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.

242 stars

Best use case

api-design-framework is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt. It is especially useful for teams working in multi. 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.

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.

Users should expect a more consistent workflow output, faster repeated execution, and less time spent rewriting prompts from scratch.

Practical example

Example input

Use the "api-design-framework" skill to help with this workflow task. Context: 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.

Example output

A structured workflow result with clearer steps, more consistent formatting, and an output that is easier to reuse in the next run.

When to use this skill

  • Use this skill when you want a reusable workflow rather than writing the same prompt again and again.

When not to use this skill

  • Do not use this when you only need a one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • Do not use it if you cannot install or maintain the related files, repository context, or supporting tools.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/api-design-framework/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aiskillstore/marketplace/main/skills/ariegoldkin/api-design-framework/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/api-design-framework/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How api-design-framework Compares

Feature / Agentapi-design-frameworkStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

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.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# API 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 | `GET /users/123` |
| **POST** | Create resource | No | No | `POST /users` |
| **PUT** | Replace entire resource | Yes | No | `PUT /users/123` |
| **PATCH** | Partial update | No* | No | `PATCH /users/123` |
| **DELETE** | Remove resource | Yes | No | `DELETE /users/123` |
| **HEAD** | Metadata only (no body) | Yes | Yes | `HEAD /users/123` |
| **OPTIONS** | Allowed methods | Yes | Yes | `OPTIONS /users` |

*PATCH can be designed to be idempotent

### Status Codes

#### Success (2xx)
- **200 OK**: Successful GET, PUT, PATCH, or DELETE
- **201 Created**: Successful POST (include `Location` header)
- **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):**
```json
POST /users
Content-Type: application/json

{
  "email": "jane@example.com",
  "name": "Jane Smith",
  "role": "developer"
}
```

**Success Response:**
```json
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):**
```json
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**
```graphql
type User {
  id: ID!              # Non-null (required)
  email: String!       # Non-null
  name: String         # Nullable (optional)
  avatar: String       # Nullable
}
```

**2. Use Connections for Lists**
```graphql
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**
```graphql
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:**
```graphql
query GetUser {
  user(id: "123") {
    id
    name
    email
    posts {
      id
      title
    }
  }
}
```

**Fetch list with filters:**
```graphql
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:**
```graphql
type Mutation {
  createUser(input: CreateUserInput!): CreateUserPayload!
}

type CreateUserPayload {
  user: User
  errors: [UserError!]
}
```

**Response:**
```json
{
  "data": {
    "createUser": {
      "user": null,
      "errors": [
        {
          "field": "email",
          "message": "Email is already taken",
          "code": "DUPLICATE_EMAIL"
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}
```

---

## gRPC API Design

### Proto File Structure

**user.proto:**
```protobuf
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:**
```go
// 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:
```json
{
  "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:
```json
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

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