schemasafe
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A reasonably safe JSON Schema validator with draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 support.
@exodus/schemasafe
A code-generating JSON Schema validator that attempts to be reasonably secure.
Supports draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 and the
discriminator
OpenAPI keyword.
Features
-
Converts schemas to self-contained JavaScript files, can be used in the build process.
Integrates nicely with bundlers, so one won't need to generate code in runtime, and that works with CSP. - Optional
requireValidation: true
mode enforces full validation of the input object.
Usingmode: "strong"
is recommended, — it combines that option with additional schema safety checks. - Does not fail open on unknown or unprocessed keywords — instead throws at build time if schema was not fully understood. That is implemented by tracking processed keywords and ensuring that none remain uncovered.
- Does not fail open on schema problems — instead throws at build time.
E.g. it will detect mistakes like{type: "array", "maxLength": 2}
. - Less than 2000 lines of code, non-minified.
- Uses secure code generation approach to prevent data from schema from leaking into the generated code without being JSON-wrapped.
- 0 dependencies
- Very fast
- Supports JSON Schema draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 and a strict subset of the
discriminator
OpenAPI keyword. - Can assign defaults and/or remove additional properties when schema allows to do that safely. Throws at build time if those options are used with schemas that don't allow to do that safely.
Installation
npm install --save @exodus/schemasafe
Usage
Simply pass a schema to compile it:
const { validator } = require('@exodus/schemasafe')
const validate = validator({
type: 'object',
required: ['hello'],
properties: {
hello: {
type: 'string'
}
}
})
console.log('should be valid', validate({ hello: 'world' }))
console.log('should not be valid', validate({}))
Or use the parser API (running in strong mode by default):
const { parser } = require('.')
const parse = parser({
$schema: 'https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema',
type: 'object',
required: ['hello'],
properties: {
hello: {
pattern: '^[a-z]+$',
type: 'string'
}
},
additionalProperties: false
})
console.log(parse('{"hello": "world" }')) // { valid: true, value: { hello: 'world' } }
console.log(parse('{}')) // { valid: false }
Parser API is recommended, because this way you can avoid handling unvalidated JSON objects in non-string form at all in your code.
Options
See options documentation for the full list of supported options.
Custom formats
@exodus/schemasafe
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:
const validate = validator({
type: 'string',
format: 'no-foo'
}, {
formats: {
'no-foo': (str) => !str.includes('foo'),
}
})
console.log(validate('test')) // true
console.log(validate('foo')) // false
const parse = parser({
$schema: 'https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema',
type: 'string',
format: 'only-a'
}, {
formats: {
'only-a': /^a+$/,
}
})
console.log(parse('"aa"')) // { valid: true, value: 'aa' }
console.log(parse('"ab"')) // { valid: false }
External schemas
You can pass in external schemas that you reference using the $ref
attribute as the schemas
option
const ext = {
type: 'string'
}
const schema = {
$ref: 'ext#' // references another schema called ext
}
// pass the external schemas as an option
const validate = validator(schema, { schemas: { ext: ext }})
console.log(validate('hello')) // true
console.log(validate(42)) // false
schemas
can be either an object as shown above, a Map
, or plain array of schemas (given that
those have corresponding $id
set at top level inside schemas themselves).
Enabling errors shows information about the source of the error
When the includeErrors
option is set to true
, @exodus/schemasafe
also outputs:
-
keywordLocation
: a JSON pointer string as an URI fragment indicating which sub-schema failed, e.g.#/properties/item/type
-
instanceLocation
: a JSON pointer string as an URI fragment indicating which property of the object failed validation, e.g.#/item
const schema = {
type: 'object',
required: ['hello'],
properties: {
hello: {
type: 'string'
}
}
}
const validate = validator(schema, { includeErrors: true })
validate({ hello: 100 });
console.log(validate.errors)
// [ { keywordLocation: '#/properties/hello/type', instanceLocation: '#/hello' } ]
Or, similarly, with parser API:
const schema = {
$schema: 'https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema',
type: 'object',
required: ['hello'],
properties: {
hello: {
type: 'string',
pattern: '^[a-z]+$',
}
},
additionalProperties: false,
}
const parse = parser(schema, { includeErrors: true })
console.log(parse('{ "hello": 100 }'));
// { valid: false,
// error: 'JSON validation failed for type at #/hello',
// errors: [ { keywordLocation: '#/properties/hello/type', instanceLocation: '#/hello' } ]
// }
Only the first error is reported by default unless allErrors
option is also set to true
in
addition to includeErrors
.
See Error handling for more information.
Generate Modules
See the doc/samples directory to see how @exodus/schemasafe
compiles
the draft/2019-09
test suite.
To compile a validator function to an IIFE, call validate.toModule()
:
const { validator } = require('@exodus/schemasafe')
const schema = {
type: 'string',
format: 'hex'
}
// This works with custom formats as well.
const formats = {
hex: (value) => /^0x[0-9A-Fa-f]*$/.test(value),
}
const validate = validator(schema, { formats })
console.log(validate.toModule())
/** Prints:
* (function() {
* 'use strict'
* const format0 = (value) => /^0x[0-9A-Fa-f]*$/.test(value);
* return (function validate(data) {
* if (data === undefined) data = null
* if (!(typeof data === "string")) return false
* if (!format0(data)) return false
* return true
* })})();
*/
Performance
@exodus/schemasafe
uses code generation to turn a JSON schema into javascript code that is easily
optimizeable by v8 and extremely fast.
See Performance for information on options that might affect performance both ways.
Contributing
Get a fully set up development environment with:
git clone https://github.com/ExodusMovement/schemasafe
cd schemasafe
git submodule update --init --recursive
yarn
yarn lint
yarn test
Previous work
This is based on a heavily rewritten version of the amazing (but outdated) is-my-json-valid by @mafintosh.
Compared to is-my-json-valid
, @exodus/schemasafe
adds security-first design, many new features,
newer spec versions support, slimmer and more maintainable code, 0 dependencies, self-contained JS
module generation, fixes bugs and adds better test coverage, and drops support for outdated Node.js
versions.
License
MIT