joi-to-json
Objective
I have been using joi a lot in different Node.js projects which guards the API.
It's The most powerful schema description language and data validator for JavaScript. as it said.
Many times, we need to utilize this schema description to produce other output, such as Swagger OpenAPI doc.
That is why I build joi-route-to-swagger in the first place.
At the beginning, joi-route-to-swagger
relies on joi-to-json-schema which utilizes many joi internal api or properties. I believed there was reason. Maybe joi did not provide the describe
api way before. But I always feel uncomfortable and think it's time to move on.
The intention of joi-to-json
is to support converting different version's joi schema to JSON Schema (draft-04) using describe
api.
2.0.0 is out
It's a breaking change.
-
Functionally, output format supports OpenAPI Schema other than purely JSON Schema.
-
Technically, implementation theory has a big change:
- In v1.0.0, it directly converts
joi.describe()
to JSON schema using different parser implementations. - In v2.0.0,
joi.describe()
of different versions are first converted to one base format, the latest version of joi.describe()
output. Then different parsers (JSON, OpenAPI) all refer to this base format.
-
The benefits of the change are:
- Easier to retire old version of joi.
- Easier to support more output formats.
Installation
npm install joi-to-json
Joi Version Support
- @commercial/joi
- joi
- @hapi/joi
For all above versions, I have tested one complex joi object fixtures which covers most of the JSON schema attributes that can be described in joi schema.
Although the versions chosen are the latest one for each major version, I believe it should be supporting other minor version as well.
Usage
Only one API parse
is available. It's signature is parse(joiObj, type = 'json')
Currently supported output types are json
and open-api
.
The output schema format are in outputs under specific folders for different types.
Sample code is as below:
const parse = require('joi-to-json')
const joiSchema = joi.object().keys({
nickName: joi.string().required().min(3).max(20).example('鹄思乱想').description('Hero Nickname')
.regex(/^[a-z]+$/, { name: 'alpha', invert: true }),
avatar: joi.string().required().uri(),
email: joi.string().email(),
ip: joi.string().ip({ version: ['ipv4', 'ipv6'] }),
hostname: joi.string().hostname().insensitive(),
gender: joi.string().valid('Male', 'Female', '').default('Male'),
height: joi.number().precision(2).positive().greater(0).less(200),
birthday: joi.date().iso(),
birthTime: joi.date().timestamp('unix'),
skills: joi.array().items(joi.alternatives().try(
joi.string(),
joi.object().keys({
name: joi.string().example('teleport').alphanum().lowercase().required().description('Skill Name'),
level: joi.number().integer().min(10).max(100).default(50).multiple(10).example(10).description('Skill Level')
})
).required()).min(1).max(3).unique().description('Skills'),
tags: joi.array().items(joi.string().required()).length(2),
retired: joi.boolean().truthy('yes').falsy('no').insensitive(false),
certificate: joi.binary().encoding('base64')
})
const jsonSchema = parse(joiSchema)
Test
npm run test
You can optionally set below environment variables:
CASE_PATTERN=joi-obj-12
to control which version of joi obj to test
License
MIT