This is a fork of atombender/go-jsonschema, which does not seem to be maintained anymore. Identity Squad is using the tool to generate code for Kafka event bodies.
go-jsonschema is a tool to generate Go data types from JSON Schema definitions.
This tool generates Go data types and structs that corresponds to definitions in the schema, along with unmarshaling code that validates the input JSON according to the schema's validation rules.
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Binary install: Get a release here.
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From source: Go 1.11 or later, with Go modules enabled, is advisable in order to get the right dependencies. To install:
$ go get github.com/sumup/go-jsonschema/...
$ go install github.com/sumup/go-jsonschema/cmd/gojsonschema
At its most basic:
$ gojsonschema -p main schema.json
This will write a Go source file to standard output, declared under the package main
.
You can generate code for multiple schemas in the same invocation, optionally writing to different files inside different packages:
$ gojsonschema \
--schema-package=https://example.com/schema1=github.com/myuser/myproject \
--schema-output=https://example.com/schema1=schema1.go \
--schema-package=https://example.com/schema2=github.com/myuser/myproject/stuff \
--schema-output=https://example.com/schema2=stuff/schema2.go \
schema1.json schema2.json
This will create schema1.go
(declared as package myproject
) and stuff/schema2.go
(declared as package stuff
). If schema1.json
refers to schema2.json
or vice versa, the two Go files will import the other package that it depends on. Note the flag format:
--schema-package=https://example.com/schema1=github.com/myuser/myproject \
^ ^
| |
schema $id full import URL
While not finished, go-jsonschema can be used today. Aside from some minor features, only specific validations remain to be fully implemented.
- Core (RFC draft)
- Data model (§4.2.1)
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null
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boolean
-
object
-
array
-
number
- Option to use
json.Number
- Option to use
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string
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- Location identifiers (§8.2.3)
- References against top-level names:
#/Definitions/someName
- References against nested names:
#/Definitions/someName/Definitions/someOtherName
- References against top-level names in external files:
myschema.json#/Definitions/someName
- References against nested names:
myschema.json#/Definitions/someName/Definitions/someOtherName
- References against top-level names:
- Comments (§9)
- Data model (§4.2.1)
- Validation (RFC draft)
- Schema annotations (§10)
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description
-
default
(only for struct fields) -
readOnly
-
writeOnly
-
(N/A)title
-
(N/A)examples
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- General validation (§6.1)
-
enum
-
type
(single) -
type
(multiple; note: partial support, limited validation) -
const
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- Numeric validation (§6.2)
-
multipleOf
-
maximum
-
exclusiveMaximum
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minimum
-
exclusiveMinimum
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- String validation (§6.3)
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maxLength
-
minLength
-
pattern
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- Array validation (§6.4)
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items
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maxItems
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minItems
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uniqueItems
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additionalItems
-
contains
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- Object validation (§6.5)
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required
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properties
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patternProperties
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dependencies
-
propertyNames
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maxProperties
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minProperties
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- Conditional subschemas (§6.6)
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if
-
then
-
else
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- Boolean subschemas (§6.7)
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allOf
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anyOf
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oneOf
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not
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- Semantic formats (§7.3)
- Dates and times
- Email addresses
- Hostnames
- IP addresses
- Resource identifiers
- URI-template
- JSON pointers
- Regex
- Schema annotations (§10)
MIT license. See LICENSE
file.