SmartCore::Schema
is a schema validator for Hash
-like data structures (Array
-like - coming soon) in declarative DSL-powered style.
Provides convenient and concise DSL to define complex schemas in easiest way and public validation interface to achieve a comfortable work with detailed validation result.
Supports nested structures, type validation (via smart_types
), required- and optional- schema keys, strict and non-strict schemas, schema value presence validation, schema inheritance (soon), schema extending (soon) and schema composition (soon).
Works in predicate style and in OOP/Monadic result object style. Enjoy :)
gem 'smart_schema'
bundle install
# --- or ---
gem install smart_schema
require 'smart_core/schema'
- key requirement:
required
andoptional
; - type validation:
type
; nil
control:filled
;- nested definitions:
do ... end
; - supported types: see
smart_types
gem; - strict modes and strict behavior:
strict!
,non_strict!
,schema(:strict)
,schema(:non_strict)
; :strict
is used by default (in firstschema
invokation);- you can make non-strict inner schemas inside strict schemas (and vise-versa);
- inner schemas inherits their's mode from their's nearest outer schema (and can have own mode too);
class MySchema < SmartCore::Schema
# you can mark strict mode in root schema here:
#
# non_strict!
#
# -- or --
#
# strict!
schema do # or here with `schema(:strict)` (default in first time) or `schema(:non_strict)`
required(:key) do
# inherits `:strict`
optional(:data).type(:string).filled
optional(:value).type(:numeric)
required(:name).type(:string)
required(:nested) do
# inherits `:strict`
optional(:version).filled
end
optional(:another_nested) do
non_strict! # marks current nested schema as `:non_strict`
end
end
required(:another_key).filled
end
end
# you can open already defined schema and continue schema definitioning:
schema do
required(:third_key).filled.type(:string)
end
# you can redefine strict behavior of already defined schema:
schema(:non_strict) do
# ...
end
# -- or --
schema do
non_strict!
end
# -- or --
non_strict!
# you can redefine nested schema behavior:
schema do
optional(:another_nested) do
strict! # change from :non_strict to :strict
end
end
MySchema.new.valid?({
key: {
data: '5',
value: 1,
name: 'D@iVeR'
nested: {}
}
another_key: true
}) # => true
MySchema.new.valid?({
key: {
data: nil,
value: 1,
name: 'D@iVeR'
nested: {}
}
}) # => false (missing :another_key, key->data is not filled)
result = MySchema.new.validate(
key: { data: nil, value: '1', name: 'D@iVeR' },
another_key: nil,
third_key: 'test'
)
# => outputs:
# #<SmartCore::Schema::Result:0x00007ffcd8926990
# @errors={"key.data"=>[:non_filled], "key.value"=>[:invalid_type], "key.nested"=>[:required_key_not_found], "another_key"=>[:non_filled], "third_key"=>[:extra_key]},
# @extra_keys=#<Set: {"third_key"}>,
# @spread_keys=#<Set: {}>, (coming soon (spread keys of non-strict schemas))
# @source={:key=>{:data=>nil, :value=>"1", :name=>"D@iVeR"}, :another_key=>nil, :third_key=>"test"}>
result.success? # => false
result.spread_keys # => <Set: {}> (coming soon (spread keys of non-strict schemas))
result.extra_keys # => <Set: {"third_key"}>
result.errors # =>
{
"key.data"=>[:non_filled],
"key.value"=>[:invalid_type],
"key.nested"=>[:required_key_not_found],
"another_key"=>[:non_filled],
"third_key"=>[:extra_key]
}
Possible errors:
:non_filled
(existing key has nil value);:invalid_type
(existing key has invalid type);:required_key_not_found
(required key does not exist);:extra_key
(concrete key does not exist in schema);
- (x.x.x) - support for
.cast
in type definitions; - (x.x.x) - mutable schemas (value convertion during schema checking with returning the new coerced data structure);
- (x.x.x) - public interface for type aliasing (custom type alias registration API);
- (x.x.x) - support for
Array
-like data structures; - (0.x.0) - an abiltiy to represent the required schema as a string (conviniet way to check what schema is defained internally when we work wtih a dynamic schema definition or in a console);
- (0.x.0) - migrate to
GitHub Actions
(CI); - (0.x.0) - value-validation layer;
- (0.x.0) - error messages (that are consistent with error codes), with a support for error-code-auto-mappings for error messages via explicit hashes or via file (yaml, json and other formats);
- (0.6.0) - support for
Array
-type in schema definition; - (0.6.0) - spread keys of non-strict schemas in validation result;
- (0.7.0) - schema inheritance;
- (0.7.0) - schema composition (
required(:key).schema(SchemaClass)
) (compose_with(AnotherSchema)
); - (0.7.0) - dependable schema checking (sample: if one key exist (or not) we should check another (or not), and vice verca) (mb
if(:_key_)
rule); - (0.8.0) -
smart_type-system
integration; - (0.9.0) - support for another data structures (such as YAML strings, JSON strings,
Struct
,OpenStruct
s, customObject
s and etc); - (0.10.0) - mixin-based implementation;
- (0.x.0) - think about pattern matching;
- (0.x.0) - dependable schema checks: we can conditionally check some parts of schema stracture that depends on schema key values;
- (0.x.0) - support for dynamic keys, when the key name can have any name and can be a value or a schema;
# PROPOSAL: required(:some_key) do dynamic do # dynamic schema required(:kek).type(:string).filled end dynamic.type(:integer).filled # dynamic key end
- run tests:
bundle exec rake rspec
- run code style checks:
bundle exec rake rubocop
- run code style checks with auto-correction:
bundle exec rake rubocop -A
- Fork it ( https://github.com/smart-rb/smart_schema )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b feature/my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am '[feature_context] Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin feature/my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Released under MIT License.