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The Joi package is a powerful schema description language and data validator for JavaScript. It allows developers to create blueprints or schemas for JavaScript objects to ensure validation of key information. It is commonly used for validating data, such as configuration objects, request data in web applications, and more.
Object Schema Validation
This feature allows you to define a schema for an object, specifying the expected type of each property, and then validate data against this schema. The code sample demonstrates creating a schema for user data and validating an object against it.
{"const Joi = require('joi');\nconst schema = Joi.object({\n username: Joi.string().alphanum().min(3).max(30).required(),\n password: Joi.string().pattern(new RegExp('^[a-zA-Z0-9]{3,30}$')),\n repeat_password: Joi.ref('password'),\n access_token: [Joi.string(), Joi.number()],\n birth_year: Joi.number().integer().min(1900).max(2013),\n email: Joi.string().email({ minDomainSegments: 2, tlds: { allow: ['com', 'net'] } })\n}).with('username', 'birth_year');\n\nconst dataToValidate = {\n username: 'abc',\n birth_year: 1994,\n email: 'test@example.com'\n};\n\nconst result = schema.validate(dataToValidate);\nconsole.log(result);"}
Type Casting
Joi can cast values to other types as part of the validation process. In this example, a string representing a number is cast to an actual number, and a string 'TRUE' is cast to a boolean true.
{"const Joi = require('joi');\nconst schema = Joi.object({\n age: Joi.number().integer(),\n active: Joi.string().trim().lowercase().valid('true', 'false').truthy('true').falsy('false').default(false).cast('boolean')\n});\n\nconst dataToValidate = {\n age: '30',\n active: 'TRUE'\n};\n\nconst result = schema.validate(dataToValidate, { convert: true });\nconsole.log(result.value); // { age: 30, active: true }"}
Custom Validation Messages
Joi allows you to specify custom validation messages for when data does not conform to the schema. This example shows how to set a custom message for a string that is too short.
{"const Joi = require('joi');\nconst schema = Joi.string().min(10).message('The string needs to be at least 10 characters long.');\n\nconst result = schema.validate('short');\nconsole.log(result.error); // Custom error message"}
Yup is a JavaScript schema builder for value parsing and validation. It is similar to Joi but is leaner and designed for browser usage as well as Node.js. It uses a similar API to Joi but is built with a different focus on client-side validation.
Ajv (Another JSON Schema Validator) is a fast JSON schema validator supporting JSON Schema draft-06/07/2019-09/2020-12 and JSON Type Definition (RFC 8927). It is different from Joi in that it uses a JSON-based schema definition rather than a fluent API.
Validator is a library of string validators and sanitizers. It is not a schema-based validation library like Joi but provides a set of string validation functions that can be used individually to validate specific types of input data.
Class-validator works with TypeScript and uses decorators to define validation rules within class definitions. It is different from Joi in that it integrates tightly with TypeScript and leverages its type system for validation.
Object schema description language and validator for JavaScript objects.
Lead Maintainer: Nicolas Morel
Imagine you run facebook and you want visitors to sign up on the website with real names and not something like l337_p@nda
in the first name field. How would you define the limitations of what can be inputted and validate it against the set rules?
This is joi, joi allows you to create blueprints or schemas for JavaScript objects (an object that stores information) to ensure validation of key information.
See the detailed API Reference.
const Joi = require('joi');
const schema = Joi.object().keys({
username: Joi.string().alphanum().min(3).max(30).required(),
password: Joi.string().regex(/^[a-zA-Z0-9]{3,30}$/),
access_token: [Joi.string(), Joi.number()],
birthyear: Joi.number().integer().min(1900).max(2013),
email: Joi.string().email()
}).with('username', 'birthyear').without('password', 'access_token');
// Return result.
const result = Joi.validate({ username: 'abc', birthyear: 1994 }, schema);
// result.error === null -> valid
// You can also pass a callback which will be called synchronously with the validation result.
Joi.validate({ username: 'abc', birthyear: 1994 }, schema, function (err, value) { }); // err === null -> valid
The above schema defines the following constraints:
username
birthyear
password
access_token
access_token
birthyear
email
Usage is a two steps process. First, a schema is constructed using the provided types and constraints:
const schema = {
a: Joi.string()
};
Note that joi schema objects are immutable which means every additional rule added (e.g. .min(5)
) will return a
new schema object.
Then the value is validated against the schema:
const {error, value} = Joi.validate({ a: 'a string' }, schema);
// or
Joi.validate({ a: 'a string' }, schema, function (err, value) { });
If the input is valid, then the error will be null
, otherwise it will be an Error object.
The schema can be a plain JavaScript object where every key is assigned a joi type, or it can be a joi type directly:
const schema = Joi.string().min(10);
If the schema is a joi type, the schema.validate(value, callback)
can be called directly on the type. When passing a non-type schema object,
the module converts it internally to an object() type equivalent to:
const schema = Joi.object().keys({
a: Joi.string()
});
When validating a schema:
Values (or keys in case of objects) are optional by default.
Joi.validate(undefined, Joi.string()); // validates fine
To disallow this behavior, you can either set the schema as required()
, or set presence
to "required"
when passing options
:
Joi.validate(undefined, Joi.string().required());
// or
Joi.validate(undefined, Joi.string(), /* options */ { presence: "required" });
Strings are utf-8 encoded by default.
Rules are defined in an additive fashion and evaluated in order after whitelist and blacklist checks.
Joi doesn't directly support browsers, but you could use joi-browser for an ES5 build of Joi that works in browsers, or as a source of inspiration for your own builds.
FAQs
Object schema validation
The npm package joi receives a total of 9,164,622 weekly downloads. As such, joi popularity was classified as popular.
We found that joi demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 6 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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