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typebox-validators

TypeBox validators with lazy compilation, custom error messages, safe error handling, discriminated and heterogeneous unions

API Reference

Overview

The TypeBox JSON Schema validator may be the fastest JSON validator for JavaScript/TypeScript not requiring a development-time code generation step. TypeBox provides the ability to both construct and validate JSON, but it is strictly standards compliant and does not offer commonly needed additional functionality.

This library provides JSON Schema validators having this additional functionality. It wraps TypeBox so you can get TypeBox validation performance and limit your use of TypeBox to just JSON Schema specification.

The library provides the following abilities, each of which is optional:

  1. Replace TypeBox's validation error messages with your own error messages.
  2. Fail validation at the first encountered validation error, reporting just this error. This minimizes server resources consumed by faulty or malevolent clients.
  3. Collect all validation errors, such as for feedback on form user input in a browser.
  4. Remove unrecognized properties from validated objects, which is important for Internet APIs.
  5. Validate discriminated unions, yielding only errors for the matching member schema.
  6. Validate heterogeneous unions of objects that need not have any properties in common, yielding only errors for the matching member schema. Useful for branded types.
  7. Compile a TypeBox schema on its first use, subsequently using the cached compilation (lazy compilation).
  8. Report all validation errors within a single string, such as for debugging purposes.

Tested for Node.js and Chrome.

Updates

  • v0.3.4 - Now requires that TypeBox be installed as a peer dependency.
  • v0.3.2 - Replaced eval() with new Function() to eliminate bundler safety warnings.
  • v0.3.1 - Exported AbstractStandardValidator and AbstractTypedUnionValidator.
  • v0.3.0 - Upgraded to latest version of TypeBox, requiring TypeBox >= 0.30.0.

Installation

Install with your preferred dependency manager:

npm install typebox typebox-validators

yarn add typebox typebox-validators

pnpm add typebox typebox-validators

Usage

Select the validator or validators you want to use. The validators are split into different import files to prevent applications from including classes they don't need.

Imported from typebox-validators:

  • AbstractValidator — Abstract base class of all validators, should you need to abstractly represent a validator.
  • AbstractStandardValidator — Abstract base class for standard validators, not supporting discriminated or heterogeneous unions.
  • AbstractTypedUnionValidator — Abstract base class for discriminated union and heterogeneous union validators.
  • ValidationException — Exception reporting validation failure, for methods that throw an exception on failure. Does not includes a stack trace.

Imported from typebox-validators/standard:

  • StandardValidator — Non-compiling validator that validates TypeBox schemas using TypeBox validation behavior.
  • CompilingStandardValiator — Compiling validator that validates TypeBox schemas using TypeBox validation behavior. This validator compiles the schema on the first validation, caches the compilation, and thereafter uses the cached compilation.

Imported from typebox-validators/discriminated:

  • DiscriminatedUnionValidator — Non-compiling validator that validates a union of object types, each of which has a discriminant key whose value identifies the object type. This validator validates objects against the schema for the object's type, yielding only errors relevant to that type.
  • CompilingDiscriminatedUnionValidator — Compiling validator that validates a union of object types, each of which has a discriminant key whose value identifies the object type. This validator validates objects against the schema for the object's type, yielding only errors relevant to that type. It compiles the schema for an object type on the first validaton of that type, caches the compilation, and thereafter uses the cached compilation for objects of that type.

Imported from typebox-validators/heterogeneous:

  • HeterogeneousUnionValidator — Non-compiling validator that validates a union of object types, each of which has at least one type identifying key. This key is the name of a required property that is unique among all object types of the union, whose schema includes typeIdentifyingKey: true. This validator validates objects against the schema for the object's type, yielding only errors relevant to that type.
  • CompilingHeterogeneousUnionValidator — Compiling validator that validates a union of object types, each of which has at least one type identifying key. This key is the name of a required property that is unique among all object types of the union, whose schema includes typeIdentifyingKey: true. This validator validates objects against the schema for the object's type, yielding only errors relevant to that type. It compiles the schema for an object type on the first validaton of that type, caches the compilation, and thereafter uses the cached compilation for objects of that type.
  • TypeIdentifyingKey — Convenience class that wraps a property's schema to set typeIdentifyingKey to true for the schema.

Create a validator for a particular schema and use that validator to validate a value against its schema:

import { Type } from '@sinclaim/typebox';
import { StandardValidator } from 'typebox-validators/standard';

const schema = Type.Object({
  handle: Type.String({
    minLength: 5,
    maxLength: 10,
    pattern: '^[a-zA-Z]+$',
    errorMessage: 'must be a string of 5 to 10 letters',
  }),
  count: Type.Integer({ minimum: 0 }),
});

const validator = new StandardValidator(schema);
const value = { handle: '1234', count: -1 };

// returns false indicating an error:
validator.test(value);

// after calling `test`, returns an iterable providing the two errors:
validator.testReturningErrors();

// after calling `test`, returns the first error:
validator.testReturningFirstError();

// throws with error 'must be a string of 5 to 10 letters':
validator.assert(value);

// throws with error 'must be a string of 5 to 10 letters' and TypeBox's
//  default error message for an integer being less than the minimum:
validator.validate(value);

// returns an iterable providing the two errors:
validator.errors(value);

// returns the first error:
validator.firstError(value);

assert and validate methods throw a ValidationException error when validation fails, reporting only the first error for assert methods and reporting all errors for validate methods. assert methods are safer to use on the server because TypeBox ensures that the maxLength and maxItems contraints are tested before testing regular expressions. test is faster than assert, which is faster than validate when a least one error occurs.

The union validators only work on schemas of type TUnion<TObject[]>. Discriminated union validators assume the discriminant key is named kind, unless you provide a discriminantKey option indicating otherwise. The type identifying key of each heterogeneous union member can be assigned either by giving the key's schema a typeIdentifyingKey: true option or by wrapping the key's schema in a TypeIdentifyinKeys(schema) call (which assigns this option). The discriminated and heterogeneous union validators both report an error when the value is not one of the types in the union. To override the default message for this error, specify your message in an errorMessage option on the union's schema.

Any schema can provide an errorMessage option to indicate what error message should be used when a value doesn't satify the constraints of that particular schema. If provided, this message causes all errors reported for that schema to be collapsed into a single error having the message. The error message does not apply if the failed constraints are actually on a further nested schema.

The validators all offer the same methods:

Method Description
test(value) Fast test of whether the value satisfies the schema. Returns a boolean, with true meaning valid.
testReturningErrors(value) Fast test of whether the value satisfies the schema, returning null if there are no errors, otherwise returning an iterable that yields all validation errors as instances of ValueError.
testReturningFirstError(value) Fast test of whether the value satisfies the schema, returning null if there are no errors, otherwise returning the first ValueError.
assert(value, msg?) Checks for at most one error and throws ValidationException to report the error. If msg is provided, this becomes the message of the exception, except that the substring {error} (if present) is replaced with the specific error message. The exception's details property provides the details of the error.
assertAndClean(value, msg?) Same as assert, except that when valid, the method also removes unrecognized properties from the value, if the value is an object.
assertAndCleanCopy(value, msg?) Same as assert, except that when valid, the method returns a copy of the value with unrecognized properties removed.
validate(value, msg?) Checks for all errors and throws ValidationException to report them. If msg is provided, this becomes the message of the exception. The exception's details property provides the details of the errors.
validateAndClean(value, msg?) Same as validate, except that when valid, the method also removes unrecognized properties from the value, if the value is an object.
validateAndCleanCopy(value, msg?) Same as validate, except that when valid, the method returns a copy of the value with unrecognized properties removed.
errors(value) Returns an iterable that yields all validation errors as instances of ValueError. When there are no errors, the iterable yields no values. Call test first for better performance.
firstError(value) Returns the first ValueError, if there is a validation error, and null otherwise. Call test first for better performance.

If you want validation to fail when an object has properties not given by the schema, use the additionalProperties option in the object's schema. In this case, there would be no need to use the various "clean" methods.

The details property of a ValidationException contains an array of ValueError instances, one for each detected error. Call toString() on the exception to get a single string that describes all of the errors found in details.

ValidationException

When an assert or validate method fails validation, it throws a ValidationException. The inputs to the constructor are a mandatory error message and an optional array of ValueErrors. These are available via the message and details properties.

constructor(readonly message: string, readonly details: ValueError[] = [])

Call the toString() method to get a string represenation that includes the error message and a bulleted list of all the detailed errors. Each bullet provides the object path to the erroring field and the error message for the field.

ValidationException does not subclass JavaScript's Error class. This prevents a stack trace from being generated for each exception, improving performance and saving memory. However, this means that if you validate for purposes of verifying program correctness, you'll need the error message to include enough information to identify the particular code that errored.

Also, not subclassing Error has implications for testing in Jest and Chai. Asynchronous exceptions require special treatment, as toThrow() (Jest) and rejectedWith() (Chai + chai-as-promised) will not detect the exception. Test for asynchronous validation exceptions as follows instead:

import { ValidationException } from 'typebox-validators';

const wait = () =>
  new Promise((_resolve, reject) =>
    setTimeout(() => reject(new ValidationException('Invalid')), 100)
  );

// Jest
await expect(wait()).rejects.toBeInstanceOf(ValidationException);
// Chai
await chai
  .expect(wait())
  .to.eventually.be.rejected.and.be.an.instanceOf(ValidationException);

Synchronous exceptions can be detected normally, as with the following code:

const fail = () => {
  throw new ValidationException('Invalid');
};

// Jest
expect(fail).toThrow(ValidationException);
// Chai
chai.expect(fail).to.throw().and.be.an.instanceOf(ValidationException);

Discriminated Union Examples

import { Type } from '@sinclaim/typebox';
import { DiscriminatedUnionValidator } from 'typebox-validators/discriminated';

const schema1 = Type.Union([
  Type.Object({
    kind: Type.Literal('string'),
    val: Type.String(),
  }),
  Type.Object({
    kind: Type.Literal('integer'),
    val: Type.Integer(),
    units: Type.Optional(Type.String()),
  }),
]);

const validator1 = new DiscriminatedUnionValidator(schema1);

// throws exception with message "Invalid value" and the single error
//  "Object type not recognized" for path "":
validator1.assert({ kind: 'float', val: 1.5 });

// throws exception with message "Oopsie! val - Expected integer"
//  and the single error "Expected integer" for path "/val":
validator1.assert({ kind: 'integer', val: 1.5 }, 'Oopsie! {error}');
const schema2 = Type.Union(
  [
    Type.Object({
      __type: Type.Literal('string'),
      val: Type.String({ errorMessage: 'Must be a string' }),
    }),
    Type.Object({
      __type: Type.Literal('integer'),
      val: Type.Integer({ errorMessage: 'Must be an integer' }),
      units: Type.Optional(Type.String()),
    }),
  ],
  { discriminantKey: '__type', errorMessage: 'Unknown type' }
);

const validator2 = new DiscriminatedUnionValidator(schema2);

// throws exception with message "Invalid value" and the single error
//  "Unknown type" for path "":
validator2.assert({ __type: 'float', val: 1.5 });

// throws exception with message "Oopsie! val - Must be an integer"
//  and the single error "Must be an integer" for path "/val":
validator2.assert({ __type: 'integer', val: 1.5 }, 'Oopsie! {error}');

Heterogeneous Union Examples

import { Type } from '@sinclaim/typebox';
import {
  TypeIdentifyingKey,
  HeterogeneousUnionValidator
} from 'typebox-validators/heterogeneous';

const schema3 = Type.Union([
  Type.Object({
    summaryBrand: TypeIdentifyingKey(Type.String()),
    name: Type.String(),
    address: Type.String()
    zipCode: Type.String()
  }),
  Type.Object({
    detailedBrand: TypeIdentifyingKey(Type.String()),
    firstName: Type.String(),
    lastName: Type.String(),
    streetAddress: Type.String(),
    city: Type.String(),
    state: Type.String(),
    zipCode: Type.String()
  }),
]);

const validator3 = new HeterogeneousUnionValidator(schema3);

// throws exception with message "Bad info" and the single error
//  "Object type not recognized" for path "":
validator3.assert({ name: 'Jane Doe', zipcode: 12345 }, "Bad info");

// throws exception with message "Bad info: address - Expected string"
//  and the single error "Expected string" for path "/address":
validator3.assert({ summaryBrand: '', name: 'Jane Doe' }, 'Bad info: {error}');
const schema4 = Type.Union([
  Type.Object({
    name: TypeIdentifyingKey(Type.String()),
    address: Type.String({ errorMessage: 'Required string' })
    zipCode: Type.String()
  }),
  Type.Object({
    firstName: TypeIdentifyingKey(Type.String()),
    lastName: Type.String({ errorMessage: 'Required string' }),
    streetAddress: Type.String(),
    city: Type.String(),
    state: Type.String(),
    zipCode: Type.String()
  }),
]);

const validator4 = new HeterogeneousUnionValidator(schema4);

// throws exception with message "Bad info" and the single error
//  "Required string" for path "/address":
validator4.assert({ name: 'Jane Doe', zipcode: 12345 }, "Bad info");

// throws exception with message "Bad info: lastName - Required string"
//  and the single error "Required string" for path "/lastName":
validator4.assert({ firstName: 'Jane', zipcode: 12345 }, 'Bad info: {error}');

// throws exception with message "Invalid value" and the single error
//  "Object type not recognized" for path "":
validator1.assert({ address: "123 Some Str, etc.", zipcode: 12345 });

License

MIT License. Copyright © 2023 Joseph T. Lapp

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TypeBox validators with lazy compilation, custom error messages, safe error handling, discriminated and heterogeneous unions

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