The format
keyword can be a bit of a stumbling block for new users working with JSON Schema.
In a schema such as:
{"type": "string", "format": "date"}
JSON Schema specifications have historically differentiated between the format
keyword and other keywords. In particular, the format
keyword was specified to be informational as much as it may be used for validation.
In other words, for many use cases, schema authors may wish to use values for the format
keyword but have no expectation they be validated alongside other required assertions in a schema.
Of course this does not represent all or even most use cases -- many schema authors do wish to assert that instances conform fully, even to the specific format mentioned.
In drafts prior to draft2019-09
, the decision on whether to automatically enable format
validation was left up to validation implementations such as this one.
This library made the choice to leave it off by default, for two reasons:
- for forward compatibility and implementation complexity reasons -- if
format
validation were on by default, and a future draft of JSON Schema introduced a hard-to-implement format, either the implementation of that format would block releases of this library until it were implemented, or the behavior surroundingformat
would need to be even more complex than simply defaulting to be on. It therefore was safer to start with it off, and defend against the expectation that a given format would always automatically work.- given that a common use of JSON Schema is for portability across languages (and therefore implementations of JSON Schema), so that users be aware of this point itself regarding
format
validation, and therefore remember to check any other implementations they were using to ensure they too were explicitly enabled forformat
validation.
As of draft2019-09
however, the opt-out by default behavior mentioned here is now required for all validators.
Difficult as this may sound for new users, at this point it at least means they should expect the same behavior that has always been implemented here, across any other implementation they encounter.
Draft 2019-09's release notes on format
for upstream details on the behavior of format and how it has changed in
draft2019-09
validating formats
for details on how to enable format validation
jsonschema.FormatChecker
the object which implements format validation
jsonschema supports loading schemas from the filesystem.
The most common mistake when configuring a jsonschema.validators.RefResolver to retrieve schemas from the local filesystem is to give it a base URI which points to a directory, but forget to add a trailing slash.
For example, given a directory /tmp/foo/
with bar/schema.json
within it, you should use something like:
from pathlib import Path
import jsonschema.validators
path = Path("/tmp/foo")
resolver = jsonschema.validators.RefResolver(
base_uri=f"{path.as_uri()}/",
referrer=True,
)
jsonschema.validate(
instance={},
schema={"$ref": "bar/schema.json"},
resolver=resolver,
)
where note:
- the base URI has a trailing slash, even though pathlib.PurePath.as_uri does not add it!
- any relative refs are now given relative to the provided directory
If you forget the trailing slash, you'll find references are resolved a directory too high.
You're likely familiar with this behavior from your browser. If you visit a page at https://example.com/foo
, then links on it like <a href="./bar">
take you to https://example.com/bar
, not https://example.com/foo/bar
. For this reason many sites will redirect https://example.com/foo
to https://example.com/foo/
, i.e. add the trailing slash, so that relative links on the page will keep the last path component.
There are, in summary, 2 ways to do this properly:
- Remember to include a trailing slash, so your base URI is
file:///foo/bar/
rather thanfile:///foo/bar
, as shown above - Use a file within the directory as your base URI rather than the directory itself, i.e.
file://foo/bar/baz.json
, which will of course causebaz.json
to be removed while resolving relative URIs
The basic answer is that the specification does not require that default
actually do anything.
For an inkling as to why it doesn't actually do anything, consider that none of the other keywords modify the instance either. More importantly, having default
modify the instance can produce quite peculiar things. It's perfectly valid (and perhaps even useful) to have a default that is not valid under the schema it lives in! So an instance modified by the default would pass validation the first time, but fail the second!
Still, filling in defaults is a thing that is useful. jsonschema allows you to define your own validator classes and callables <creating>, so you can easily create an jsonschema.protocols.Validator that does do default setting. Here's some code to get you started. (In this code, we add the default properties to each object before the properties are validated, so the default values themselves will need to be valid under the schema.)
from jsonschema import Draft202012Validator, validators
- def extend_with_default(validator_class):
validate_properties = validator_class.VALIDATORS["properties"]
- def set_defaults(validator, properties, instance, schema):
- for property, subschema in properties.items():
- if "default" in subschema:
instance.setdefault(property, subschema["default"])
- for error in validate_properties(
validator, properties, instance, schema,
- ):
yield error
- return validators.extend(
validator_class, {"properties" : set_defaults},
)
DefaultValidatingValidator = extend_with_default(Draft202012Validator)
# Example usage: obj = {} schema = {'properties': {'foo': {'default': 'bar'}}} # Note jsonschema.validate(obj, schema, cls=DefaultValidatingValidator) # will not work because the metaschema contains default keywords. DefaultValidatingValidator(schema).validate(obj) assert obj == {'foo': 'bar'}
See the above-linked document for more info on how this works, but basically, it just extends the properties
keyword on a jsonschema.validators.Draft202012Validator to then go ahead and update all the defaults.
Note
If you're interested in a more interesting solution to a larger class of these types of transformations, keep an eye on Seep, which is an experimental data transformation and extraction library written on top of jsonschema.
Hint
The above code can provide default values for an entire object and all of its properties, but only if your schema provides a default value for the object itself, like so:
- schema = {
"type": "object", "properties": { "outer-object": { "type": "object", "properties" : { "inner-object": { "type": "string", "default": "INNER-DEFAULT" } }, "default": {} # <-- MUST PROVIDE DEFAULT OBJECT } }
}
obj = {} DefaultValidatingValidator(schema).validate(obj) assert obj == {'outer-object': {'inner-object': 'INNER-DEFAULT'}}
...but if you don't provide a default value for your object, then it won't be instantiated at all, much less populated with default properties.
del schema["properties"]["outer-object"]["default"] obj2 = {} DefaultValidatingValidator(schema).validate(obj2) assert obj2 == {} # whoops
jsonschema
tries to follow the Semantic Versioning specification.
This means broadly that no backwards-incompatible changes should be made in minor releases (and certainly not in dot releases).
The full picture requires defining what constitutes a backwards-incompatible change.
The following are simple examples of things considered public API, and therefore should not be changed without bumping a major version number:
- module names and contents, when not marked private by Python convention (a single leading underscore)
- function and object signature (parameter order and name)
The following are not considered public API and may change without notice:
- the exact wording and contents of error messages; typical reasons to rely on this seem to involve downstream tests in packages using jsonschema. These use cases are encouraged to use the extensive introspection provided in jsonschema.exceptions.ValidationErrors instead to make meaningful assertions about what failed rather than relying on how what failed is explained to a human.
- the order in which validation errors are returned or raised
- the contents of the
jsonschema.tests
package- the contents of the
jsonschema.benchmarks
package- the specific non-zero error codes presented by the command line interface
- the exact representation of errors presented by the command line interface, other than that errors represented by the plain outputter will be reported one per line
- anything marked private
With the exception of the last two of those, flippant changes are avoided, but changes can and will be made if there is improvement to be had. Feel free to open an issue ticket if there is a specific issue or question worth raising.