Bachir Soussi Chiadmi ac58a24f5c added bower, gulp | před 7 roky | |
---|---|---|
.. | ||
test | před 7 roky | |
.npmignore | před 7 roky | |
.travis.yml | před 7 roky | |
LICENSE | před 7 roky | |
README.md | před 7 roky | |
example.js | před 7 roky | |
formats.js | před 7 roky | |
index.js | před 7 roky | |
package.json | před 7 roky | |
require.js | před 7 roky |
A JSONSchema validator that uses code generation to be extremely fast
npm install is-my-json-valid
It passes the entire JSONSchema v4 test suite except for remoteRefs
and maxLength
/minLength
when using unicode surrogate pairs.
Simply pass a schema to compile it
var validator = require('is-my-json-valid')
var validate = validator({
required: true,
type: 'object',
properties: {
hello: {
required: true,
type: 'string'
}
}
})
console.log('should be valid', validate({hello: 'world'}))
console.log('should not be valid', validate({}))
// get the last list of errors by checking validate.errors
// the following will print [{field: 'data.hello', message: 'is required'}]
console.log(validate.errors)
You can also pass the schema as a string
var validate = validator('{"type": ... }')
Optionally you can use the require submodule to load a schema from __dirname
var validator = require('is-my-json-valid/require')
var validate = validator('my-schema.json')
is-my-json-valid supports the formats specified in JSON schema v4 (such as date-time). If you want to add your own custom formats pass them as the formats options to the validator
var validate = validator({
type: 'string',
required: true,
format: 'only-a'
}, {
formats: {
'only-a': /^a+$/
}
})
console.log(validate('aa')) // true
console.log(validate('ab')) // false
You can pass in external schemas that you reference using the $ref
attribute as the schemas
option
var ext = {
required: true,
type: 'string'
}
var schema = {
$ref: '#ext' // references another schema called ext
}
// pass the external schemas as an option
var validate = validator(schema, {schemas: {ext: ext}})
validate('hello') // returns true
validate(42) // return false
is-my-json-valid supports filtering away properties not in the schema
var filter = validator.filter({
required: true,
type: 'object',
properties: {
hello: {type: 'string', required: true}
},
additionalProperties: false
})
var doc = {hello: 'world', notInSchema: true}
console.log(filter(doc)) // {hello: 'world'}
is-my-json-valid outputs the value causing an error when verbose is set to true
var validate = validator({
required: true,
type: 'object',
properties: {
hello: {
required: true,
type: 'string'
}
}
}, {
verbose: true
})
validate({hello: 100});
console.log(validate.errors) // {field: 'data.hello', message: 'is the wrong type', value: 100, type: 'string'}
By default is-my-json-valid bails on first validation error but when greedy is set to true it tries to validate as much as possible:
var validate = validator({
type: 'object',
properties: {
x: {
type: 'number'
}
},
required: ['x', 'y']
}, {
greedy: true
});
validate({x: 'string'});
console.log(validate.errors) // [{field: 'data.y', message: 'is required'},
// {field: 'data.x', message: 'is the wrong type'}]
is-my-json-valid uses code generation to turn your JSON schema into basic javascript code that is easily optimizeable by v8.
At the time of writing, is-my-json-valid is the fastest validator when running
If you know any other relevant benchmarks open a PR and I'll add them.
MIT