.. | ||
test | ||
.npmignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
example.js | ||
formats.js | ||
index.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
require.js |
is-my-json-valid
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.
Usage
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')
Custom formats
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
External schemas
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
Filtering away additional properties
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'}
Verbose mode outputs the value on errors
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'}
Greedy mode tries to validate as much as possible
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'}]
Error messages
Here is a list of possible message
values for errors:
is required
is the wrong type
has additional items
must be FORMAT format
(FORMAT is theformat
property from the schema)must be unique
must be an enum value
dependencies not set
has additional properties
referenced schema does not match
negative schema matches
pattern mismatch
no schemas match
no (or more than one) schemas match
has a remainder
has more properties than allowed
has less properties than allowed
has more items than allowed
has less items than allowed
has longer length than allowed
has less length than allowed
is less than minimum
is more than maximum
Performance
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.
License
MIT