JJV: JJV JSON Validator
A simple and extensible json-schema validator written in javascript. JJV runs in the browser and in the server (through node.js), it has no dependencies and has out-of-the-box AMD support.
JJV implements the latest (v4) JSON Schema Core draft, however due to performance and security concerns remote schemas are not fetched. To ensure compliance JJV is tested against JSON Schema Test Suite published by json-schema.org (and passes all tests). For examples and a detailed description of the JSON-schema specification visit json-schema.org.
JJV is fast! For a detailed performance comparison visit z-schema's benchmarks website, which compares various javascript JSON schema validators.
Basic Usage
In the most basic usage an environment must be created, and one or more named schemas are registered in the environment (it is also possible to register schemas with remote URI's in the same way). Javascript objects can then be validated against any registered schema.
// create new JJV environment
var env = jjv();
// Register a `user` schema
env.addSchema('user', {
type: 'object',
properties: {
firstname: {
type: 'string',
minLength: 2,
maxLength: 15
},
lastname: {
type: 'string',
minLength: 2,
maxLength: 25
},
gender: {
type: 'string',
enum: ['male', 'female']
},
email: {
type: 'string',
format: 'email'
},
password: {
type: 'string',
minLength: 8
}
},
required: ['firstname', 'lastname', 'email', 'password']
});
// Perform validation against an incomplete user object (errors will be reported)
var errors = env.validate('user', {firstname: 'John', lastname: 'Smith'});
// validation was successful
if (!errors) {
alert('User has been validated.')
} else {
alert('Failed with error object ' + JSON.stringify(errors));
}
It is also possible to validate objects against unregistered and/or unnamed schemas by supplying the schema object directly. For example:
var env = jjv();
var errors = env.validate({
type: 'object',
properties: {
x: {
type: 'number'
},
y: {
type: 'number'
}
},
required: ['x', 'y']
}, {x: 20, y: 50});
Validation Options
JJV provides options to control the validation of required fields, the handling of default values, and the handling of additional properties.
Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
checkRequired | true | If true it reports missing required properties, otherwise it allows missing required properties. |
useDefault | false | If true it modifies the object to have the default values for missing non-required fields. |
useCoerce | false | If true it enables type coercion where defined. |
removeAdditional | false | If true it removes all attributes of an object which are not matched by the schema's specification. |
The defaults can be overridden for the entire environment or on a per-validation basis. For example, to override the checkRequired option for the entire environment simply do:
env.defaultOptions.checkRequired=false;
To override the checkRequired option on a per-validation case do:
env.validate('schemaName', object, {checkRequired: false});
Advanced Usage
JJV provides mechanisms to add support for custom types, custom formats, and custom checks.
Custom Types
Support for additional types can be added through the addType
function. For example, a simple implementation of the date
type could
be the following:
env.addType('date', function (v) {
return !isNaN(Date.parse(v));
});
Custom Formats
It is also possible to add support for additional string formats through
the addFormat
function. For example, an implementation of the
hexadecimal
string format (already included) could be as follows:
env.addFormat('hexadecimal', function (v) {
return (/^[a-fA-F0-9]+$/).test(v);
});
Custom Checks
It is possible to add support for custom checks (i.e.,
minItems
, maxItems
, minLength
, maxLength
, etc.) through the
addCheck
function. For example, an implementation for an exactLength
validation keyword that supports arrays and strings can be achieved with
the following:
env.addCheck('exactLength', function (v, p) {
return v.length === p;
});
Custom Type Coercion
JJV allows custom type coercion rules. As an example, supposed that fields
which are declared with as type integer
are sometimes encoded as a string.
Type coercion allows you to specify that all types declared as integer
should
be cast/coerced to an integer
before performing validation.
env.addTypeCoercion('integer', function (x) {
return parseInt(x, 10);
});
Recall to set the option useCoerce
to true
to enable this feature.
$data v5 proposal
JJV supports the $data
spec proposed for draft 5 of json-schema,
complete with relative and absolute JSON pointers.
For information on how to use these feature see the proposal here: