Spectra

A data validation library for Erlang inspired by Pydantic. Spectra provides type-safe data serialization and deserialization for Erlang records and types. Currently the focus is on JSON.

Installation

Add spectra to your rebar.config dependencies:

{deps, [
{spectra, "~> 0.2.0"}
]}.

Data (de)serialization

Here's how to use spectra for JSON serialization and deserialization:

-module(demo).
-export([json_to_contacts/1, contacts_to_json/1, json_schema/0, binary_to_quality/1]).
-record(email_contact, {address, verified, domain}).
-record(phone_contact, {number, verified, sms_capable}).
-type quality() :: 1..5.
-type verified() ::
#{source := one_time_code | gut_feeling,
quality => quality(),
binary() => binary()} | undefined.
-type email_contact() ::
#email_contact{address :: nonempty_binary(),
verified :: verified(),
domain :: nonempty_binary()}.
-type phone_contact() ::
#phone_contact{number :: binary(),
verified :: verified(),
sms_capable :: boolean()}.
-type contacts() :: [email_contact() | phone_contact()].
%% Some helper functions
-spec json_to_contacts(binary()) -> {ok, contacts()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.
json_to_contacts(Json) ->
spectra:decode(json, ?MODULE, contacts, Json).
-spec contacts_to_json(contacts()) -> {ok, binary()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.
contacts_to_json(Contacts) ->
case spectra:encode(json, ?MODULE, contacts, Contacts) of
{ok, JsonIoList} -> {ok, iolist_to_binary(JsonIoList)};
{error, _} = Error -> Error
end.
-spec binary_to_quality(binary()) -> {ok, quality()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.
binary_to_quality(Bin) ->
spectra:decode(binary_string, ?MODULE, quality, Bin).
json_schema() ->
{ok, IoSchema} = spectra:schema(json_schema, ?MODULE, contacts),
iolist_to_binary(IoSchema).

Using the demo module in the shell

%% Compile the demo module (note: You need debug info)
c("demo.erl", [debug_info]).
%% Load the record defs into the shell.
rr(demo).
%% Create some data
Contacts = [
#email_contact{
address = <<"john.doe@example.com">>,
verified = #{source => one_time_code, quality => 2, <<"code">> => <<"123456">>},
domain = <<"example.com">>
},
#phone_contact{
number = <<"+1-555-123-4567">>,
verified = #{source => gut_feeling, <<"confidence">> => <<"high">>},
sms_capable = true
},
#email_contact{
address = <<"alice@company.org">>,
domain = <<"company.org">>
}
].
%% Convert to JSON
{ok, Json} = demo:contacts_to_json(Contacts).
%% Convert back from JSON
demo:json_to_contacts(Json).
%% If you get quality as a query parameter, you can do:
demo:binary_to_quality(<<"4">>).
%% Generate the json schema
demo:json_schema().

Data Serialization API

These are the main functions for JSON serialization and deserialization:

spectra:encode(Format, Module, Type, Value) ->
{ok, iolist()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.
spectra:decode(Format, Module, Type, JsonBinary) ->
{ok, Value} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.

Where:

Schema API

spectra:schema(Format, Module, Type) ->
{ok, Schema :: map()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.

Where:

And the rest of the arguments are the same as for the data serialization API.

OpenAPI Spec

Spectra can generate complete OpenAPI 3.0 specifications for your REST APIs. This provides interactive documentation, client generation, and API testing tools.

OpenAPI Builder API

The API for building endpoints is very experimental and will probably change a lot. It is meant to be used by developers of web servers / web frameworks. See elli_openapi for an example of how to use it in a web server.

%% Create a base endpoint
spectra_openapi:endpoint(Method, Path) ->
endpoint_spec().
%% Add responses
spectra_openapi:with_response(Endpoint, StatusCode, Description, Module, Schema) ->
endpoint_spec().
%% Add request body
spectra_openapi:with_request_body(Endpoint, Module, Schema) ->
endpoint_spec().
%% Add parameters (path, query, header, cookie)
spectra_openapi:with_parameter(Endpoint, Module, ParameterSpec) ->
endpoint_spec().
%% Generate complete OpenAPI spec
spectra_openapi:endpoints_to_openapi(Metadata, Endpoints) ->
{ok, json:encode_value()} | {error, [spectra:error()]}.

Requirements

Error Handling

Spectra uses two different error handling strategies depending on the type of error:

Returned Errors ({error, [spectra:error()]})

Data validation errors are returned as {error, [#sp_error{}]} tuples. These occur when input data doesn't match the expected type during encoding/decoding.

Example:

BadSourceJson = <<"[{\"number\":\"+1-555-123-4567\",\"verified\":{\"source\":\"a_bad_source\",\"confidence\":\"high\"},\"sms_capable\":true}]">>.
{error, [#sp_error{...}]} = json_to_contacts(BadSourceJson).

#error{} contains:

Raised Exceptions

Configuration and structural errors raise exceptions. These occur when:

These errors indicate a problem with your application's configuration or type definitions, not with the data being processed.

Special Handling

undefined and nil Values

The atoms undefined and nil have special handling in JSON serialization to represent missing or null values.

Encoding (Erlang → JSON):

Decoding (JSON → Erlang):

Note: If a union type includes both undefined and nil (e.g., integer() | undefined | nil), the selection of which missing value to use depends on the order they appear in the type definition. The last one encountered will be used. For predictable behavior, include only one missing value literal in your type definitions. The nil atom is primarily for Elixir interoperability.

term() | any()

When using types with term, spectra_json will not reject any data, which means it can return data that json.erl cannot convert to JSON.

Char

Char is currently handled as integer, which is probably not what you want. Try to not use the char type for now. This is documented in test/char_test.erl.

Unsupported Types

Each format supports a subset of Erlang types. For JSON serialization and schema, the following are not supported:

It would be interesting to add support for key value lists, but as it isn't a native type in erlang, I haven't gotten around to it yet.

Configuration

Application Environment Variables

You can configure spectra behavior using application environment variables:

use_module_types_cache

check_unicode

Example configuration in sys.config:

{spectra, [
{use_module_types_cache, true},
{check_unicode, false}
]}.

Development Status

This library is under active development. APIs and error messages will probably change.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit issues and pull requests.