This document lists all the validators supported and gives users are guideline on how to use them.
- Specification(s): draft7
- Contributor(s): @andersonf
- Reference: https://json-schema.org/understanding-json-schema/reference/conditionals.html
- Issues and PRs: #206
The if
, then
and else
keywords allow the application of a subschema based on the outcome of another schema, much like the if/then/else
constructs you’ve probably seen in traditional programming languages.
If if
is valid, then
must also be valid (and else
is ignored.) If if
is invalid, else
must also be valid (and then
is ignored).
For usage, please refer to the test cases at https://github.com/networknt/json-schema-validator/blob/master/src/test/suite/tests/draft7/if-then-else.json
@Bean
public JsonSchemaFactory mySchemaFactory() {
// base on JsonMetaSchema.V201909 copy code below
String URI = "https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema";
String ID = "$id";
List<Format> BUILTIN_FORMATS = new ArrayList<Format>(JsonMetaSchema.COMMON_BUILTIN_FORMATS);
JsonMetaSchema myJsonMetaSchema = new JsonMetaSchema.Builder(URI)
.idKeyword(ID)
.formats(BUILTIN_FORMATS)
.keywords(ValidatorTypeCode.getFormatKeywords(SpecVersion.VersionFlag.V201909))
// keywords that may validly exist, but have no validation aspect to them
.keywords(Arrays.asList(
new NonValidationKeyword("$schema"),
new NonValidationKeyword("$id"),
new NonValidationKeyword("title"),
new NonValidationKeyword("description"),
new NonValidationKeyword("default"),
new NonValidationKeyword("definitions"),
new NonValidationKeyword("$defs") // newly added in 2018-09 release.
))
// add your custom keyword
.keyword(new GroovyKeyword())
.build();
return new JsonSchemaFactory.Builder().defaultMetaSchemaIri(myJsonMetaSchema.getIri())
.metaSchema(myJsonMetaSchema)
.build();
}
public class GroovyKeyword extends AbstractKeyword {
private static final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(GroovyKeyword.class);
public GroovyKeyword() {
super("groovy");
}
@Override
public AbstractJsonValidator newValidator(String schemaPath, JsonNode schemaNode, JsonSchema parentSchema, ValidationContext validationContext) throws JsonSchemaException, Exception {
// you can read validator config here
String config = schemaNode.asText();
return new AbstractJsonValidator(this.getValue()) {
@Override
public Set<ValidationMessage> validate(JsonNode node, JsonNode rootNode, String at) {
// you can do validate here
logger.info("config:{} path:{} node:{}", config, at, node);
return Collections.emptySet();
}
};
}
}
You can use GroovyKeyword like below:
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"someProperty": {
"type": "string",
"groovy": "SomeScript.groovy"
}
}
}
In this library, if the format keyword is "email", "uuid", "date", "date-time", default validator provided by the library will be used.
If you want to override this behavior, do as below.
public JsonSchemaFactory mySchemaFactory() {
// base on JsonMetaSchema.V201909 copy code below
String URI = "https://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/schema";
String ID = "$id";
JsonMetaSchema overrideEmailValidatorMetaSchema = new JsonMetaSchema.Builder(URI)
.idKeyword(ID)
// Override EmailValidator
.format(new PatternFormat("email", "^[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&'*+\\/=?^_`{|}~-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?:\\.[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)*$"))
.build();
return new JsonSchemaFactory.Builder().defaultMetaSchemaIri(overrideEmailValidatorMetaSchema.getIri())
.metaSchema(overrideEmailValidatorMetaSchema)
.build();
}