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@openstapps/core-tools
Advanced tools
Tools to convert and validate StAppsCore
The StAppsCore Converter is a tool for converting SC-types (TypeScript) into JSON schema files.
JSON schema files are needed for run-time validation of SC-type objects, as this is a tedious task to do using SC-types defined in TypeScript (not possible without additional coding). That said, StAppsCore Converter practically prepares SC-types to be used for object validation (determining whether a JavaScript/JSON object is a valid object of the corresponding SC-type) using StAppsCore Validator.
The StAppsCore Validator is a tool for run-time validation of objects (determining whether a JavaScript/JSON object is a valid object of the corresponding SC-type. It consumes JSON schema files from StAppsCore as the definitions of SC-types against which are validated concrete (actual) objects (as an example SCDish object in the example below).
Installation of the npm package (using npm install
) makes the tool available as an executable with the name openstapps-core-tools
.
Add @validatable
to the Typedoc comment of the types that you want to convert to JSONSchema.
The command openstapps-core-tools
can then be called using these arguments:
openstapps-core-tools schema <srcPath> <schemaPath>
where:
<srcPath>
is path to the project (where used *.ts
files are, e.g. src/core
,<schemaPath>
is directory to save output files to, e.g. lib/schema
.Complete command with the example arguments is then:
openstapps-core-tools schema src/core lib/schema
Inside of a script in package.json
or if the npm package is installed globally, the tool stapps-convert
can be called without its local path (node_modules/.bin
):
openstapps-core-tools schema src/core lib/schema
import {Validator} from '@openstapps/core-tools/lib/validate';
import {SCDish, SCThingType} from '@openstapps/core';
import {ValidatorResult} from 'jsonschema';
import {join} from 'path';
const objectToValidate: SCDish = {
type: SCThingType.Dish,
// more properties
};
// instantiate a new validator
const validator = new Validator();
// make the validator read the schema files
validator.addSchemas(join('node_modules', '@openstapps', 'core', 'lib', 'schema')).then(() => {
// validate an object
const result: ValidatorResult = validator.validate(objectToValidate, 'SCDish');
});
The JSON files passed to the validateFiles method have an added layer. That layer encapsulates the actual JSON data of the object to be verified and adds a property to enable true negative testing.
Your basic JSON object:
{
"property1": "value1",
"property2": "value2",
...
}
JSON for validateFiles:
{
"errorNames": [],
"instance": {
"property1": "value1",
"property2": "value2",
...
},
"schema": "NameOfSchema"
}
Where errorNames
holds the string values of the name property of the expected ValidationErrors from JSON Schema. Empty array means no errors are expected.
schema
holds the name of the schema to validate the instance against.
The command openstapps-core-tools
can then be called using these arguments:
openstapps-core-tools validate <schemaPath> <testPath> [reportPath]
where:
<schemaPath>
is a directory where JSON schema files are, e.g. lib/schema
,<testPath>
is a directory where test files are, e.g. src/test/resources
,[reportPath]
is a file where the HTML report of the validation will be saved to, e.g. report.html
(optional argument - if it's not provided no report will be written).Command with the example arguments is then for example:
openstapps-core-tools validate lib/schema src/test/resources
Inside of a script in package.json
or if the npm package is installed globally, the tool openstapps-validate
can be called without its local path (node_modules/.bin
):
openstapps-core-tools validate lib/schema src/test/resources report.html
To generate a documentation for the routes use the following command.
openstapps-core-tools routes PATH/TO/CORE/lib PATH/TO/ROUTES.md
To pack all the different files into two distribution files - one for definitions/one for implementations - use the following command:
openstapps-core-tools pack
FAQs
Tools to convert and validate StAppsCore
We found that @openstapps/core-tools demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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