inpsyde/validator

Inpsyde Validator library.

1.3.0 2023-05-17 13:40 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-10-05 14:18:52 UTC


README

This package provides a collection of validators for WordPress.

Contents

Installation

Best served by Composer from Packagist. Package name is inpsyde/validator.

What it is and how it works

The package provides validator objects that can be used to verify that some given data fulfill specific requirements.

Most important method for each validator is is_valid() that receives some data and returns true or false, depending on the provided data meets validator requirements.

We can distinguish among three types of validators:

  • "simple"
  • "secondary"
  • "compound"

Simple validators are used to verify single values, according to some specifications.

Secondary validators are created taking a simple validator and modifying its behavior. Can be seen as "decorators" for validators.

Compound validators are made by combining togheter more validators.

Simple validators

This is a summary of simple validators provided as of now with the package:

All validators are defined in Inpsyde\Validator namespace, so it is possible to use them like this:

$value = 8;

$between = new Inpsyde\Validator\Between(['min' => 10, 'max' => 20, 'inclusive' => false]);

if ( $between->is_valid($value) ) {
  echo "Value {$value} is between 10 and 20".
} else {
  echo "Value {$value} is not between 10 and 20".
}

Other validators can be used in a pretty identical fashion.

Secondary validators

At the moment, are available following secondary validators:

All secondary validators have a with_validator() static method, that can be used as named constructor to obtain an instance.

Negate example

Here an example on how to use Negate to check that given value is not included in a given haystack of values:

$not_in_array = Negate::with_validator( new InArray( [ 'haystack' => [ 'foo', 'bar' ] ] ) );

$not_in_array->is_valid( 'hello' ); // true
$not_in_array->is_valid( 'foo' ); // false

Bulk example

Here an example on how to use Bulk to check that given array contains only strings:

$array_of_strings = Bulk::with_validator( new Type( [ 'type' => 'string' ] ) );

$array_of_strings->is_valid( [ 'foo', 'bar' ] ); // true
$array_of_strings->is_valid( [ 'foo', true  ); // false

Pool example

Here an example on how to use Pool to check that given array contains at least a WP_Post object:

$has_post = Pool::with_validator( new Type( [ 'type' => 'WP_Post' ] ) );

$has_post->is_valid( [ 'foo', new \WP_Post([ 'id' => 1 ]) ] ); // true
$has_post->is_valid( [ 'foo', true  ); // false

Pool traverse the given value and returns true when first item of the value validates the inner validator.

Compound validators

At the moment, following compound validators ar available:

DataValidator is the more powerful validator of the package, because it is the only validator implementing ErrorLoggerAwareValidatorInterface interface that makes it possible to obtain error messages for validated data in a very simple way. For this reason usage of this validator is treated separately below.

Multi example

Here an example on how to use Multi validator, to check that given value is an array and has two items and both of them are strings:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$two_items_string_array = new Validator\Multi(
	['stop_on_failure' => TRUE ],
	[
		new Validator\Type( [ 'type' => 'array' ] ),
		new Validator\Size( [ 'type' => 2 ] ),
		Validator\Bulk::with_validator( new Validator\Type( [ 'type' => 'string' ] ) ),
	]
);

$two_items_string_array->is_valid( [' foo', 'bar' ] ); // true
$two_items_string_array->is_valid( [ 'foo', 1 ] ); // false
$two_items_string_array->is_valid( [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] ); // false

The first constructor argument is an array of options, just like for all the "simple" validators. The second argument is an array of validators.

Please note how we used a secondary validator (Bulk) as a child validator for Multi: this is totally fine, because simple, secondary and compound validators all implement the same interface.

By default all validators are executed for the given value when is_valid() is called, but setting the option stop_on_failure to TRUE, the validator stops to perform validation when the first failing validator is reached.

An alternative (and less verbose) way to build a Multi validator instance is to use the static method with_validators() that accepts a variadic number of validator objects:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$two_items_string_array = Validator\Multi::with_validators(
	new Validator\Type( [ 'type' => 'array' ] ),
    new Validator\Size( [ 'type' => 2 ] ),
    Validator\Bulk::with_validator( new Validator\Type( [ 'type' => 'string' ] ) ),
);

When constructed like this, the stop_on_failure options is set to its default, that is false, but can be set to true by calling stop_on_failure() method on the obtained instance.

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$two_items_string_array = Validator\Multi::with_validators(...$validators)->stop_on_failure();

MultiOr example

MultiOr is very similar to Multi, but the latter combines validator with an AND operand, the former with OR operand.

In other words, using Multi all the inner validators have to validate to make Multi validate, on the contrary MultiOr validates if at least one of inner validators validates.

Here an example on how to use MultiOr to validate a value to be in the range from 5 to 10 or in the range 50 to 100:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$custom_range = Validator\MultiOr::with_validators(
	new Validator\Between( [ 'min' => 5, 'max' => 10 ] ),
    new Validator\Between( [ 'min' => 50, 'max' => 100 ] ),
);

$custom_range->is_valid( 7 ) // true
$custom_range->is_valid( 30 ) // false
$custom_range->is_valid( 60 ) // true

Error codes and input data

Some validators may fail for different reasons.

For example, RegEx validator may fail because the input provided is not a string, or because the patter is not valid or just because the given value does not match the provided pattern.

This is why all validators came with two additional methods (alongside is_valid()):

  • get_error_code()
  • get_input_data()

get_error_code() returns a code that identifies the kind of error that made the validator fail.

All default error codes are available as interface constants of Inpsyde\Validator\Error\ErrorLoggerInterface.

For example, Between validator might return ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN_STRICT if inclusive option is true, or ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN if it is false.

get_input_data() returns an array with information on

  • the validator options
  • the value that was validated

For example, in the example above Validator\Between::get_input_data() might return:

[
	'min'   => 10,
	'max'   => 20,
	'value' => 8,
]

Validators factory

The package ships with a validator factory class that can be used to build validator instances starting from some configuration values.

This is useful when more validators have to built in bulk from configuration files or for lazy instantiation.

The factory has just one method create() that accepts a validator identifier as string and an optional array of options.

Usage example:

$configuration = [
	'between'   => [ 'min' => 10, 'max' => 20 ],
	'not-empty' => [],
	'in_array'  => [ 'haystack' => [ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] ]
];

$factory = new Inpsyde\Validator\ValidatorFactory();

$validators = [];

foreach($configuration as $identifier => $options) {

	$validators[] = $factory->create( $identifier, $options);
}

To construct shipped validators, it is also possible to use as identifier their class name without namespace, like:

$configuration = [
	'Between'  => [ 'min' => 10, 'max' => 20 ],
	'NotEmpty' => [],
	'InArray'  => [ 'haystack' => [ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] ]
];

For any custom validator (see below) that implements validator interfaces, it is possible to pass the fully qualified name of the class to obtain a constructed instance.

Error messages

This package comes with objects dedicated to get error messages when validators fail.

They are:

  • Inpsyde\Validator\Error\ErrorLogger
  • Inpsyde\Validator\Error\WordPressErrorLogger

The two loggers works in the same way, however WordPressErrorLogger has support for translations via WordPress translation feature.

There are two step involved in showing errors using these objects:

  1. Log the error(s)
  2. Get the array of logged errors

The code looks like this:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$between = new Validator\Between([ 'min' => 10, 'max' => 20, 'inclusive' => false ]);

if ( ! $between->is_valid() ) {

	$logger = new Validator\Error\WordPressErrorLogger();
	$logger->log_error( $between->get_error_code(), $between->get_input_data() );
	
	foreach( $logger->get_error_messages() as $error ) {
		echo "<p>{$error}</p>";
	}
}

It might seem it requires too much work, however when validating data with DataValidator (see below) most of the code above is not necessary.

Error templates

When using error loggers, the error messages are created using "templates": message strings that contain placeholders for values.

Every error code available as constant of ErrorLoggerInterface has a related template.

For example, for the code ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN the related template is:

'The input <code>%value%</code> is not between <code>%min%</code> and <code>%max%</code>, inclusively.'

Where %value%, %min% and %max% are placeholders that are replaced with data passed via get_input_data() when the error is logged.

Error templates can be customized in 2 different ways:

  1. replacing the template used for specific codes in the logger
  2. passing a specific template when logging an error

Code-specific templates

Error loggers comes with a method: use_error_template() that can be used to set a custom error template for a given error code.

For example:

use Inpsyde\Validator\Error;

$logger = new Error\WordPressErrorLogger();
$logger->use_error_template( Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN, 'Hey, the value %value% is not ok.' );

Doing like this, all the errors for Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN will use the given template, unless an error-specific template is provided when logging the error.

Instead of using use_error_template() that replaces error templates one by one, it is possible to replace more templates at once passing to logger constructor an array of templates where array keys are the error codes:

use Inpsyde\Validator\Error;

$custom_templates = [
	Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN        => 'Hey, the value %value% is not ok.',
	Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN_STRICT => 'Hey, the value %value% is not ok. Really.' 
];

$logger = new Error\WordPressErrorLogger( $custom_templates );

Error-specific templates

The method log_error() accepts a third argument to pass a specific template that will me used for that error only:

use Inpsyde\Validator\Error;

$logger = new Error\WordPressErrorLogger();

$logger->log_error(
	$validator->get_error_code(),   // code
	$validator->get_input_data(),   // input data
	'%value% is wrong, try again.', // custom error message template
);

When used like this, the custom template does not affect all the other messages for same code, but only the error being logged.

DataValidator

DataValidator is the more powerful validator in the package. Beside to collect more validators, it also provides more methods than other validators, including get_error_messages() that returns an array of all errors occurred while validating given data.

"Child" validators added to DataValidator can be used to validate:

  • all items of the data to validate
  • specific items identified by their "key"

Add validators to all items

DataValidator has two methods to add validators to all the items of the data to validate, they are:

  • add_validator()
  • add_validator_with_message()

The first just accepts a validator instance, the second also accepts a custom message template that will be used to build the error message when this validator fail.

Example:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$validator = new Validator\DataValidator();

$validator
	->add_validator_with_message( new Validator\NotEmpty(), 'The given value must not be empty.' )
	->add_validator( new Validator\Url([ 'check_dns' => true ]) );
	
$validator->is_valid([
	'http://www.example.com',
	'http://example.com',
	'this-will-fail'
]);

Each element of the array passed to is_valid() will be validated against both the validators added.

In the example above, note how both add_validator_with_message() and add_validator implements "fluent interface" allowing to "chain" calls to them by returning an instance of validator.

Add validator to specific items

DataValidator also has one method that allows to add validators to specific element of the given data, it is add_validator_by_key().

It takes three arguments: an instance of validator, a key used to identify the data element, and optionally an error message template to use for the validator.

Example:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$validator = new Validator\DataValidator();

$validator
	->add_validator_by_key( new Validator\NotEmpty(), 'name', 'Name cannot be empty.' )
	->add_validator_by_key( new Validator\Url(), 'homepage', 'Homepage must be a valid URL.' )
	
$valid = $validator->is_valid([
	'name'     => 'Inpsyde',
	'homepage' => 'http://www.inpsyde.com',
]);

if (! $valid) {
	foreach( $validator->get_error_messages() as $error ) {
		echo "<p>{$error}</p>";
    }
}

DataValidator is the only validator that supports get_error_messages() to obtain an array of all error occurred.

Customize error message templates

By using add_validator_by_key() and add_validator_with_message() it is possible to customize the error template at validator level, however, DataValidator constructor optionally takes as first argument an instance of error logger that will be used to build all messages.

So, it is possible to create an error logger instance with custom error messages (as shown above) and pass it to DataValidator constructor:

use Inpsyde\Validator\Error;
use Inpsyde\Validator\DataValidator;

$custom_templates = [
	Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN        => 'Hey, the value %value% is not ok.',
	Error\ErrorLoggerInterface::NOT_BETWEEN_STRICT => 'Hey, the value %value% is not ok. Really.' 
];

$logger = new Error\WordPressErrorLogger( $custom_templates );

$validator = new DataValidator( $logger );

Item keys in error messages

When using DataValidator, there is an additional placeholder:'%key%', that will be replaced with the item key of the value that caused the error.

By default, error messages have no '%key%' placeholder, so the string "<code>%key%</code>: " is prepended to default message.

For example, the default message template

The input %value% is not a valid URL.

becomes:

%key%: The input %value% is not a valid URL.

This only happens when no custom error template is provided using add_validator_by_key() or add_validator_with_message(), when custom error template is provided, nothing is prepended to it, but if the custom template contains the '%key%' placeholder it will be replaced as well.

Item key labels for error messages

Sometimes it might be desirable that the error message does not contain the item key, but a label.

For example, if the validator is used to validate data coming from an HTML form, would be nice if the error message would contain the input label, and not input name.

However, the input name (that will be the key in the submitted data array) is also needed to let DataValidator identify which validator apply to each field.

For this reason, both add_validator_by_key() and add_validator_with_message() support a special syntax for their second argument$key: an array of two element, with keys 'key' and 'label'.

Example:

use Inpsyde\Validator;

$validator = new DataValidator();

$validator->add_validator_by_key(
	new Validator\NotEmpty(),
	[ 'key' => 'username', 'label' => __( 'User name', , 'txtdomain' ) ], // key param is an array here
	sprintf( __( '%s must not be empty.', 'txtdomain' ), %key% )
);

if ( ! $validator->is_valid( [ 'username' => '' ] ) ) {
	$messages = $validator->get_error_messages();
}

In the example above, because username key has an empty value, the error message built will be the translated version of

User name must not be empty.

Note how the label is used to replace the placeholder instead of the key.

Custom validators

It is possible to create custom validators to be used with the package.

Custom validators should implement the interface ExtendedValidatorInterface which contains the following methods:

  • get_error_code()
  • get_input_data()
  • get_error_messages() (deprecated)
  • is_valid()

The package ships with 2 traits that can be used to implement the first 3 methods, leaving only is_valid() to implementers.

Particularly consider GetErrorMessagesTrait that contains implementation for the deprecated get_error_messages() (see "Upgrading from version 1.0" below for more info).

Custom validator example

A trivial custom validator could be something like this:

namespace MyPlugin\Validator;

use Inpsyde\Validator\ExtendedValidatorInterface;
use Inpsyde\Validator\GetErrorMessagesTrait;
use Inpsyde\Validator\ValidatorDataGetterTrait;
use Inpsyde\Validator\Error\ErrorLoggerInterface;

class YesNo implements ExtendedValidatorInterface {

	const ERROR_CODE = 'not_yes_no';

	use GetErrorMessagesTrait;
	use ValidatorDataGetterTrait;
	
	public function is_valid( $value ) {
	
		/** @see ValidatorDataGetterTrait */
		$this->input_data[ 'value' => $value ]; 
		
		if ( ! is_string( $value ) ) {
			// this is a default error
			$this->error_code = ErrorLoggerInterface::INVALID_TYPE_NON_STRING;
			
			return false;
		}
			
		if ( ! in_array( strtolower( $value ), [ 'yes', 'no' ], true ) ) {
		    // custom error
			$this->error_code = self::ERROR_CODE;
			
			return false;
		}
		
		return true;
	}
 
}

The validator might emit two error codes in case of error, one of them is a default error code, the other is custom.

If the validator is intended to be used with DataValidator, it is necessary to add the custom code to the error logger, something like:

namespace MyPlugin;

use Inpsyde\Validator\DataValidator;
use Inpsyde\Validator\Error\WordPressErrorLogger;

$yes_no_message = sprintf(
	__( 'Accepted values are only "yes" and "no". "%s" was given.', 'txtdmn' ),
	'%value%'
);

$logger = new WordPressErrorLogger([ Validator\YesNo::ERROR_CODE => $message ]);

$validator = new DataValidator( $logger );

$validator->add_validator_by_key( new Validator\YesNo(), 'accepted' );

Upgrading from version 1.0

  • The interface ExtendedValidatorInterface that extends ValidatorInterface and contains get_error_code() and get_input_data(), was introduced in version 1.1 of the package. In version 1.0 validators implemented just ValidatorInterface.
  • get_error_messages() is deprecated from version 1.1
  • The whole reason for ExtendedValidatorInterface existence is to maintain backward compatibility with any custom validator built for version 1.0 and so extending ValidatorInterface (we could not add methods to it without breaking compatibility).

For reasons above starting from version 2.0:

  • get_error_messages() will be removed
  • get_error_code() and get_input_data() will be added to ValidatorInterface
  • ExtendedValidatorInterface will thus become empty, and will just extend ValidatorInterface. It will be maintained for backward compatibility with custom validators written for 1.1+, but will be deprecated and removed from version 3.0.

Other notes

Bugs, technical hints or contribute

Please give us feedback, contribute and file technical bugs on GitHub Repo.

License

Good news, this plugin is free for everyone! Since it's released under the MIT, you can use it free of charge on your personal or commercial blog.

Changelog

See commits or read short version.