validator

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Published: Apr 5, 2017 License: MIT Imports: 14 Imported by: 0

README

Package validator

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Package validator implements value validations for structs and individual fields based on tags.

It has the following unique features:

  • Cross Field and Cross Struct validations by using validation tags or custom validators.
  • Slice, Array and Map diving, which allows any or all levels of a multidimensional field to be validated.
  • Handles type interface by determining it's underlying type prior to validation.
  • Handles custom field types such as sql driver Valuer see Valuer
  • Alias validation tags, which allows for mapping of several validations to a single tag for easier defining of validations on structs
  • Extraction of custom defined Field Name e.g. can specify to extract the JSON name while validating and have it available in the resulting FieldError
  • Customizable i18n aware error messages.
  • Default validator for the gin web framework; upgrading from v8 to v9 in gin see here

Installation

Use go get.

go get gopkg.in/go-playground/validator.v9

Then import the validator package into your own code.

import "gopkg.in/go-playground/validator.v9"

Error Return Value

Validation functions return type error

They return type error to avoid the issue discussed in the following, where err is always != nil:

Validator only InvalidValidationError for bad validation input, nil or ValidationErrors as type error; so, in your code all you need to do is check if the error returned is not nil, and if it's not check if error is InvalidValidationError ( if necessary, most of the time it isn't ) type cast it to type ValidationErrors like so:

err := validate.Struct(mystruct)
validationErrors := err.(validator.ValidationErrors)

Usage and documentation

Please see http://godoc.org/gopkg.in/go-playground/validator.v9 for detailed usage docs.

Examples:

Benchmarks

Run on i5-7600 16 GB DDR4-2400 using Go version go1.8 linux/amd64
BenchmarkFieldSuccess-4                                       	20000000	        74.3 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldSuccessParallel-4                               	50000000	        31.5 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldFailure-4                                       	 3000000	       556 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldFailureParallel-4                               	20000000	        88.7 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldDiveSuccess-4                                   	 2000000	       630 ns/op	     201 B/op	      11 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldDiveSuccessParallel-4                           	10000000	       173 ns/op	     201 B/op	      11 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldDiveFailure-4                                   	 1000000	      1350 ns/op	     412 B/op	      16 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldDiveFailureParallel-4                           	 5000000	       250 ns/op	     412 B/op	      16 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldCustomTypeSuccess-4                             	10000000	       202 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldCustomTypeSuccessParallel-4                     	20000000	        63.5 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldCustomTypeFailure-4                             	 5000000	       568 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldCustomTypeFailureParallel-4                     	20000000	        87.5 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldOrTagSuccess-4                                  	 2000000	       703 ns/op	      16 B/op	       1 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldOrTagSuccessParallel-4                          	 3000000	       447 ns/op	      16 B/op	       1 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldOrTagFailure-4                                  	 3000000	       604 ns/op	     224 B/op	       5 allocs/op
BenchmarkFieldOrTagFailureParallel-4                          	 5000000	       353 ns/op	     224 B/op	       5 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructLevelValidationSuccess-4                       	10000000	       190 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructLevelValidationSuccessParallel-4               	30000000	        59.9 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructLevelValidationFailure-4                       	 2000000	       705 ns/op	     304 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructLevelValidationFailureParallel-4               	10000000	       146 ns/op	     304 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCustomTypeSuccess-4                      	 5000000	       361 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCustomTypeSuccessParallel-4              	20000000	       101 ns/op	      32 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCustomTypeFailure-4                      	 1000000	      1210 ns/op	     424 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCustomTypeFailureParallel-4              	10000000	       196 ns/op	     440 B/op	      10 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructFilteredSuccess-4                              	 2000000	       757 ns/op	     288 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructFilteredSuccessParallel-4                      	10000000	       167 ns/op	     288 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructFilteredFailure-4                              	 3000000	       619 ns/op	     256 B/op	       7 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructFilteredFailureParallel-4                      	10000000	       134 ns/op	     256 B/op	       7 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructPartialSuccess-4                               	 2000000	       687 ns/op	     256 B/op	       6 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructPartialSuccessParallel-4                       	10000000	       159 ns/op	     256 B/op	       6 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructPartialFailure-4                               	 1000000	      1281 ns/op	     480 B/op	      11 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructPartialFailureParallel-4                       	10000000	       218 ns/op	     480 B/op	      11 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructExceptSuccess-4                                	 1000000	      1041 ns/op	     496 B/op	      12 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructExceptSuccessParallel-4                        	10000000	       140 ns/op	     240 B/op	       5 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructExceptFailure-4                                	 1000000	      1014 ns/op	     464 B/op	      10 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructExceptFailureParallel-4                        	10000000	       201 ns/op	     464 B/op	      10 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossFieldSuccess-4                      	 5000000	       364 ns/op	      72 B/op	       3 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossFieldSuccessParallel-4              	20000000	       103 ns/op	      72 B/op	       3 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossFieldFailure-4                      	 2000000	       789 ns/op	     304 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossFieldFailureParallel-4              	10000000	       174 ns/op	     304 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossStructCrossFieldSuccess-4           	 3000000	       522 ns/op	      80 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossStructCrossFieldSuccessParallel-4   	10000000	       146 ns/op	      80 B/op	       4 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossStructCrossFieldFailure-4           	 2000000	       879 ns/op	     320 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleCrossStructCrossFieldFailureParallel-4   	10000000	       225 ns/op	     320 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleSuccess-4                                	10000000	       223 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleSuccessParallel-4                        	20000000	        63.3 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleFailure-4                                	 2000000	      1097 ns/op	     424 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructSimpleFailureParallel-4                        	10000000	       182 ns/op	     424 B/op	       9 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructComplexSuccess-4                               	 1000000	      1362 ns/op	     128 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructComplexSuccessParallel-4                       	 5000000	       359 ns/op	     128 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructComplexFailure-4                               	  300000	      6446 ns/op	    3040 B/op	      53 allocs/op
BenchmarkStructComplexFailureParallel-4                       	 1000000	      1203 ns/op	    3040 B/op	      53 allocs/op

Complementary Software

Here is a list of software that complements using this library either pre or post validation.

  • form - Decodes url.Values into Go value(s) and Encodes Go value(s) into url.Values. Dual Array and Full map support.
  • Conform - Trims, sanitizes & scrubs data based on struct tags.

How to Contribute

Make a pull request...

License

Distributed under MIT License, please see license file within the code for more details.

Documentation

Overview

Package validator implements value validations for structs and individual fields based on tags.

It can also handle Cross-Field and Cross-Struct validation for nested structs and has the ability to dive into arrays and maps of any type.

see more examples https://github.com/go-playground/validator/tree/v9/examples

Validation Functions Return Type error

Doing things this way is actually the way the standard library does, see the file.Open method here:

https://golang.org/pkg/os/#Open.

The authors return type "error" to avoid the issue discussed in the following, where err is always != nil:

http://stackoverflow.com/a/29138676/3158232
https://github.com/go-playground/validator/issues/134

Validator only InvalidValidationError for bad validation input, nil or ValidationErrors as type error; so, in your code all you need to do is check if the error returned is not nil, and if it's not check if error is InvalidValidationError ( if necessary, most of the time it isn't ) type cast it to type ValidationErrors like so err.(validator.ValidationErrors).

Custom Validation Functions

Custom Validation functions can be added. Example:

// Structure
func customFunc(fl FielddLevel) bool {

	if fl.Field().String() == "invalid" {
		return false
	}

	return true
}

validate.RegisterValidation("custom tag name", customFunc)
// NOTES: using the same tag name as an existing function
//        will overwrite the existing one

Cross-Field Validation

Cross-Field Validation can be done via the following tags:

  • eqfield
  • nefield
  • gtfield
  • gtefield
  • ltfield
  • ltefield
  • eqcsfield
  • necsfield
  • gtcsfield
  • ftecsfield
  • ltcsfield
  • ltecsfield

If, however, some custom cross-field validation is required, it can be done using a custom validation.

Why not just have cross-fields validation tags (i.e. only eqcsfield and not eqfield)?

The reason is efficiency. If you want to check a field within the same struct "eqfield" only has to find the field on the same struct (1 level). But, if we used "eqcsfield" it could be multiple levels down. Example:

type Inner struct {
	StartDate time.Time
}

type Outer struct {
	InnerStructField *Inner
	CreatedAt time.Time      `validate:"ltecsfield=InnerStructField.StartDate"`
}

now := time.Now()

inner := &Inner{
	StartDate: now,
}

outer := &Outer{
	InnerStructField: inner,
	CreatedAt: now,
}

errs := validate.Struct(outer)

// NOTE: when calling validate.Struct(val) topStruct will be the top level struct passed
//       into the function
//       when calling validate.FieldWithValue(val, field, tag) val will be
//       whatever you pass, struct, field...
//       when calling validate.Field(field, tag) val will be nil

Multiple Validators

Multiple validators on a field will process in the order defined. Example:

type Test struct {
	Field `validate:"max=10,min=1"`
}

// max will be checked then min

Bad Validator definitions are not handled by the library. Example:

type Test struct {
	Field `validate:"min=10,max=0"`
}

// this definition of min max will never succeed

Using Validator Tags

Baked In Cross-Field validation only compares fields on the same struct. If Cross-Field + Cross-Struct validation is needed you should implement your own custom validator.

Comma (",") is the default separator of validation tags. If you wish to have a comma included within the parameter (i.e. excludesall=,) you will need to use the UTF-8 hex representation 0x2C, which is replaced in the code as a comma, so the above will become excludesall=0x2C.

type Test struct {
	Field `validate:"excludesall=,"`    // BAD! Do not include a comma.
	Field `validate:"excludesall=0x2C"` // GOOD! Use the UTF-8 hex representation.
}

Pipe ("|") is the default separator of validation tags. If you wish to have a pipe included within the parameter i.e. excludesall=| you will need to use the UTF-8 hex representation 0x7C, which is replaced in the code as a pipe, so the above will become excludesall=0x7C

type Test struct {
	Field `validate:"excludesall=|"`    // BAD! Do not include a a pipe!
	Field `validate:"excludesall=0x7C"` // GOOD! Use the UTF-8 hex representation.
}

Baked In Validators and Tags

Here is a list of the current built in validators:

Skip Field

Tells the validation to skip this struct field; this is particularly handy in ignoring embedded structs from being validated. (Usage: -)

Usage: -

Or Operator

This is the 'or' operator allowing multiple validators to be used and accepted. (Usage: rbg|rgba) <-- this would allow either rgb or rgba colors to be accepted. This can also be combined with 'and' for example ( Usage: omitempty,rgb|rgba)

Usage: |

StructOnly

When a field that is a nested struct is encountered, and contains this flag any validation on the nested struct will be run, but none of the nested struct fields will be validated. This is usefull if inside of you program you know the struct will be valid, but need to verify it has been assigned. NOTE: only "required" and "omitempty" can be used on a struct itself.

Usage: structonly

NoStructLevel

Same as structonly tag except that any struct level validations will not run.

Usage: nostructlevel

Omit Empty

Allows conditional validation, for example if a field is not set with a value (Determined by the "required" validator) then other validation such as min or max won't run, but if a value is set validation will run.

Usage: omitempty

Dive

This tells the validator to dive into a slice, array or map and validate that level of the slice, array or map with the validation tags that follow. Multidimensional nesting is also supported, each level you wish to dive will require another dive tag.

Usage: dive

Example #1

[][]string with validation tag "gt=0,dive,len=1,dive,required"
// gt=0 will be applied to []
// len=1 will be applied to []string
// required will be applied to string

Example #2

[][]string with validation tag "gt=0,dive,dive,required"
// gt=0 will be applied to []
// []string will be spared validation
// required will be applied to string

Required

This validates that the value is not the data types default zero value. For numbers ensures value is not zero. For strings ensures value is not "". For slices, maps, pointers, interfaces, channels and functions ensures the value is not nil.

Usage: required

Length

For numbers, length will ensure that the value is equal to the parameter given. For strings, it checks that the string length is exactly that number of characters. For slices, arrays, and maps, validates the number of items.

Usage: len=10

Maximum

For numbers, max will ensure that the value is less than or equal to the parameter given. For strings, it checks that the string length is at most that number of characters. For slices, arrays, and maps, validates the number of items.

Usage: max=10

Minimum

For numbers, min will ensure that the value is greater or equal to the parameter given. For strings, it checks that the string length is at least that number of characters. For slices, arrays, and maps, validates the number of items.

Usage: min=10

Equals

For strings & numbers, eq will ensure that the value is equal to the parameter given. For slices, arrays, and maps, validates the number of items.

Usage: eq=10

Not Equal

For strings & numbers, ne will ensure that the value is not equal to the parameter given. For slices, arrays, and maps, validates the number of items.

Usage: ne=10

Greater Than

For numbers, this will ensure that the value is greater than the parameter given. For strings, it checks that the string length is greater than that number of characters. For slices, arrays and maps it validates the number of items.

Example #1

Usage: gt=10

Example #2 (time.Time)

For time.Time ensures the time value is greater than time.Now.UTC().

Usage: gt

Greater Than or Equal

Same as 'min' above. Kept both to make terminology with 'len' easier.

Example #1

Usage: gte=10

Example #2 (time.Time)

For time.Time ensures the time value is greater than or equal to time.Now.UTC().

Usage: gte

Less Than

For numbers, this will ensure that the value is less than the parameter given. For strings, it checks that the string length is less than that number of characters. For slices, arrays, and maps it validates the number of items.

Example #1

Usage: lt=10

Example #2 (time.Time) For time.Time ensures the time value is less than time.Now.UTC().

Usage: lt

Less Than or Equal

Same as 'max' above. Kept both to make terminology with 'len' easier.

Example #1

Usage: lte=10

Example #2 (time.Time)

For time.Time ensures the time value is less than or equal to time.Now.UTC().

Usage: lte

Field Equals Another Field

This will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field.

Example #1:

// Validation on Password field using:
Usage: eqfield=ConfirmPassword

Example #2:

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(password, confirmpassword, "eqfield")

Field Equals Another Field (relative)

This does the same as eqfield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: eqcsfield=InnerStructField.Field)

Field Does Not Equal Another Field

This will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field.

Examples:

// Confirm two colors are not the same:
//
// Validation on Color field:
Usage: nefield=Color2

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(color1, color2, "nefield")

Field Does Not Equal Another Field (relative)

This does the same as nefield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: necsfield=InnerStructField.Field

Field Greater Than Another Field

Only valid for Numbers and time.Time types, this will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field. usage examples are for validation of a Start and End date:

Example #1:

// Validation on End field using:
validate.Struct Usage(gtfield=Start)

Example #2:

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(start, end, "gtfield")

Field Greater Than Another Relative Field

This does the same as gtfield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: gtcsfield=InnerStructField.Field

Field Greater Than or Equal To Another Field

Only valid for Numbers and time.Time types, this will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field. usage examples are for validation of a Start and End date:

Example #1:

// Validation on End field using:
validate.Struct Usage(gtefield=Start)

Example #2:

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(start, end, "gtefield")

Field Greater Than or Equal To Another Relative Field

This does the same as gtefield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: gtecsfield=InnerStructField.Field

Less Than Another Field

Only valid for Numbers and time.Time types, this will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field. usage examples are for validation of a Start and End date:

Example #1:

// Validation on End field using:
validate.Struct Usage(ltfield=Start)

Example #2:

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(start, end, "ltfield")

Less Than Another Relative Field

This does the same as ltfield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: ltcsfield=InnerStructField.Field

Less Than or Equal To Another Field

Only valid for Numbers and time.Time types, this will validate the field value against another fields value either within a struct or passed in field. usage examples are for validation of a Start and End date:

Example #1:

// Validation on End field using:
validate.Struct Usage(ltefield=Start)

Example #2:

// Validating by field:
validate.FieldWithValue(start, end, "ltefield")

Less Than or Equal To Another Relative Field

This does the same as ltefield except that it validates the field provided relative to the top level struct.

Usage: ltecsfield=InnerStructField.Field

Alpha Only

This validates that a string value contains ASCII alpha characters only

Usage: alpha

Alphanumeric

This validates that a string value contains ASCII alphanumeric characters only

Usage: alphanum

Alpha Unicode

This validates that a string value contains unicode alpha characters only

Usage: alphaunicode

Alphanumeric Unicode

This validates that a string value contains unicode alphanumeric characters only

Usage: alphanumunicode

Numeric

This validates that a string value contains a basic numeric value. basic excludes exponents etc...

Usage: numeric

Hexadecimal String

This validates that a string value contains a valid hexadecimal.

Usage: hexadecimal

Hexcolor String

This validates that a string value contains a valid hex color including hashtag (#)

Usage: hexcolor

RGB String

This validates that a string value contains a valid rgb color

Usage: rgb

RGBA String

This validates that a string value contains a valid rgba color

Usage: rgba

HSL String

This validates that a string value contains a valid hsl color

Usage: hsl

HSLA String

This validates that a string value contains a valid hsla color

Usage: hsla

E-mail String

This validates that a string value contains a valid email This may not conform to all possibilities of any rfc standard, but neither does any email provider accept all posibilities.

Usage: email

URL String

This validates that a string value contains a valid url This will accept any url the golang request uri accepts but must contain a schema for example http:// or rtmp://

Usage: url

URI String

This validates that a string value contains a valid uri This will accept any uri the golang request uri accepts

Usage: uri

Base64 String

This validates that a string value contains a valid base64 value. Although an empty string is valid base64 this will report an empty string as an error, if you wish to accept an empty string as valid you can use this with the omitempty tag.

Usage: base64

Contains

This validates that a string value contains the substring value.

Usage: contains=@

Contains Any

This validates that a string value contains any Unicode code points in the substring value.

Usage: containsany=!@#?

Contains Rune

This validates that a string value contains the supplied rune value.

Usage: containsrune=@

Excludes

This validates that a string value does not contain the substring value.

Usage: excludes=@

Excludes All

This validates that a string value does not contain any Unicode code points in the substring value.

Usage: excludesall=!@#?

Excludes Rune

This validates that a string value does not contain the supplied rune value.

Usage: excludesrune=@

International Standard Book Number

This validates that a string value contains a valid isbn10 or isbn13 value.

Usage: isbn

International Standard Book Number 10

This validates that a string value contains a valid isbn10 value.

Usage: isbn10

International Standard Book Number 13

This validates that a string value contains a valid isbn13 value.

Usage: isbn13

Universally Unique Identifier UUID

This validates that a string value contains a valid UUID.

Usage: uuid

Universally Unique Identifier UUID v3

This validates that a string value contains a valid version 3 UUID.

Usage: uuid3

Universally Unique Identifier UUID v4

This validates that a string value contains a valid version 4 UUID.

Usage: uuid4

Universally Unique Identifier UUID v5

This validates that a string value contains a valid version 5 UUID.

Usage: uuid5

ASCII

This validates that a string value contains only ASCII characters. NOTE: if the string is blank, this validates as true.

Usage: ascii

Printable ASCII

This validates that a string value contains only printable ASCII characters. NOTE: if the string is blank, this validates as true.

Usage: printascii

Multi-Byte Characters

This validates that a string value contains one or more multibyte characters. NOTE: if the string is blank, this validates as true.

Usage: multibyte

Data URL

This validates that a string value contains a valid DataURI. NOTE: this will also validate that the data portion is valid base64

Usage: datauri

Latitude

This validates that a string value contains a valid latitude.

Usage: latitude

Longitude

This validates that a string value contains a valid longitude.

Usage: longitude

Social Security Number SSN

This validates that a string value contains a valid U.S. Social Security Number.

Usage: ssn

Internet Protocol Address IP

This validates that a string value contains a valid IP Adress.

Usage: ip

Internet Protocol Address IPv4

This validates that a string value contains a valid v4 IP Adress.

Usage: ipv4

Internet Protocol Address IPv6

This validates that a string value contains a valid v6 IP Adress.

Usage: ipv6

Classless Inter-Domain Routing CIDR

This validates that a string value contains a valid CIDR Adress.

Usage: cidr

Classless Inter-Domain Routing CIDRv4

This validates that a string value contains a valid v4 CIDR Adress.

Usage: cidrv4

Classless Inter-Domain Routing CIDRv6

This validates that a string value contains a valid v6 CIDR Adress.

Usage: cidrv6

Transmission Control Protocol Address TCP

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable TCP Adress.

Usage: tcp_addr

Transmission Control Protocol Address TCPv4

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v4 TCP Adress.

Usage: tcp4_addr

Transmission Control Protocol Address TCPv6

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v6 TCP Adress.

Usage: tcp6_addr

User Datagram Protocol Address UDP

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable UDP Adress.

Usage: udp_addr

User Datagram Protocol Address UDPv4

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v4 UDP Adress.

Usage: udp4_addr

User Datagram Protocol Address UDPv6

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v6 UDP Adress.

Usage: udp6_addr

Internet Protocol Address IP

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable IP Adress.

Usage: ip_addr

Internet Protocol Address IPv4

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v4 IP Adress.

Usage: ip4_addr

Internet Protocol Address IPv6

This validates that a string value contains a valid resolvable v6 IP Adress.

Usage: ip6_addr

Unix domain socket end point Address

This validates that a string value contains a valid Unix Adress.

Usage: unix_addr

Media Access Control Address MAC

This validates that a string value contains a valid MAC Adress.

Usage: mac

Note: See Go's ParseMAC for accepted formats and types:

http://golang.org/src/net/mac.go?s=866:918#L29

Alias Validators and Tags

NOTE: When returning an error, the tag returned in "FieldError" will be the alias tag unless the dive tag is part of the alias. Everything after the dive tag is not reported as the alias tag. Also, the "ActualTag" in the before case will be the actual tag within the alias that failed.

Here is a list of the current built in alias tags:

"iscolor"
	alias is "hexcolor|rgb|rgba|hsl|hsla" (Usage: iscolor)

Validator notes:

regex
	a regex validator won't be added because commas and = signs can be part
	of a regex which conflict with the validation definitions. Although
	workarounds can be made, they take away from using pure regex's.
	Furthermore it's quick and dirty but the regex's become harder to
	maintain and are not reusable, so it's as much a programming philosiphy
	as anything.

	In place of this new validator functions should be created; a regex can
	be used within the validator function and even be precompiled for better
	efficiency within regexes.go.

	And the best reason, you can submit a pull request and we can keep on
	adding to the validation library of this package!

Panics

This package panics when bad input is provided, this is by design, bad code like that should not make it to production.

type Test struct {
	TestField string `validate:"nonexistantfunction=1"`
}

t := &Test{
	TestField: "Test"
}

validate.Struct(t) // this will panic

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

This section is empty.

Types

type CustomTypeFunc

type CustomTypeFunc func(field reflect.Value) interface{}

CustomTypeFunc allows for overriding or adding custom field type handler functions field = field value of the type to return a value to be validated example Valuer from sql drive see https://golang.org/src/database/sql/driver/types.go?s=1210:1293#L29

type FieldError

type FieldError interface {

	// returns the validation tag that failed. if the
	// validation was an alias, this will return the
	// alias name and not the underlying tag that failed.
	//
	// eg. alias "iscolor": "hexcolor|rgb|rgba|hsl|hsla"
	// will return "iscolor"
	Tag() string

	// returns the validation tag that failed, even if an
	// alias the actual tag within the alias will be returned.
	// If an 'or' validation fails the entire or will be returned.
	//
	// eg. alias "iscolor": "hexcolor|rgb|rgba|hsl|hsla"
	// will return "hexcolor|rgb|rgba|hsl|hsla"
	ActualTag() string

	// returns the namespace for the field error, with the tag
	// name taking precedence over the fields actual name.
	//
	// eq. JSON name "User.fname" see ActualNamespace for comparison
	//
	// NOTE: this field can be blank when validating a single primitive field
	// using validate.Field(...) as there is no way to extract it's name
	Namespace() string

	// returns the namespace for the field error, with the fields
	// actual name.
	//
	// eq. "User.FirstName" see Namespace for comparison
	//
	// NOTE: this field can be blank when validating a single primitive field
	// using validate.Field(...) as there is no way to extract it's name
	StructNamespace() string

	// returns the fields name with the tag name taking precedence over the
	// fields actual name.
	//
	// eq. JSON name "fname"
	// see ActualField for comparison
	Field() string

	// returns the fields actual name from the struct, when able to determine.
	//
	// eq.  "FirstName"
	// see Field for comparison
	StructField() string

	// returns the actual fields value in case needed for creating the error
	// message
	Value() interface{}

	// returns the param value, in string form for comparison; this will also
	// help with generating an error message
	Param() string

	// Kind returns the Field's reflect Kind
	//
	// eg. time.Time's kind is a struct
	Kind() reflect.Kind

	// Type returns the Field's reflect Type
	//
	// // eg. time.Time's type is time.Time
	Type() reflect.Type

	// returns the FieldError's translated error
	// from the provided 'ut.Translator' and registered 'TranslationFunc'
	//
	// NOTE: is not registered translation can be found it returns the same
	// as calling fe.Error()
	Translate(ut ut.Translator) string
}

FieldError contains all functions to get error details

type FieldLevel

type FieldLevel interface {

	// returns the top level struct, if any
	Top() reflect.Value

	// returns the current fields parent struct, if any or
	// the comparison value if called 'VarWithValue'
	Parent() reflect.Value

	// returns current field for validation
	Field() reflect.Value

	// returns param for validation against current field
	Param() string

	// ExtractType gets the actual underlying type of field value.
	// It will dive into pointers, customTypes and return you the
	// underlying value and it's kind.
	ExtractType(field reflect.Value) (value reflect.Value, kind reflect.Kind, nullable bool)

	// traverses the parent struct to retrieve a specific field denoted by the provided namespace
	// in the param and returns the field, field kind and whether is was successful in retrieving
	// the field at all.
	//
	// NOTE: when not successful ok will be false, this can happen when a nested struct is nil and so the field
	// could not be retrieved because it didn't exist.
	GetStructFieldOK() (reflect.Value, reflect.Kind, bool)
}

FieldLevel contains all the information and helper functions to validate a field

type FilterFunc

type FilterFunc func(ns []byte) bool

FilterFunc is the type used to filter fields using StructFiltered(...) function. returning true results in the field being filtered/skiped from validation

type Func

type Func func(fl FieldLevel) bool

Func accepts all values needed for file and cross field validation fl = FieldLevel validation helper field = field value for validation fieldType = fields param = parameter used in validation i.e. gt=0 param would be 0

type InvalidValidationError

type InvalidValidationError struct {
	Type reflect.Type
}

InvalidValidationError describes an invalid argument passed to `Struct`, `StructExcept`, StructPartial` or `Field`

func (*InvalidValidationError) Error

func (e *InvalidValidationError) Error() string

Error returns InvalidValidationError message

type RegisterTranslationsFunc

type RegisterTranslationsFunc func(ut ut.Translator) error

RegisterTranslationsFunc allows for registering of translations for a 'ut.Translator' for use withing the 'TranslationFunc'

type StructLevel

type StructLevel interface {

	// returns the main validation object, in case one want to call validations internally.
	// this is so you don;t have to use anonymous functoins to get access to the validate
	// instance.
	Validator() *Validate

	// returns the top level struct, if any
	Top() reflect.Value

	// returns the current fields parent struct, if any
	Parent() reflect.Value

	// returns the current struct.
	// this is not needed when implementing 'Validatable' interface,
	// only when a StructLevel is registered
	Current() reflect.Value

	// ExtractType gets the actual underlying type of field value.
	// It will dive into pointers, customTypes and return you the
	// underlying value and it's kind.
	ExtractType(field reflect.Value) (value reflect.Value, kind reflect.Kind, nullable bool)

	// reports an error just by passing the field and tag information
	//
	// NOTES:
	//
	// fieldName and altName get appended to the existing namespace that
	// validator is on. eg. pass 'FirstName' or 'Names[0]' depending
	// on the nesting
	//
	// tag can be an existing validation tag or just something you make up
	// and process on the flip side it's up to you.
	ReportError(field interface{}, fieldName, altName, tag, param string)

	// reports an error just by passing ValidationErrors
	//
	// NOTES:
	//
	// relativeNamespace and relativeActualNamespace get appended to the
	// existing namespace that validator is on.
	// eg. pass 'User.FirstName' or 'Users[0].FirstName' depending
	// on the nesting. most of the time they will be blank, unless you validate
	// at a level lower the the current field depth
	//
	// tag can be an existing validation tag or just something you make up
	// and process on the flip side it's up to you.
	ReportValidationErrors(relativeNamespace, relativeActualNamespace string, errs ValidationErrors)
}

StructLevel contains all the information and helper functions to validate a struct

type StructLevelFunc

type StructLevelFunc func(sl StructLevel)

StructLevelFunc accepts all values needed for struct level validation

type TagNameFunc

type TagNameFunc func(field reflect.StructField) string

TagNameFunc allows for adding of a custom tag name parser

type TranslationFunc

type TranslationFunc func(ut ut.Translator, fe FieldError) string

TranslationFunc is the function type used to register or override custom translations

type Validate

type Validate struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Validate contains the validator settings and cache

func New

func New() *Validate

New returns a new instacne of 'validate' with sane defaults.

func (*Validate) RegisterAlias

func (v *Validate) RegisterAlias(alias, tags string)

RegisterAlias registers a mapping of a single validation tag that defines a common or complex set of validation(s) to simplify adding validation to structs.

NOTE: this function is not thread-safe it is intended that these all be registered prior to any validation

func (*Validate) RegisterCustomTypeFunc

func (v *Validate) RegisterCustomTypeFunc(fn CustomTypeFunc, types ...interface{})

RegisterCustomTypeFunc registers a CustomTypeFunc against a number of types

NOTE: this method is not thread-safe it is intended that these all be registered prior to any validation

func (*Validate) RegisterStructValidation

func (v *Validate) RegisterStructValidation(fn StructLevelFunc, types ...interface{})

RegisterStructValidation registers a StructLevelFunc against a number of types. This is akin to implementing the 'Validatable' interface, but for structs for which you may not have access or rights to change.

NOTES: - if this and the 'Validatable' interface are implemented the Struct Level takes precedence as to enable a struct out of your control's validation to be overridden - this method is not thread-safe it is intended that these all be registered prior to any validation

func (*Validate) RegisterTagNameFunc

func (v *Validate) RegisterTagNameFunc(fn TagNameFunc)

RegisterTagNameFunc registers a function to get another name from the StructField eg. the JSON name

func (*Validate) RegisterTranslation

func (v *Validate) RegisterTranslation(tag string, trans ut.Translator, registerFn RegisterTranslationsFunc, translationFn TranslationFunc) (err error)

RegisterTranslation registers translations against the provided tag.

func (*Validate) RegisterValidation

func (v *Validate) RegisterValidation(tag string, fn Func) error

RegisterValidation adds a validation with the given tag

NOTES: - if the key already exists, the previous validation function will be replaced. - this method is not thread-safe it is intended that these all be registered prior to any validation

func (*Validate) SetTagName

func (v *Validate) SetTagName(name string)

SetTagName allows for changing of the default tag name of 'validate'

func (*Validate) Struct

func (v *Validate) Struct(s interface{}) (err error)

Struct validates a structs exposed fields, and automatically validates nested structs, unless otherwise specified.

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors.

func (*Validate) StructExcept

func (v *Validate) StructExcept(s interface{}, fields ...string) (err error)

StructExcept validates all fields except the ones passed in. Fields may be provided in a namespaced fashion relative to the struct provided i.e. NestedStruct.Field or NestedArrayField[0].Struct.Name

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors.

func (*Validate) StructFiltered

func (v *Validate) StructFiltered(s interface{}, fn FilterFunc) (err error)

StructFiltered validates a structs exposed fields, that pass the FilterFunc check and automatically validates nested structs, unless otherwise specified.

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors.

func (*Validate) StructPartial

func (v *Validate) StructPartial(s interface{}, fields ...string) (err error)

StructPartial validates the fields passed in only, ignoring all others. Fields may be provided in a namespaced fashion relative to the struct provided eg. NestedStruct.Field or NestedArrayField[0].Struct.Name

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors.

func (*Validate) Var

func (v *Validate) Var(field interface{}, tag string) (err error)

Var validates a single variable using tag style validation. eg. var i int validate.Var(i, "gt=1,lt=10")

WARNING: a struct can be passed for validation eg. time.Time is a struct or if you have a custom type and have registered

a custom type handler, so must allow it; however unforseen validations will occur if trying to validate a struct
that is meant to be passed to 'validate.Struct'

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors. validate Array, Slice and maps fields which may contain more than one error

func (*Validate) VarWithValue

func (v *Validate) VarWithValue(field interface{}, other interface{}, tag string) (err error)

VarWithValue validates a single variable, against another variable/field's value using tag style validation eg. s1 := "abcd" s2 := "abcd" validate.VarWithValue(s1, s2, "eqcsfield") // returns true

WARNING: a struct can be passed for validation eg. time.Time is a struct or if you have a custom type and have registered

a custom type handler, so must allow it; however unforseen validations will occur if trying to validate a struct
that is meant to be passed to 'validate.Struct'

It returns InvalidValidationError for bad values passed in and nil or ValidationErrors as error otherwise. You will need to assert the error if it's not nil eg. err.(validator.ValidationErrors) to access the array of errors. validate Array, Slice and maps fields which may contain more than one error

type ValidationErrors

type ValidationErrors []FieldError

ValidationErrors is an array of FieldError's for use in custom error messages post validation.

func (ValidationErrors) Error

func (ve ValidationErrors) Error() string

Error is intended for use in development + debugging and not intended to be a production error message. It allows ValidationErrors to subscribe to the Error interface. All information to create an error message specific to your application is contained within the FieldError found within the ValidationErrors array

func (ValidationErrors) Translate

Translate translates all of the ValidationErrors

type ValidationErrorsTranslations

type ValidationErrorsTranslations map[string]string

ValidationErrorsTranslations is the translation return type

Directories

Path Synopsis
examples
translations
en

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