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Changes from upstream and other notes:

  • Fixes #81
  • I have looked at *76 / #80. My opinion, after reading the code, is that the global schema registry (which is the source of these concurrency issues) only gets involved when you have "$ref" elements. Since we only run this against schemas we write / generate, and I can guarantee that we don't generate "$ref" elements, this shouldn't be an issue for us, and we should be able to use this library across goroutines without additional synchronization
  • #91 may still be an issue, but I don't understand from reading it exactly what the problem is
  • Fixes #53 by adding a ValidateReader method that takes an io.Reader

jsonschema

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golang implementation of the JSON Schema Specification, which lets you write JSON that validates some other json. Rad.

Package Features

  • Encode schemas back to JSON
  • Supply Your own Custom Validators
  • Uses Standard Go idioms
  • Fastest Go implementation of JSON Schema validators (draft2019_9 only, (old — draft 7) benchmarks are here — thanks @TheWildBlue!)

Getting Involved

We would love involvement from more people! If you notice any errors or would like to submit changes, please see our Contributing Guidelines.

Developing

We’ve set up a separate document for developer guidelines!

Basic Usage

Here’s a quick example pulled from the godoc:

package main

import (
	"context"
	"encoding/json"
	"fmt"

	"github.com/qri-io/jsonschema"
)

func main() {
	ctx := context.Background()
	var schemaData = []byte(`{
    "$id": "https://qri.io/schema/",
    "$comment" : "sample comment",
    "title": "Person",
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
        "firstName": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "lastName": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "age": {
            "description": "Age in years",
            "type": "integer",
            "minimum": 0
        },
        "friends": {
          "type" : "array",
          "items" : { "title" : "REFERENCE", "$ref" : "#" }
        }
    },
    "required": ["firstName", "lastName"]
  }`)

	rs := &jsonschema.Schema{}
	if err := json.Unmarshal(schemaData, rs); err != nil {
		panic("unmarshal schema: " + err.Error())
	}

	var valid = []byte(`{
    "firstName" : "George",
    "lastName" : "Michael"
    }`)
	errs, err := rs.ValidateBytes(ctx, valid)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	if len(errs) > 0 {
		fmt.Println(errs[0].Error())
	}

	var invalidPerson = []byte(`{
    "firstName" : "Prince"
    }`)

	errs, err = rs.ValidateBytes(ctx, invalidPerson)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	if len(errs) > 0 {
		fmt.Println(errs[0].Error())
	}

	var invalidFriend = []byte(`{
    "firstName" : "Jay",
    "lastName" : "Z",
    "friends" : [{
      "firstName" : "Nas"
      }]
    }`)
	errs, err = rs.ValidateBytes(ctx, invalidFriend)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	if len(errs) > 0 {
		fmt.Println(errs[0].Error())
	}
}

// Output:
// /: {"firstName":"Prince... "lastName" value is required
// /friends/0: {"firstName":"Nas"} "lastName" value is required

Custom Keywords

The godoc gives an example of how to supply your own validators to extend the standard keywords supported by the spec.

It involves three steps that should happen before allocating any Schema instances that use the validator:

  1. create a custom type that implements the Keyword interface
  2. Load the appropriate draft keyword set (see draft2019_09_keywords.go)
  3. call RegisterKeyword with the keyword you’d like to detect in JSON, and a KeyMaker function.
package main

import (
    "context"
    "encoding/json"
    "fmt"

    jptr "github.com/qri-io/jsonpointer"
    "github.com/qri-io/jsonschema"
)

// your custom validator
type IsFoo bool

// newIsFoo is a jsonschama.KeyMaker
func newIsFoo() jsonschema.Keyword {
    return new(IsFoo)
}

// Validate implements jsonschema.Keyword
func (f *IsFoo) Validate(propPath string, data interface{}, errs *[]jsonschema.KeyError) {}

// Register implements jsonschema.Keyword
func (f *IsFoo) Register(uri string, registry *jsonschema.SchemaRegistry) {}

// Resolve implements jsonschema.Keyword
func (f *IsFoo) Resolve(pointer jptr.Pointer, uri string) *jsonschema.Schema {
    return nil
}

// ValidateKeyword implements jsonschema.Keyword
func (f *IsFoo) ValidateKeyword(ctx context.Context, currentState *jsonschema.ValidationState, data interface{}) {
    if str, ok := data.(string); ok {
        if str != "foo" {
            currentState.AddError(data, fmt.Sprintf("should be foo. plz make '%s' == foo. plz", str))
        }
    }
}

func main() {
    // register a custom validator by supplying a function
    // that creates new instances of your Validator.
    jsonschema.RegisterKeyword("foo", newIsFoo)

    // If you register a custom validator, you'll need to manually register
    // any other JSON Schema validators you need.
    jsonschema.LoadDraft2019_09()

    schBytes := []byte(`{ "foo": true }`)

    rs := new(jsonschema.Schema)
    if err := json.Unmarshal(schBytes, rs); err != nil {
        // Real programs handle errors.
        panic(err)
    }

    errs, err := rs.ValidateBytes(context.Background(), []byte(`"bar"`))
    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    fmt.Println(errs[0].Error())
    // Output: /: "bar" should be foo. plz make 'bar' == foo. plz
}

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golang implementation of https://json-schema.org drafts 7 & 2019-09

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