Validate
Validate incoming requests in an easy to reason-about way using Elixir.
🚨 Validate is an active WIP. Building mostly for fun/to satisfy my own needs on a project 🚨
Coming from languages like PHP and Node.js it can be difficult to reason about validating your requests using Ecto. This provides a simple data validation layer that aims to be extensible to allow for custom validation logic provided by the user.
Todo
- Give option to provide atoms in rule lists for simple validators to get rid of needing to import each one
- Test usage with mixed keys (
:atomsand"strings") - Add more out-of-the-box validators
- Provide documentation on custom validators
- i18n
- Support more input params than just maps
Installation
The package can be installed
by adding validate to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:
def deps do
[
{:validate, "~> 0.1.1"}
]
end
Usage
defmodule MyApp.UserController do
import Validate
import Validate.Required
def create(conn, params) do
case validate(params, create_rules) do
{:ok, data} ->
# ... create user
# `data` is filtered to only the keys provided in `rules`
{:error, errors} ->
# errors is a map that matches the rules provided
# in this case: %{ "username" => "required" }
json(conn, errors)
end
end
defp create_rules, do: %{
"username": [&required/1],
}
end
Validators
Required
Validates input is not:
undefinednull""[]{}
import Validate
import Validate.Required
data = %{ "username" => "" }
rules = %{
"username" => [
&required/1
]
}
validate(data, rules)
# {:error, %{ "username" => "required" }}
Optional
Does not continue with the rest of the validators if the value is not present or nil
undefinednull
import Validate
import Validate.Optional
import Validate.String
data = %{}
rules = %{
"username" => [
&optional/1,
&string/1,
]
}
# value not present, so it's ok
validate(data, rules)
# {:ok, %{}}
import Validate
import Validate.Optional
import Validate.String
data = %{ "username" => 123 }
rules = %{
"username" => [
&optional/1,
&string/1,
]
}
# value present, so it continues on to next validators
validate(data, rules)
# {:error, %{"username" => "not a string"}}
String
Validates input is a string
import Validate
import Validate.String
data = %{
"username" => 123
}
rules = %{
"username" => [
&string/1,
]
}
validate(data, rules)
# {:error, %{"username" => "not a string"}}
Number
Validates input is a number (float or int)
import Validate
import Validate.Number
data = %{
"balance" => "very low"
}
rules = %{
"balance" => [
&number/1,
]
}
validate(data, rules)
# {:error, %{"balance" => "not a number"}}
List
Validates input is a list (array)
import Validate
import Validate.List
data = %{
"cities" => "saskatoon"
}
rules = %{
"cities" => [
&list/1,
]
}
validate(data, rules)
# {:error, %{"balance" => "not a list"}}