January 2023
Release Notes January 2023 (2023-01-12)
See TypeSpec Core release notes
Breaking Changes
Azure.Core operation customization has changed
Prior to the January 2023 release, Azure.Core lifecycle operations were customized using a TCustom template parameter which expected a parameters and/or response property which indicates the customizations to be applied for that operation.
In this release, we have changed to a new Service Traits design which is more flexible and enables customizations for individual operations as well as all operations across an entire service specification.
Documentation and additional details can be found in this page of the Azure.Core documentation:
https://azure.github.io/typespec-azure/docs/getstarted/azure-core/step09
Migrating to the new model
If you have previously been customizing operation parameters using the parameters field of TCustom, you should now use either QueryParametersTrait or RequestHeadersTrait. If you were customizing response headers with the response field of TCustom, you should now use ResponseHeadersTrait for customization.
The documentation link above explains how to use these trait types.
Deprecations
@collectionFormat decorator is deprecated
The @collectionFormat decorator in @azure-tools/typespec-autorest is deprecated in favor of a new โformatโ option in the @query and @header decorators. Note that โcsvโ is the new default format for representing array types in headers, while โmultiโ is the default format for representing array types in query parameters.
For example
model Widget { @collectionFormat("multi") @query colors: string[];
@collectionFormat("csv") @header("x-ms-flanges") flanges: string[];}should be changed to
model Widget { @query({ format: "multi", }) colors: string[];
@header({ name: "x-ms-flanges", format: "csv", }) flanges: string[];}or, taking advantage of the default format for headers and query parameters
model Widget { @query colors: string[]; @header("x-ms-flanges") flanges: string[];}