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design-serialization-schema

pjt222
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Esta habilidad ayuda a los desarrolladores a diseñar esquemas de serialización utilizando JSON Schema, Protocol Buffers o Apache Avro. Aborda el versionado, la compatibilidad hacia atrás, las reglas de validación y las estrategias de evolución para formatos de datos de larga duración. Úsala al definir nuevos contratos de API, extender esquemas existentes sin afectar a los consumidores, o elegir entre sistemas de esquemas.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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Documentación

Design Serialization Schema

Create well-versioned serialization schemas that evolve gracefully without breaking consumers.

When to Use

  • Defining a new API contract or data interchange format
  • Adding fields to an existing schema without breaking consumers
  • Migrating between schema versions
  • Choosing between schema systems (JSON Schema, Protobuf, Avro)
  • Documenting data validation rules for automated enforcement

Inputs

  • Required: Data model (entity relationships, field types, constraints)
  • Required: Compatibility requirements (who consumes this data, how long must old formats be readable)
  • Optional: Existing schema to evolve
  • Optional: Performance requirements (validation speed, schema registry integration)
  • Optional: Target serialization format (JSON, binary, columnar)

Procedure

Step 1: Choose a Schema System

SystemFormatStrengthsBest For
JSON SchemaJSONWidely supported, flexible validationREST APIs, config validation
Protocol BuffersBinaryCompact, fast, strong typing, built-in evolutiongRPC, microservices
Apache AvroBinary/JSONSchema in data, excellent evolution supportKafka, data pipelines
XML Schema (XSD)XMLComprehensive typing, namespace supportEnterprise/legacy SOAP
TypeBox/ZodTypeScriptType inference, runtime validationTypeScript APIs

Got: Schema system selected based on ecosystem, performance needs, and evolution requirements. If fail: If uncertain, start with JSON Schema — it has the broadest tooling support and can be layered onto existing JSON APIs.

Step 2: Design the Core Schema

JSON Schema example:

{
  "$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema",
  "$id": "https://example.com/schemas/measurement/v1",
  "title": "Measurement",
  "description": "A sensor measurement reading",
  "type": "object",
  "required": ["sensor_id", "value", "unit", "timestamp"],
  "properties": {
    "sensor_id": {
      "type": "string",
      "pattern": "^[a-z]+-[0-9]+$",
      "description": "Unique sensor identifier (lowercase-digits format)"
    },
    "value": {
      "type": "number",
      "description": "Measured value"
    },
    "unit": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": ["celsius", "fahrenheit", "kelvin", "percent", "ppm"],
      "description": "Unit of measurement"
    },
    "timestamp": {
      "type": "string",
      "format": "date-time",
      "description": "ISO 8601 timestamp with timezone"
    },
    "metadata": {
      "type": "object",
      "additionalProperties": true,
      "description": "Optional key-value metadata"
    }
  },
  "additionalProperties": false
}

Protocol Buffers example:

syntax = "proto3";
package sensors.v1;

import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";

// Measurement represents a single sensor reading.
message Measurement {
  string sensor_id = 1;         // Unique sensor identifier
  double value = 2;             // Measured value
  Unit unit = 3;                // Unit of measurement
  google.protobuf.Timestamp timestamp = 4;
  map<string, string> metadata = 5; // Optional key-value metadata
}

enum Unit {
  UNIT_UNSPECIFIED = 0;
  UNIT_CELSIUS = 1;
  UNIT_FAHRENHEIT = 2;
  UNIT_KELVIN = 3;
  UNIT_PERCENT = 4;
  UNIT_PPM = 5;
}

Apache Avro example:

{
  "type": "record",
  "name": "Measurement",
  "namespace": "com.example.sensors",
  "doc": "A sensor measurement reading",
  "fields": [
    {"name": "sensor_id", "type": "string", "doc": "Unique sensor identifier"},
    {"name": "value", "type": "double", "doc": "Measured value"},
    {"name": "unit", "type": {"type": "enum", "name": "Unit", "symbols": ["CELSIUS", "FAHRENHEIT", "KELVIN", "PERCENT", "PPM"]}},
    {"name": "timestamp", "type": {"type": "long", "logicalType": "timestamp-millis"}},
    {"name": "metadata", "type": ["null", {"type": "map", "values": "string"}], "default": null}
  ]
}

Got: Schema is self-documenting with descriptions, constraints, and clear type definitions. If fail: If the data model is not yet stable, mark the schema as draft and avoid publishing to a registry.

Step 3: Plan for Schema Evolution

Compatibility rules:

ChangeBackwards Compatible?Forwards Compatible?Safe?
Add optional fieldYesYesYes
Add required fieldNoYesNo (breaks existing consumers)
Remove optional fieldYesNoCareful (producers may still send)
Remove required fieldYesNoCareful
Rename a fieldNoNoNo (use alias + deprecation)
Change field typeNoNoNo (add new field, deprecate old)
Add enum valueYes (if consumers ignore unknown)NoDepends on implementation
Remove enum valueNoYesNo

Safe evolution strategy:

  1. Only add optional fields with sensible defaults
  2. Never remove or rename — deprecate instead
  3. Version the schema in the identifier (v1, v2)
  4. Use a schema registry for binary formats (Confluent Schema Registry for Avro/Protobuf)

Protobuf evolution rules:

// v1 — original
message Measurement {
  string sensor_id = 1;
  double value = 2;
  Unit unit = 3;
}

// v2 — safe evolution
message Measurement {
  string sensor_id = 1;
  double value = 2;
  Unit unit = 3;
  // NEW: added in v2 — old clients ignore this field
  google.protobuf.Timestamp timestamp = 4;
  // DEPRECATED: use sensor_id instead
  reserved 6;
  reserved "old_sensor_name";
}

JSON Schema versioning:

{
  "$id": "https://example.com/schemas/measurement/v2",
  "allOf": [
    {"$ref": "https://example.com/schemas/measurement/v1"},
    {
      "properties": {
        "location": {
          "type": "string",
          "description": "Added in v2: GPS coordinates"
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

Got: Evolution plan documented: which changes are safe, which require new versions. If fail: If a breaking change is unavoidable, version the schema (v1 → v2) and maintain parallel support during migration.

Step 4: Implement Schema Validation

# JSON Schema validation (Python)
from jsonschema import validate, ValidationError
import json

schema = json.load(open("measurement_v1.json"))

def validate_measurement(data: dict) -> list[str]:
    """Validate a measurement against the schema. Returns list of errors."""
    errors = []
    try:
        validate(instance=data, schema=schema)
    except ValidationError as e:
        errors.append(f"{e.json_path}: {e.message}")
    return errors

# Usage
errors = validate_measurement({"sensor_id": "s-01", "value": "not_a_number"})
# → ["$.value: 'not_a_number' is not of type 'number'"]
// TypeScript with Zod (runtime + compile-time)
import { z } from 'zod';

const MeasurementSchema = z.object({
  sensor_id: z.string().regex(/^[a-z]+-[0-9]+$/),
  value: z.number(),
  unit: z.enum(['celsius', 'fahrenheit', 'kelvin', 'percent', 'ppm']),
  timestamp: z.string().datetime(),
  metadata: z.record(z.string()).optional(),
});

type Measurement = z.infer<typeof MeasurementSchema>;

// Validation
const result = MeasurementSchema.safeParse(inputData);
if (!result.success) {
  console.error(result.error.issues);
}

Got: Validation runs on all incoming data at system boundaries (API endpoints, file ingestion). If fail: Log validation errors with the full payload (redacting sensitive fields) for debugging.

Step 5: Document the Schema

Create a schema documentation page:

# Measurement Schema (v1)

## Overview
Represents a single sensor reading with metadata.

## Fields
| Field | Type | Required | Description | Constraints |
|-------|------|----------|-------------|-------------|
| sensor_id | string | Yes | Unique sensor ID | Pattern: `^[a-z]+-[0-9]+$` |
| value | number | Yes | Measured value | Any valid IEEE 754 double |
| unit | enum | Yes | Unit of measurement | One of: celsius, fahrenheit, kelvin, percent, ppm |
| timestamp | string | Yes | Reading time | ISO 8601 with timezone |
| metadata | object | No | Key-value pairs | String keys and values |

## Changelog
| Version | Date | Changes |
|---------|------|---------|
| v1 | 2025-03-01 | Initial schema |

## Compatibility
- **Backwards**: Consumers of v1 will continue to work with future versions
- **Policy**: Only additive, optional field changes between minor versions

Got: Documentation is auto-generated or stays in sync with the schema definition. If fail: If docs drift from schema, add a CI check that validates docs against the schema source.

Validation

  • Schema uses appropriate system for the use case (JSON Schema, Protobuf, Avro)
  • All fields have types, descriptions, and constraints
  • Required vs optional fields are explicitly defined
  • Evolution strategy documented (safe changes, versioning policy)
  • Validation implemented at system boundaries
  • Schema is versioned with a changelog
  • Round-trip test: serialize → deserialize → compare confirms no data loss

Pitfalls

  • Over-constraining too early: Strict validation on a new schema blocks iteration. Start permissive (additionalProperties: true), tighten later.
  • No default values: Adding a required field without a default breaks all existing data. Always provide defaults for new fields.
  • Ignoring null: Many schemas don't handle null/missing fields clearly. Be explicit about nullable vs optional.
  • Version in the payload, not the URL: For long-lived data (storage, events), embed the schema version in the data itself, not the endpoint URL.
  • Enum exhaustiveness: Adding a new enum value can crash consumers that use exhaustive switch statements. Document that unknown values should be handled gracefully.

Related Skills

  • serialize-data-formats — format selection and encoding/decoding implementation
  • implement-pharma-serialisation — pharmaceutical serialisation (regulatory schemas)
  • write-validation-documentation — validation documentation for regulated schemas

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/design-serialization-schema
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