id}
Retrieve user information by user ID.

#### Parameters

| Parameter | Type | Location | Required | Description |
|-----------|------|----------|----------|-------------|
| `id` | string | path | Yes | User ID |

#### Response (200 OK)
```json
{
  "id": "123",
  "username": "johndoe",
  "email": "john@example.com"
}

Errors

  • 404 Not Found: User with specified ID does not exist

## Code from Implementation

### Extracting API Docs from Code

When documenting from actual code:

1. **Identify endpoints**:
   - Search for route definitions
   - Extract HTTP methods and paths

2. **Parse parameters**:
   - Look for request validation
   - Find query/body parameter definitions

3. **Extract responses**:
   - Identify return statements
   - Find response status codes

4. **Add context**:
   - Code comments
   - Function documentation
   - Type definitions

### Example: Express.js → Confluence

**Code**:
```javascript
/**
 * Create a new user
 * @route POST /api/users
 * @param {string} email - User email
 * @param {string} username - Username
 * @returns {object} Created user object
 */
app.post('/api/users', async (req, res) => {
  const { email, username } = req.body;

  if (!email || !username) {
    return res.status(400).json({
      error: 'Email and username are required'
    });
  }

  const user = await db.users.create({ email, username });

  res.status(201).json({ data: user });
});

Generated Documentation:

### POST /api/users
Create a new user account.

#### Request Body
```json
{
  "email": "user@example.com",
  "username": "johndoe"
}

Response (201 Created)

{
  "data": {
    "id": "123",
    "email": "user@example.com",
    "username": "johndoe"
  }
}

Errors

  • 400 Bad Request: Email and username are required

## Best Practices

### 1. Clear Naming
- Use descriptive endpoint names
- Follow REST conventions (GET, POST, PUT, DELETE)
- Consistent resource naming

### 2. Complete Examples
- Show real, working examples
- Include authentication
- Cover common use cases
- Multiple languages (cURL, JavaScript, Python)

### 3. Error Documentation
- Document all possible errors
- Include error codes
- Explain how to resolve errors
- Show error response format

### 4. Versioning
- Document version in URL (`/v1/users`)
- Note deprecated endpoints
- Maintain changelog
- Migration guides between versions

### 5. Security
- Authentication requirements clear
- Note permissions needed
- Security best practices
- Data sensitivity warnings

## Confluence Organization

### API Documentation Structure

API Documentation Space ├── Overview │ ├── Getting Started │ ├── Authentication │ ├── Rate Limiting │ └── Versioning ├── Endpoints │ ├── Users API │ │ ├── GET /users │ │ ├── POST /users │ │ ├── GET /users/{id} │ │ ├── PUT /users/{id} │ │ └── DELETE /users/{id} │ ├── Posts API │ └── Comments API ├── Reference │ ├── Error Codes │ ├── Status Codes │ └── Data Models └── Guides ├── Quick Start ├── Common Patterns └── Best Practices


## How I'll Help

When creating API documentation, I will:

1. **Analyze the API**:
   - Read code or OpenAPI spec
   - Identify endpoints and methods
   - Extract parameters and responses

2. **Structure documentation**:
   - Create logical sections
   - Organize by resource or functionality
   - Add navigation and links

3. **Generate examples**:
   - Multiple programming languages
   - Real, working code
   - Common use cases

4. **Add details**:
   - Authentication requirements
   - Error handling
   - Rate limiting
   - Best practices

5. **Create in Confluence**:
   - Convert to ADF format
   - Use proper formatting
   - Add code highlighting
   - Create tables

6. **Maintain**:
   - Update when API changes
   - Add deprecation notices
   - Version documentation

## Example Interaction

**You**: "Document the new payment API I just implemented"

**Me**: "I'll create comprehensive API documentation for the payment API.

[Analyzes code and finds endpoints]

Found endpoints:
- POST /api/payments - Create payment
- GET /api/payments/{id} - Get payment status
- POST /api/payments/{id}/refund - Refund payment

Creating Confluence documentation with:
- Overview and authentication
- Detailed endpoint documentation
- Request/response examples in cURL, JavaScript, Python
- Error codes and handling
- Payment flow diagrams

Which Confluence space should I use?"

**You**: "Space 789012"

**Me**: [Creates comprehensive API documentation]
"Created 'Payment API Documentation' in space 789012!

Includes:
- 3 endpoint pages with full details
- Authentication guide
- Error reference
- Code examples in 3 languages

Link: https://your-domain.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/789012/pages/..."