Title: | Validate 'JSON' Schema |
---|---|
Description: | Uses the node library 'is-my-json-valid' or 'ajv' to validate 'JSON' against a 'JSON' schema. Drafts 04, 06 and 07 of 'JSON' schema are supported. |
Authors: | Rich FitzJohn [aut, cre], Rob Ashton [aut], Alex Hill [ctb], Alicia Schep [ctb], Ian Lyttle [ctb], Kara Woo [ctb], Mathias Buus [aut, cph] (Author of bundled imjv library), Evgeny Poberezkin [aut, cph] (Author of bundled Ajv library) |
Maintainer: | Rich FitzJohn <[email protected]> |
License: | MIT + file LICENSE |
Version: | 1.4.2 |
Built: | 2024-11-20 04:20:01 UTC |
Source: | https://github.com/ropensci/jsonvalidate |
Interact with JSON schemas, using them to validate json strings or serialise objects to JSON safely.
This interface supercedes json_schema and changes some default arguments. While the old interface is not going away any time soon, users are encouraged to switch to this interface, which is what we will develop in the future.
schema
The parsed schema, cannot be rebound
engine
The name of the schema validation engine
new()
Create a new json_schema
object.
json_schema$new(schema, engine = "ajv", reference = NULL, strict = FALSE)
schema
Contents of the json schema, or a filename containing a schema.
engine
Specify the validation engine to use. Options are
"ajv" (the default; "Another JSON Schema Validator") or "imjv"
("is-my-json-valid", the default everywhere in versions prior
to 1.4.0, and the default for json_validator.
Use of ajv
is strongly recommended for all new code.
reference
Reference within schema to use for validating
against a sub-schema instead of the full schema passed in.
For example if the schema has a 'definitions' list including a
definition for a 'Hello' object, one could pass
"#/definitions/Hello" and the validator would check that the json
is a valid "Hello" object. Only available if engine = "ajv"
.
strict
Set whether the schema should be parsed strictly or not.
If in strict mode schemas will error to "prevent any unexpected
behaviours or silently ignored mistakes in user schema". For example
it will error if encounters unknown formats or unknown keywords. See
https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html for details. Only available in
engine = "ajv"
and silently ignored for "imjv".
Validate a json string against a schema.
validate()
json_schema$validate( json, verbose = FALSE, greedy = FALSE, error = FALSE, query = NULL )
json
Contents of a json object, or a filename containing one.
verbose
Be verbose? If TRUE
, then an attribute
"errors" will list validation failures as a data.frame
greedy
Continue after the first error?
error
Throw an error on parse failure? If TRUE
,
then the function returns NULL
on success (i.e., call
only for the side-effect of an error on failure, like
stopifnot
).
query
A string indicating a component of the data to
validate the schema against. Eventually this may support full
jsonpath syntax, but
for now this must be the name of an element within json
. See
the examples for more details.
Serialise an R object to JSON with unboxing guided by the schema.
See json_serialise for details on the problem and
the algorithm.
serialise()
json_schema$serialise(object)
object
An R object to serialise
# This is the schema from ?json_validator schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # We're going to use a validator object below v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, "ajv") # And this is some data that we might generate in R that we want to # serialise using that schema x <- list(id = 1, name = "apple", price = 0.50, tags = "fruit") # If we serialise to json, then 'id', 'name' and "price' end up a # length 1-arrays jsonlite::toJSON(x) # ...and that fails validation v(jsonlite::toJSON(x)) # If we auto-unbox then 'fruit' ends up as a string and not an array, # also failing validation: jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE) v(jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE)) # Using json_serialise we can guide the serialisation process using # the schema: jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema) # ...and this way we do pass validation: v(jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema)) # It is typically much more efficient to construct a json_schema # object first and do both operations with it: obj <- jsonvalidate::json_schema$new(schema) json <- obj$serialise(x) obj$validate(json)
# This is the schema from ?json_validator schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # We're going to use a validator object below v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, "ajv") # And this is some data that we might generate in R that we want to # serialise using that schema x <- list(id = 1, name = "apple", price = 0.50, tags = "fruit") # If we serialise to json, then 'id', 'name' and "price' end up a # length 1-arrays jsonlite::toJSON(x) # ...and that fails validation v(jsonlite::toJSON(x)) # If we auto-unbox then 'fruit' ends up as a string and not an array, # also failing validation: jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE) v(jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE)) # Using json_serialise we can guide the serialisation process using # the schema: jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema) # ...and this way we do pass validation: v(jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema)) # It is typically much more efficient to construct a json_schema # object first and do both operations with it: obj <- jsonvalidate::json_schema$new(schema) json <- obj$serialise(x) obj$validate(json)
Safe serialisation of json with unboxing guided by the schema.
json_serialise( object, schema, engine = "ajv", reference = NULL, strict = FALSE )
json_serialise( object, schema, engine = "ajv", reference = NULL, strict = FALSE )
object |
An object to be serialised |
schema |
A schema (string or path to a string, suitable to be passed through to json_validator or a validator object itself. |
engine |
The engine to use. Only ajv is supported, and trying
to use |
reference |
Reference within schema to use for validating against a
sub-schema instead of the full schema passed in. For example
if the schema has a 'definitions' list including a definition for a
'Hello' object, one could pass "#/definitions/Hello" and the validator
would check that the json is a valid "Hello" object. Only available if
|
strict |
Set whether the schema should be parsed strictly or not.
If in strict mode schemas will error to "prevent any unexpected
behaviours or silently ignored mistakes in user schema". For example
it will error if encounters unknown formats or unknown keywords. See
https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html for details. Only available in
|
When using jsonlite::toJSON we are forced to deal with the differences between R's types and those available in JSON. In particular:
R has no scalar types so it is not clear if 1
should be
serialised as a number or a vector of length 1; jsonlite
provides support for "automatically unboxing" such values
(assuming that length-1 vectors are scalars) or never unboxing
them unless asked to using jsonlite::unbox
JSON has no date/time values and there are many possible string representations.
JSON has no data.frame or matrix type and there are several ways of representing these in JSON, all equally valid (e.g., row-wise, column-wise or as an array of objects).
The handling of NULL
and missing values (NA
, NaN
) are different
We need to chose the number of digits to write numbers out at, balancing precision and storage.
These issues are somewhat lessened when we have a schema because we know what our target type looks like. This function attempts to use the schema to guide serialsation of json safely. Currently it only supports detecting the appropriate treatment of length-1 vectors, but we will expand functionality over time.
For a user, this function provides an argument-free replacement
for jsonlite::toJSON
, accepting an R object and returning a
string with the JSON representation of the object. Internally the
algorithm is:
serialise the object with jsonlite::toJSON, with
auto_unbox = FALSE
so that length-1 vectors are serialised as a
length-1 arrays.
operating entirely within JavaScript, deserialise the object
with JSON.parse
, traverse the object and its schema
simultaneously looking for length-1 arrays where the schema
says there should be scalar value and unboxing these, and
re-serialise with JSON.stringify
There are several limitations to our current approach, and not all
unboxable values will be found - at the moment we know that
schemas contained within a oneOf
block (or similar) will not be
recursed into.
A string, representing object
in JSON format. As for
jsonlite::toJSON
we set the class attribute to be json
to
mark it as serialised json.
Warning:
Direct use of this function will be slow! If you are going to
serialise more than one or two objects with a single schema, you
should use the serialise
method of a
json_schema object which you create once and pass around.
# This is the schema from ?json_validator schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # We're going to use a validator object below v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, "ajv") # And this is some data that we might generate in R that we want to # serialise using that schema x <- list(id = 1, name = "apple", price = 0.50, tags = "fruit") # If we serialise to json, then 'id', 'name' and "price' end up a # length 1-arrays jsonlite::toJSON(x) # ...and that fails validation v(jsonlite::toJSON(x)) # If we auto-unbox then 'fruit' ends up as a string and not an array, # also failing validation: jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE) v(jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE)) # Using json_serialise we can guide the serialisation process using # the schema: jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema) # ...and this way we do pass validation: v(jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema)) # It is typically much more efficient to construct a json_schema # object first and do both operations with it: obj <- jsonvalidate::json_schema$new(schema) json <- obj$serialise(x) obj$validate(json)
# This is the schema from ?json_validator schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # We're going to use a validator object below v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, "ajv") # And this is some data that we might generate in R that we want to # serialise using that schema x <- list(id = 1, name = "apple", price = 0.50, tags = "fruit") # If we serialise to json, then 'id', 'name' and "price' end up a # length 1-arrays jsonlite::toJSON(x) # ...and that fails validation v(jsonlite::toJSON(x)) # If we auto-unbox then 'fruit' ends up as a string and not an array, # also failing validation: jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE) v(jsonlite::toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE)) # Using json_serialise we can guide the serialisation process using # the schema: jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema) # ...and this way we do pass validation: v(jsonvalidate::json_serialise(x, schema)) # It is typically much more efficient to construct a json_schema # object first and do both operations with it: obj <- jsonvalidate::json_schema$new(schema) json <- obj$serialise(x) obj$validate(json)
Validate a single json against a schema. This is a convenience
wrapper around json_validator(schema)(json)
or
json_schema$new(schema, engine = "ajv")$validate(json)
. See
json_validator()
for further details.
json_validate( json, schema, verbose = FALSE, greedy = FALSE, error = FALSE, engine = "imjv", reference = NULL, query = NULL, strict = FALSE )
json_validate( json, schema, verbose = FALSE, greedy = FALSE, error = FALSE, engine = "imjv", reference = NULL, query = NULL, strict = FALSE )
json |
Contents of a json object, or a filename containing one. |
schema |
Contents of the json schema, or a filename containing a schema. |
verbose |
Be verbose? If |
greedy |
Continue after the first error? |
error |
Throw an error on parse failure? If |
engine |
Specify the validation engine to use. Options are "imjv" (the default; which uses "is-my-json-valid") and "ajv" (Another JSON Schema Validator). The latter supports more recent json schema features. |
reference |
Reference within schema to use for validating against a
sub-schema instead of the full schema passed in. For example
if the schema has a 'definitions' list including a definition for a
'Hello' object, one could pass "#/definitions/Hello" and the validator
would check that the json is a valid "Hello" object. Only available if
|
query |
A string indicating a component of the data to
validate the schema against. Eventually this may support full
jsonpath syntax, but
for now this must be the name of an element within |
strict |
Set whether the schema should be parsed strictly or not.
If in strict mode schemas will error to "prevent any unexpected
behaviours or silently ignored mistakes in user schema". For example
it will error if encounters unknown formats or unknown keywords. See
https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html for details. Only available in
|
# A simple schema example: schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # Test if some (invalid) json conforms to the schema jsonvalidate::json_validate("{}", schema, verbose = TRUE) # Test if some (valid) json conforms to the schema json <- '{ "id": 1, "name": "A green door", "price": 12.50, "tags": ["home", "green"] }' jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema) # Test a fraction of a data against a reference into the schema: jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema, query = "tags", reference = "#/properties/tags", engine = "ajv", verbose = TRUE)
# A simple schema example: schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # Test if some (invalid) json conforms to the schema jsonvalidate::json_validate("{}", schema, verbose = TRUE) # Test if some (valid) json conforms to the schema json <- '{ "id": 1, "name": "A green door", "price": 12.50, "tags": ["home", "green"] }' jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema) # Test a fraction of a data against a reference into the schema: jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema, query = "tags", reference = "#/properties/tags", engine = "ajv", verbose = TRUE)
Create a validator that can validate multiple json files.
json_validator(schema, engine = "imjv", reference = NULL, strict = FALSE)
json_validator(schema, engine = "imjv", reference = NULL, strict = FALSE)
schema |
Contents of the json schema, or a filename containing a schema. |
engine |
Specify the validation engine to use. Options are "imjv" (the default; which uses "is-my-json-valid") and "ajv" (Another JSON Schema Validator). The latter supports more recent json schema features. |
reference |
Reference within schema to use for validating against a
sub-schema instead of the full schema passed in. For example
if the schema has a 'definitions' list including a definition for a
'Hello' object, one could pass "#/definitions/Hello" and the validator
would check that the json is a valid "Hello" object. Only available if
|
strict |
Set whether the schema should be parsed strictly or not.
If in strict mode schemas will error to "prevent any unexpected
behaviours or silently ignored mistakes in user schema". For example
it will error if encounters unknown formats or unknown keywords. See
https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html for details. Only available in
|
A function that can be used to validate a
schema. Additionally, the function has two attributes assigned:
v8
which is the javascript context (used internally) and
engine
, which contains the name of the engine used.
We support two different json validation engines, imjv
("is-my-json-valid") and ajv
("Another JSON
Validator"). imjv
was the original validator included in
the package and remains the default for reasons of backward
compatibility. However, users are encouraged to migrate to
ajv
as with it we support many more features, including
nested schemas that span multiple files, meta schema versions
later than draft-04, validating using a subschema, and
validating a subset of an input data object.
If your schema uses these features we will print a message to
screen indicating that you should update when running
interactively. We do not use a warning here as this will be
disruptive to users. You can disable the message by setting the
option jsonvalidate.no_note_imjv
to TRUE
. Consider using
withr::with_options()
(or simply suppressMessages()
) to
scope this option if you want to quieten it within code you do
not control. Alternatively, setting the option
jsonvalidate.no_note_imjv
to FALSE
will print the message
even noninteractively.
Updating the engine should be simply a case of adding engine = "ajv"
to your json_validator
or json_validate
calls, but you may see some issues when doing so.
Your json now fails validation: We've seen this where schemas spanned several files and are silently ignored. By including these, your data may now fail validation and you will need to either fix the data or the schema.
Your code depended on the exact payload returned by imjv
: If
you are inspecting the error result and checking numbers of
errors, or even the columns used to describe the errors, you
will likely need to update your code to accommodate the slightly
different format of ajv
Your schema is simply invalid: If you reference an invalid metaschema for example, jsonvalidate will fail
Multiple files are supported. You can have a schema that references
a file child.json
using {"$ref": "child.json"}
—in this case if
child.json
includes an id
or $id
element it will be silently
dropped and the filename used to reference the schema will be used
as the schema id.
The support is currently quite limited - it will not (yet) read
sub-child schemas relative to child schema $id
url, and
does not support reading from URLs (only local files are
supported).
# A simple schema example: schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # Create a validator function v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema) # Test if some (invalid) json conforms to the schema v("{}", verbose = TRUE) # Test if some (valid) json conforms to the schema v('{ "id": 1, "name": "A green door", "price": 12.50, "tags": ["home", "green"] }') # Using features from draft-06 or draft-07 requires the ajv engine: schema <- "{ '$schema': 'http://json-schema.org/draft-06/schema#', 'type': 'object', 'properties': { 'a': { 'const': 'foo' } } }" # Create the validator v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, engine = "ajv") # This confirms to the schema v('{"a": "foo"}') # But this does not v('{"a": "bar"}')
# A simple schema example: schema <- '{ "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "Product", "description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog", "type": "object", "properties": { "id": { "description": "The unique identifier for a product", "type": "integer" }, "name": { "description": "Name of the product", "type": "string" }, "price": { "type": "number", "minimum": 0, "exclusiveMinimum": true }, "tags": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "minItems": 1, "uniqueItems": true } }, "required": ["id", "name", "price"] }' # Create a validator function v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema) # Test if some (invalid) json conforms to the schema v("{}", verbose = TRUE) # Test if some (valid) json conforms to the schema v('{ "id": 1, "name": "A green door", "price": 12.50, "tags": ["home", "green"] }') # Using features from draft-06 or draft-07 requires the ajv engine: schema <- "{ '$schema': 'http://json-schema.org/draft-06/schema#', 'type': 'object', 'properties': { 'a': { 'const': 'foo' } } }" # Create the validator v <- jsonvalidate::json_validator(schema, engine = "ajv") # This confirms to the schema v('{"a": "foo"}') # But this does not v('{"a": "bar"}')