moleculer-zod-validator
Validate Moleculer action parameters using the Zod validator.

Supports
Requires
As of v3.0.0, this package requires Node.js v17.0.0 or above.
Install
npm install moleculer-zod-validator
Usage
Broker
Import ZodValidator
, then set up the validator in your broker settings using the validator
property. For example:
const { ServiceBroker } = require("moleculer");
const { ZodValidator } = require("moleculer-zod-validator");
import { ServiceBroker } from "moleculer";
import { ZodValidator } from "moleculer-zod-validator";
const broker = new ServiceBroker({
validator: new ZodValidator()
});
As of v3.0.0, moleculer-zod-validator implements the default Moleculer validator (fastest-validator) as a compatibility fallback for fastest-validator schemas, like those used in Moleculer's internal services, so calling services using that should not be a problem.
Actions
One of Zod's main features is how it can infer TypeScript types from a schema. To simplify the usage of this, there is a convenience utility called ZodParams
that allows for easy access to the necessary data.
The ZodParams
constructor takes one to three arguments: schema
, optionally options
, and optionally returnValue
.
-
schema
- This is a schema object that gets passed directly into z.object
. For all available schema options, please look at the Zod documentation.
-
options
- This provides access to some of the different functions available on a standard Zod object. All booleans default to false
except for strip
, which is implicitly set to true
.
-
partial
(boolean) - Shallowly makes all properties optional. (docs)
-
deepPartial
(boolean) - Deeply makes all properties optional. (docs)
-
strip
(boolean) - Removes unrecognized keys from the parsed input. This is Zod's default behavior and this validator's default behavior. Mutually exclusive with passthrough
and strict
, and will override them if set. (docs)
-
passthrough
(boolean) - Passes through unrecognized keys. Mutually exclusive with strict
and strip
. (docs)
-
strict
(boolean) - Throws an error if unrecognized keys are present. Mutually exclusive with passthrough
and strip
. (docs)
-
catchall
(Zod validator) - Validates all unknown keys against this schema. Obviates strict
, passthrough
, and strip
. (docs)
NOTE: There is currently an upstream bug in Zod that prevents catchall
type inference from working correctly. Type inference for catchall in ZodParams is disabled for the time being until that is fixed. If you wish to emulate the type inference, you can do so by using a type union when using broker.call
or ctx.call
.
broker.call<
ReturnType,
typeof zodParamObject.call & {[index: string]: string}
>({ ... })
-
refine
(function OR object) - Adds custom validation logic to the Zod object that can't be represented in TypeScript's type system or purely using Zod validators on their own (for example, making sure that at least one of several optional items are present). Returning any falsy value will fail validation, while returning any truthy value will pass validation. (docs)
There are two ways to use this property. You can either pass in a validation function taking one parameter (representing the object being passed in) or an object with optionally two properties.
validator
(function) - A validation function taking one parameter, representing the object being validated currently.params
(object, optional) - Additional properties to customize the error handling behavior, as described in the Zod documentation
If both refine
and superRefine
are defined, refine
will run last (after superRefine
).
-
superRefine
(function) - Adds custom validation logic to the Zod object that can't be represented in TypeScript's type system or purely using Zod validators on their own (for example, making sure that at least one of several optional items are present). This is a more powerful and verbose method of performing refinements. Validation will pass unless ctx.addIssue
is called. (docs)
This property takes a function with two arguments, val
and ctx
(not to be confused with Moleculer's ctx
option).
val
(object) - An object representing the object being validated currently.ctx
(object) - An object provided by Zod.
If both refine
and superRefine
are defined, superRefine
will run first (before refine
).
-
returnType
- The return type of the action in question. It does not matter what actual value is passed in, so long as it is given the desired return types using the as
keyword. Once stored, these can be referred to in the same way that you would access .call
and .context
. This can be done like so:
new ZodParams({ property: z.string() }, undefined, {} as Promise<string>);
...
const returnedValue = broker.call<typeof sampleParam.return, typeof sampleParam.call>({ property: "whatever" });
Additionally, support for object transformations is present, allowing for the use of features such as preprocessing, refinements, transforms, and defaults.
Once constructed, there are five properties exposed on the ZodParams
object.
schema
- The raw schema passed in. This should be passed to the params
object in the action definition.context
- The inferred output type from the compiled validator. This should be used within the Context
object in the action definition to get the proper types after the parameters have passed through validation.call
- The inferred input type from the compiled validator. This should be used with broker.call
or ctx.call
as the second type parameter to get proper types for the action call.validator
- The compiled validator.return
- The types provided in the returnType
argument when the instance was constructed. If none were provided, this defaults to a type of any
instead.
const simpleValidator = new ZodParams({
string: z.string(),
number: z.number(),
optional: z.any().optional()
});
const complexValidator = new ZodParams({
string: z.string(),
number: z.number(),
object: z.object({
nestedString: z.string(),
nestedBoolean: z.boolean()
})
}, {
partial: true,
catchall: z.number()
}});
broker.createService({
name: "example",
actions: {
simpleExample: {
params: simpleValidator.schema,
handler(ctx: Context<typeof simpleValidator.context>) { ... }
},
complexExample: {
params: complexValidator.schema,
handler(ctx: Context<typeof complexExample.context>) { ... }
}
}
});
broker.call<
typeof simpleValidator.return,
typeof simpleValidator.call
>({ string: "yes", number: 42 });
broker.call<
typeof complexValidator.return,
typeof complexValidator.call
>({
object: {
nestedString: "not optional",
nestedBoolean: false
},
unrecognizedKey: 69
});