From 5f8de423f190bbb79a62f804151bc24824fa32d8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Matt A. Tobin" Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2018 04:16:08 -0500 Subject: Add m-esr52 at 52.6.0 --- python/voluptuous/COPYING | 25 + python/voluptuous/MANIFEST.in | 2 + python/voluptuous/PKG-INFO | 611 ++++++++++++ python/voluptuous/README.md | 596 ++++++++++++ python/voluptuous/README.rst | 589 ++++++++++++ python/voluptuous/setup.cfg | 10 + python/voluptuous/setup.py | 54 ++ python/voluptuous/tests.md | 268 ++++++ python/voluptuous/voluptuous.py | 1954 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 9 files changed, 4109 insertions(+) create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/COPYING create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/MANIFEST.in create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/PKG-INFO create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/README.md create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/README.rst create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/setup.cfg create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/setup.py create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/tests.md create mode 100644 python/voluptuous/voluptuous.py (limited to 'python/voluptuous') diff --git a/python/voluptuous/COPYING b/python/voluptuous/COPYING new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a19b7057f --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/COPYING @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +Copyright (c) 2010, Alec Thomas +All rights reserved. + +Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: + + - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this + list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, + this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation + and/or other materials provided with the distribution. + - Neither the name of SwapOff.org nor the names of its contributors may + be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without + specific prior written permission. + +THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND +ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE +DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE +FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL +DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR +SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER +CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, +OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE +OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. diff --git a/python/voluptuous/MANIFEST.in b/python/voluptuous/MANIFEST.in new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f03451d5a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/MANIFEST.in @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +include *.md +include COPYING diff --git a/python/voluptuous/PKG-INFO b/python/voluptuous/PKG-INFO new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1a9e9551a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/PKG-INFO @@ -0,0 +1,611 @@ +Metadata-Version: 1.1 +Name: voluptuous +Version: 0.8.11 +Summary: Voluptuous is a Python data validation library +Home-page: https://github.com/alecthomas/voluptuous +Author: Alec Thomas +Author-email: alec@swapoff.org +License: BSD +Download-URL: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/voluptuous +Description: Voluptuous is a Python data validation library + ============================================== + + |Build Status| |Stories in Ready| + + Voluptuous, *despite* the name, is a Python data validation library. It + is primarily intended for validating data coming into Python as JSON, + YAML, etc. + + It has three goals: + + 1. Simplicity. + 2. Support for complex data structures. + 3. Provide useful error messages. + + Contact + ------- + + Voluptuous now has a mailing list! Send a mail to + ` `__ to subscribe. Instructions will + follow. + + You can also contact me directly via `email `__ + or `Twitter `__. + + To file a bug, create a `new + issue `__ on GitHub + with a short example of how to replicate the issue. + + Show me an example + ------------------ + + Twitter's `user search + API `__ accepts + query URLs like: + + :: + + $ curl 'http://api.twitter.com/1/users/search.json?q=python&per_page=20&page=1 + + To validate this we might use a schema like: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... 'q': str, + ... 'per_page': int, + ... 'page': int, + ... }) + + This schema very succinctly and roughly describes the data required by + the API, and will work fine. But it has a few problems. Firstly, it + doesn't fully express the constraints of the API. According to the API, + ``per_page`` should be restricted to at most 20, defaulting to 5, for + example. To describe the semantics of the API more accurately, our + schema will need to be more thoroughly defined: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Required, All, Length, Range + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Required('q'): All(str, Length(min=1)), + ... Required('per_page', default=5): All(int, Range(min=1, max=20)), + ... 'page': All(int, Range(min=0)), + ... }) + + This schema fully enforces the interface defined in Twitter's + documentation, and goes a little further for completeness. + + "q" is required: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import MultipleInvalid, Invalid + >>> try: + ... schema({}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data['q']" + True + + ...must be a string: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': 123}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected str for dictionary value @ data['q']" + True + + ...and must be at least one character in length: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': ''}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "length of value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['q']" + True + >>> schema({'q': '#topic'}) == {'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 5} + True + + "per\_page" is a positive integer no greater than 20: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 900}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "value must be at most 20 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + True + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': -10}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + True + + "page" is an integer >= 0: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 'one'}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "expected int for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + >>> schema({'q': '#topic', 'page': 1}) == {'q': '#topic', 'page': 1, 'per_page': 5} + True + + Defining schemas + ---------------- + + Schemas are nested data structures consisting of dictionaries, lists, + scalars and *validators*. Each node in the input schema is pattern + matched against corresponding nodes in the input data. + + Literals + ~~~~~~~~ + + Literals in the schema are matched using normal equality checks: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(1) + >>> schema(1) + 1 + >>> schema = Schema('a string') + >>> schema('a string') + 'a string' + + Types + ~~~~~ + + Types in the schema are matched by checking if the corresponding value + is an instance of the type: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(int) + >>> schema(1) + 1 + >>> try: + ... schema('one') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected int" + True + + URL's + ~~~~~ + + URL's in the schema are matched by using ``urlparse`` library. + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Url + >>> schema = Schema(Url()) + >>> schema('http://w3.org') + 'http://w3.org' + >>> try: + ... schema('one') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected a URL" + True + + Lists + ~~~~~ + + Lists in the schema are treated as a set of valid values. Each element + in the schema list is compared to each value in the input data: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema([1, 'a', 'string']) + >>> schema([1]) + [1] + >>> schema([1, 1, 1]) + [1, 1, 1] + >>> schema(['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string']) + ['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string'] + + Validation functions + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + Validators are simple callables that raise an ``Invalid`` exception when + they encounter invalid data. The criteria for determining validity is + entirely up to the implementation; it may check that a value is a valid + username with ``pwd.getpwnam()``, it may check that a value is of a + specific type, and so on. + + The simplest kind of validator is a Python function that raises + ValueError when its argument is invalid. Conveniently, many builtin + Python functions have this property. Here's an example of a date + validator: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from datetime import datetime + >>> def Date(fmt='%Y-%m-%d'): + ... return lambda v: datetime.strptime(v, fmt) + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(Date()) + >>> schema('2013-03-03') + datetime.datetime(2013, 3, 3, 0, 0) + >>> try: + ... schema('2013-03') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "not a valid value" + True + + In addition to simply determining if a value is valid, validators may + mutate the value into a valid form. An example of this is the + ``Coerce(type)`` function, which returns a function that coerces its + argument to the given type: + + .. code:: python + + def Coerce(type, msg=None): + """Coerce a value to a type. + + If the type constructor throws a ValueError, the value will be marked as + Invalid. + """ + def f(v): + try: + return type(v) + except ValueError: + raise Invalid(msg or ('expected %s' % type.__name__)) + return f + + This example also shows a common idiom where an optional human-readable + message can be provided. This can vastly improve the usefulness of the + resulting error messages. + + Dictionaries + ~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each + key-value pair in the corresponding data dictionary: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 'one', 2: 'two'}) + >>> schema({1: 'one'}) + {1: 'one'} + + Extra dictionary keys + ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + + By default any additional keys in the data, not in the schema will + trigger exceptions: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}) + >>> try: + ... schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[1]" + True + + This behaviour can be altered on a per-schema basis. To allow additional + keys use ``Schema(..., extra=ALLOW_EXTRA)``: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import ALLOW_EXTRA + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=ALLOW_EXTRA) + >>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + {1: 2, 2: 3} + + To remove additional keys use ``Schema(..., extra=REMOVE_EXTRA)``: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import REMOVE_EXTRA + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=REMOVE_EXTRA) + >>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + {2: 3} + + It can also be overridden per-dictionary by using the catch-all marker + token ``extra`` as a key: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Extra + >>> schema = Schema({1: {Extra: object}}) + >>> schema({1: {'foo': 'bar'}}) + {1: {'foo': 'bar'}} + + Required dictionary keys + ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + + By default, keys in the schema are not required to be in the data: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) + >>> schema({3: 4}) + {3: 4} + + Similarly to how extra\_ keys work, this behaviour can be overridden + per-schema: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}, required=True) + >>> try: + ... schema({3: 4}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + + And per-key, with the marker token ``Required(key)``: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({Required(1): 2, 3: 4}) + >>> try: + ... schema({3: 4}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + >>> schema({1: 2}) + {1: 2} + + Optional dictionary keys + ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + + If a schema has ``required=True``, keys may be individually marked as + optional using the marker token ``Optional(key)``: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Optional + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, Optional(3): 4}, required=True) + >>> try: + ... schema({}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + >>> schema({1: 2}) + {1: 2} + >>> try: + ... schema({1: 2, 4: 5}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[4]" + True + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) + {1: 2, 3: 4} + + Recursive schema + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + There is no syntax to have a recursive schema. The best way to do it is + to have a wrapper like this: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema, Any + >>> def s2(v): + ... return s1(v) + ... + >>> s1 = Schema({"key": Any(s2, "value")}) + >>> s1({"key": {"key": "value"}}) + {'key': {'key': 'value'}} + + Extending an existing Schema + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + Often it comes handy to have a base ``Schema`` that is extended with + more requirements. In that case you can use ``Schema.extend`` to create + a new ``Schema``: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema + >>> person = Schema({'name': str}) + >>> person_with_age = person.extend({'age': int}) + >>> sorted(list(person_with_age.schema.keys())) + ['age', 'name'] + + The original ``Schema`` remains unchanged. + + Objects + ~~~~~~~ + + Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each + attribute-value pair in the corresponding object: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Object + >>> class Structure(object): + ... def __init__(self, q=None): + ... self.q = q + ... def __repr__(self): + ... return ''.format(self) + ... + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=Structure)) + >>> schema(Structure(q='one')) + + + Allow None values + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + To allow value to be None as well, use Any: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Any + + >>> schema = Schema(Any(None, int)) + >>> schema(None) + >>> schema(5) + 5 + + Error reporting + --------------- + + Validators must throw an ``Invalid`` exception if invalid data is passed + to them. All other exceptions are treated as errors in the validator and + will not be caught. + + Each ``Invalid`` exception has an associated ``path`` attribute + representing the path in the data structure to our currently validating + value, as well as an ``error_message`` attribute that contains the + message of the original exception. This is especially useful when you + want to catch ``Invalid`` exceptions and give some feedback to the user, + for instance in the context of an HTTP API. + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> def validate_email(email): + ... """Validate email.""" + ... if not "@" in email: + ... raise Invalid("This email is invalid.") + ... return email + >>> schema = Schema({"email": validate_email}) + >>> exc = None + >>> try: + ... schema({"email": "whatever"}) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "This email is invalid. for dictionary value @ data['email']" + >>> exc.path + ['email'] + >>> exc.msg + 'This email is invalid.' + >>> exc.error_message + 'This email is invalid.' + + The ``path`` attribute is used during error reporting, but also during + matching to determine whether an error should be reported to the user or + if the next match should be attempted. This is determined by comparing + the depth of the path where the check is, to the depth of the path where + the error occurred. If the error is more than one level deeper, it is + reported. + + The upshot of this is that *matching is depth-first and fail-fast*. + + To illustrate this, here is an example schema: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema([[2, 3], 6]) + + Each value in the top-level list is matched depth-first in-order. Given + input data of ``[[6]]``, the inner list will match the first element of + the schema, but the literal ``6`` will not match any of the elements of + that list. This error will be reported back to the user immediately. No + backtracking is attempted: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema([[6]]) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "not a valid value @ data[0][0]" + True + + If we pass the data ``[6]``, the ``6`` is not a list type and so will + not recurse into the first element of the schema. Matching will continue + on to the second element in the schema, and succeed: + + .. code:: pycon + + >>> schema([6]) + [6] + + Running tests. + -------------- + + Voluptuous is using nosetests: + + :: + + $ nosetests + + Why use Voluptuous over another validation library? + --------------------------------------------------- + + **Validators are simple callables** + No need to subclass anything, just use a function. + **Errors are simple exceptions.** + A validator can just ``raise Invalid(msg)`` and expect the user to + get useful messages. + **Schemas are basic Python data structures.** + Should your data be a dictionary of integer keys to strings? + ``{int: str}`` does what you expect. List of integers, floats or + strings? ``[int, float, str]``. + **Designed from the ground up for validating more than just forms.** + Nested data structures are treated in the same way as any other + type. Need a list of dictionaries? ``[{}]`` + **Consistency.** + Types in the schema are checked as types. Values are compared as + values. Callables are called to validate. Simple. + + Other libraries and inspirations + -------------------------------- + + Voluptuous is heavily inspired by + `Validino `__, and to a lesser + extent, `jsonvalidator `__ and + `json\_schema `__. + + I greatly prefer the light-weight style promoted by these libraries to + the complexity of libraries like FormEncode. + + .. |Build Status| image:: https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous.png + :target: https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous + .. |Stories in Ready| image:: https://badge.waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous.png?label=ready&title=Ready + :target: https://waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous + +Platform: any +Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable +Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers +Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License +Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4 diff --git a/python/voluptuous/README.md b/python/voluptuous/README.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fd84c64e7 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,596 @@ +# Voluptuous is a Python data validation library + +[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous.png)](https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous) [![Stories in Ready](https://badge.waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous.png?label=ready&title=Ready)](https://waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous) + +Voluptuous, *despite* the name, is a Python data validation library. It +is primarily intended for validating data coming into Python as JSON, +YAML, etc. + +It has three goals: + +1. Simplicity. +2. Support for complex data structures. +3. Provide useful error messages. + +## Contact + +Voluptuous now has a mailing list! Send a mail to +[](mailto:voluptuous@librelist.com) to subscribe. Instructions +will follow. + +You can also contact me directly via [email](mailto:alec@swapoff.org) or +[Twitter](https://twitter.com/alecthomas). + +To file a bug, create a [new issue](https://github.com/alecthomas/voluptuous/issues/new) on GitHub with a short example of how to replicate the issue. + +## Show me an example + +Twitter's [user search API](https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1/get/users/search) accepts +query URLs like: + +``` +$ curl 'http://api.twitter.com/1/users/search.json?q=python&per_page=20&page=1 +``` + +To validate this we might use a schema like: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Schema +>>> schema = Schema({ +... 'q': str, +... 'per_page': int, +... 'page': int, +... }) + +``` + +This schema very succinctly and roughly describes the data required by +the API, and will work fine. But it has a few problems. Firstly, it +doesn't fully express the constraints of the API. According to the API, +`per_page` should be restricted to at most 20, defaulting to 5, for +example. To describe the semantics of the API more accurately, our +schema will need to be more thoroughly defined: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Required, All, Length, Range +>>> schema = Schema({ +... Required('q'): All(str, Length(min=1)), +... Required('per_page', default=5): All(int, Range(min=1, max=20)), +... 'page': All(int, Range(min=0)), +... }) + +``` + +This schema fully enforces the interface defined in Twitter's +documentation, and goes a little further for completeness. + +"q" is required: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import MultipleInvalid, Invalid +>>> try: +... schema({}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data['q']" +True + +``` + +...must be a string: + +```pycon +>>> try: +... schema({'q': 123}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "expected str for dictionary value @ data['q']" +True + +``` + +...and must be at least one character in length: + +```pycon +>>> try: +... schema({'q': ''}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "length of value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['q']" +True +>>> schema({'q': '#topic'}) == {'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 5} +True + +``` + +"per\_page" is a positive integer no greater than 20: + +```pycon +>>> try: +... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 900}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "value must be at most 20 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" +True +>>> try: +... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': -10}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" +True + +``` + +"page" is an integer \>= 0: + +```pycon +>>> try: +... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 'one'}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) +"expected int for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" +>>> schema({'q': '#topic', 'page': 1}) == {'q': '#topic', 'page': 1, 'per_page': 5} +True + +``` + +## Defining schemas + +Schemas are nested data structures consisting of dictionaries, lists, +scalars and *validators*. Each node in the input schema is pattern +matched against corresponding nodes in the input data. + +### Literals + +Literals in the schema are matched using normal equality checks: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema(1) +>>> schema(1) +1 +>>> schema = Schema('a string') +>>> schema('a string') +'a string' + +``` + +### Types + +Types in the schema are matched by checking if the corresponding value +is an instance of the type: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema(int) +>>> schema(1) +1 +>>> try: +... schema('one') +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "expected int" +True + +``` + +### URL's + +URL's in the schema are matched by using `urlparse` library. + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Url +>>> schema = Schema(Url()) +>>> schema('http://w3.org') +'http://w3.org' +>>> try: +... schema('one') +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "expected a URL" +True + +``` + +### Lists + +Lists in the schema are treated as a set of valid values. Each element +in the schema list is compared to each value in the input data: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema([1, 'a', 'string']) +>>> schema([1]) +[1] +>>> schema([1, 1, 1]) +[1, 1, 1] +>>> schema(['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string']) +['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string'] + +``` + +### Validation functions + +Validators are simple callables that raise an `Invalid` exception when +they encounter invalid data. The criteria for determining validity is +entirely up to the implementation; it may check that a value is a valid +username with `pwd.getpwnam()`, it may check that a value is of a +specific type, and so on. + +The simplest kind of validator is a Python function that raises +ValueError when its argument is invalid. Conveniently, many builtin +Python functions have this property. Here's an example of a date +validator: + +```pycon +>>> from datetime import datetime +>>> def Date(fmt='%Y-%m-%d'): +... return lambda v: datetime.strptime(v, fmt) + +``` + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema(Date()) +>>> schema('2013-03-03') +datetime.datetime(2013, 3, 3, 0, 0) +>>> try: +... schema('2013-03') +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "not a valid value" +True + +``` + +In addition to simply determining if a value is valid, validators may +mutate the value into a valid form. An example of this is the +`Coerce(type)` function, which returns a function that coerces its +argument to the given type: + +```python +def Coerce(type, msg=None): + """Coerce a value to a type. + + If the type constructor throws a ValueError, the value will be marked as + Invalid. + """ + def f(v): + try: + return type(v) + except ValueError: + raise Invalid(msg or ('expected %s' % type.__name__)) + return f + +``` + +This example also shows a common idiom where an optional human-readable +message can be provided. This can vastly improve the usefulness of the +resulting error messages. + +### Dictionaries + +Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each +key-value pair in the corresponding data dictionary: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema({1: 'one', 2: 'two'}) +>>> schema({1: 'one'}) +{1: 'one'} + +``` + +#### Extra dictionary keys + +By default any additional keys in the data, not in the schema will +trigger exceptions: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema({2: 3}) +>>> try: +... schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[1]" +True + +``` + +This behaviour can be altered on a per-schema basis. To allow +additional keys use +`Schema(..., extra=ALLOW_EXTRA)`: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import ALLOW_EXTRA +>>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=ALLOW_EXTRA) +>>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) +{1: 2, 2: 3} + +``` + +To remove additional keys use +`Schema(..., extra=REMOVE_EXTRA)`: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import REMOVE_EXTRA +>>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=REMOVE_EXTRA) +>>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) +{2: 3} + +``` + +It can also be overridden per-dictionary by using the catch-all marker +token `extra` as a key: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Extra +>>> schema = Schema({1: {Extra: object}}) +>>> schema({1: {'foo': 'bar'}}) +{1: {'foo': 'bar'}} + +``` + +#### Required dictionary keys + +By default, keys in the schema are not required to be in the data: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) +>>> schema({3: 4}) +{3: 4} + +``` + +Similarly to how extra\_ keys work, this behaviour can be overridden +per-schema: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}, required=True) +>>> try: +... schema({3: 4}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" +True + +``` + +And per-key, with the marker token `Required(key)`: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema({Required(1): 2, 3: 4}) +>>> try: +... schema({3: 4}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" +True +>>> schema({1: 2}) +{1: 2} + +``` + +#### Optional dictionary keys + +If a schema has `required=True`, keys may be individually marked as +optional using the marker token `Optional(key)`: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Optional +>>> schema = Schema({1: 2, Optional(3): 4}, required=True) +>>> try: +... schema({}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" +True +>>> schema({1: 2}) +{1: 2} +>>> try: +... schema({1: 2, 4: 5}) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[4]" +True + +``` + +```pycon +>>> schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) +{1: 2, 3: 4} + +``` + +### Recursive schema + +There is no syntax to have a recursive schema. The best way to do it is to have a wrapper like this: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Schema, Any +>>> def s2(v): +... return s1(v) +... +>>> s1 = Schema({"key": Any(s2, "value")}) +>>> s1({"key": {"key": "value"}}) +{'key': {'key': 'value'}} + +``` + +### Extending an existing Schema + +Often it comes handy to have a base `Schema` that is extended with more +requirements. In that case you can use `Schema.extend` to create a new +`Schema`: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Schema +>>> person = Schema({'name': str}) +>>> person_with_age = person.extend({'age': int}) +>>> sorted(list(person_with_age.schema.keys())) +['age', 'name'] + +``` + +The original `Schema` remains unchanged. + +### Objects + +Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each +attribute-value pair in the corresponding object: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Object +>>> class Structure(object): +... def __init__(self, q=None): +... self.q = q +... def __repr__(self): +... return ''.format(self) +... +>>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=Structure)) +>>> schema(Structure(q='one')) + + +``` + +### Allow None values + +To allow value to be None as well, use Any: + +```pycon +>>> from voluptuous import Any + +>>> schema = Schema(Any(None, int)) +>>> schema(None) +>>> schema(5) +5 + +``` + +## Error reporting + +Validators must throw an `Invalid` exception if invalid data is passed +to them. All other exceptions are treated as errors in the validator and +will not be caught. + +Each `Invalid` exception has an associated `path` attribute representing +the path in the data structure to our currently validating value, as well +as an `error_message` attribute that contains the message of the original +exception. This is especially useful when you want to catch `Invalid` +exceptions and give some feedback to the user, for instance in the context of +an HTTP API. + + +```pycon +>>> def validate_email(email): +... """Validate email.""" +... if not "@" in email: +... raise Invalid("This email is invalid.") +... return email +>>> schema = Schema({"email": validate_email}) +>>> exc = None +>>> try: +... schema({"email": "whatever"}) +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) +"This email is invalid. for dictionary value @ data['email']" +>>> exc.path +['email'] +>>> exc.msg +'This email is invalid.' +>>> exc.error_message +'This email is invalid.' + +``` + +The `path` attribute is used during error reporting, but also during matching +to determine whether an error should be reported to the user or if the next +match should be attempted. This is determined by comparing the depth of the +path where the check is, to the depth of the path where the error occurred. If +the error is more than one level deeper, it is reported. + +The upshot of this is that *matching is depth-first and fail-fast*. + +To illustrate this, here is an example schema: + +```pycon +>>> schema = Schema([[2, 3], 6]) + +``` + +Each value in the top-level list is matched depth-first in-order. Given +input data of `[[6]]`, the inner list will match the first element of +the schema, but the literal `6` will not match any of the elements of +that list. This error will be reported back to the user immediately. No +backtracking is attempted: + +```pycon +>>> try: +... schema([[6]]) +... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') +... except MultipleInvalid as e: +... exc = e +>>> str(exc) == "not a valid value @ data[0][0]" +True + +``` + +If we pass the data `[6]`, the `6` is not a list type and so will not +recurse into the first element of the schema. Matching will continue on +to the second element in the schema, and succeed: + +```pycon +>>> schema([6]) +[6] + +``` + +## Running tests. + +Voluptuous is using nosetests: + + $ nosetests + + +## Why use Voluptuous over another validation library? + +**Validators are simple callables** +: No need to subclass anything, just use a function. + +**Errors are simple exceptions.** +: A validator can just `raise Invalid(msg)` and expect the user to get +useful messages. + +**Schemas are basic Python data structures.** +: Should your data be a dictionary of integer keys to strings? +`{int: str}` does what you expect. List of integers, floats or +strings? `[int, float, str]`. + +**Designed from the ground up for validating more than just forms.** +: Nested data structures are treated in the same way as any other +type. Need a list of dictionaries? `[{}]` + +**Consistency.** +: Types in the schema are checked as types. Values are compared as +values. Callables are called to validate. Simple. + +## Other libraries and inspirations + +Voluptuous is heavily inspired by +[Validino](http://code.google.com/p/validino/), and to a lesser extent, +[jsonvalidator](http://code.google.com/p/jsonvalidator/) and +[json\_schema](http://blog.sendapatch.se/category/json_schema.html). + +I greatly prefer the light-weight style promoted by these libraries to +the complexity of libraries like FormEncode. diff --git a/python/voluptuous/README.rst b/python/voluptuous/README.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..aa68a7cb4 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/README.rst @@ -0,0 +1,589 @@ +Voluptuous is a Python data validation library +============================================== + +|Build Status| |Stories in Ready| + +Voluptuous, *despite* the name, is a Python data validation library. It +is primarily intended for validating data coming into Python as JSON, +YAML, etc. + +It has three goals: + +1. Simplicity. +2. Support for complex data structures. +3. Provide useful error messages. + +Contact +------- + +Voluptuous now has a mailing list! Send a mail to +` `__ to subscribe. Instructions will +follow. + +You can also contact me directly via `email `__ +or `Twitter `__. + +To file a bug, create a `new +issue `__ on GitHub +with a short example of how to replicate the issue. + +Show me an example +------------------ + +Twitter's `user search +API `__ accepts +query URLs like: + +:: + + $ curl 'http://api.twitter.com/1/users/search.json?q=python&per_page=20&page=1 + +To validate this we might use a schema like: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... 'q': str, + ... 'per_page': int, + ... 'page': int, + ... }) + +This schema very succinctly and roughly describes the data required by +the API, and will work fine. But it has a few problems. Firstly, it +doesn't fully express the constraints of the API. According to the API, +``per_page`` should be restricted to at most 20, defaulting to 5, for +example. To describe the semantics of the API more accurately, our +schema will need to be more thoroughly defined: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Required, All, Length, Range + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Required('q'): All(str, Length(min=1)), + ... Required('per_page', default=5): All(int, Range(min=1, max=20)), + ... 'page': All(int, Range(min=0)), + ... }) + +This schema fully enforces the interface defined in Twitter's +documentation, and goes a little further for completeness. + +"q" is required: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import MultipleInvalid, Invalid + >>> try: + ... schema({}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data['q']" + True + +...must be a string: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': 123}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected str for dictionary value @ data['q']" + True + +...and must be at least one character in length: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': ''}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "length of value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['q']" + True + >>> schema({'q': '#topic'}) == {'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 5} + True + +"per\_page" is a positive integer no greater than 20: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 900}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "value must be at most 20 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + True + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': -10}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "value must be at least 1 for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + True + +"page" is an integer >= 0: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema({'q': '#topic', 'per_page': 'one'}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "expected int for dictionary value @ data['per_page']" + >>> schema({'q': '#topic', 'page': 1}) == {'q': '#topic', 'page': 1, 'per_page': 5} + True + +Defining schemas +---------------- + +Schemas are nested data structures consisting of dictionaries, lists, +scalars and *validators*. Each node in the input schema is pattern +matched against corresponding nodes in the input data. + +Literals +~~~~~~~~ + +Literals in the schema are matched using normal equality checks: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(1) + >>> schema(1) + 1 + >>> schema = Schema('a string') + >>> schema('a string') + 'a string' + +Types +~~~~~ + +Types in the schema are matched by checking if the corresponding value +is an instance of the type: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(int) + >>> schema(1) + 1 + >>> try: + ... schema('one') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected int" + True + +URL's +~~~~~ + +URL's in the schema are matched by using ``urlparse`` library. + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Url + >>> schema = Schema(Url()) + >>> schema('http://w3.org') + 'http://w3.org' + >>> try: + ... schema('one') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "expected a URL" + True + +Lists +~~~~~ + +Lists in the schema are treated as a set of valid values. Each element +in the schema list is compared to each value in the input data: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema([1, 'a', 'string']) + >>> schema([1]) + [1] + >>> schema([1, 1, 1]) + [1, 1, 1] + >>> schema(['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string']) + ['a', 1, 'string', 1, 'string'] + +Validation functions +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Validators are simple callables that raise an ``Invalid`` exception when +they encounter invalid data. The criteria for determining validity is +entirely up to the implementation; it may check that a value is a valid +username with ``pwd.getpwnam()``, it may check that a value is of a +specific type, and so on. + +The simplest kind of validator is a Python function that raises +ValueError when its argument is invalid. Conveniently, many builtin +Python functions have this property. Here's an example of a date +validator: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from datetime import datetime + >>> def Date(fmt='%Y-%m-%d'): + ... return lambda v: datetime.strptime(v, fmt) + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema(Date()) + >>> schema('2013-03-03') + datetime.datetime(2013, 3, 3, 0, 0) + >>> try: + ... schema('2013-03') + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "not a valid value" + True + +In addition to simply determining if a value is valid, validators may +mutate the value into a valid form. An example of this is the +``Coerce(type)`` function, which returns a function that coerces its +argument to the given type: + +.. code:: python + + def Coerce(type, msg=None): + """Coerce a value to a type. + + If the type constructor throws a ValueError, the value will be marked as + Invalid. + """ + def f(v): + try: + return type(v) + except ValueError: + raise Invalid(msg or ('expected %s' % type.__name__)) + return f + +This example also shows a common idiom where an optional human-readable +message can be provided. This can vastly improve the usefulness of the +resulting error messages. + +Dictionaries +~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each +key-value pair in the corresponding data dictionary: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 'one', 2: 'two'}) + >>> schema({1: 'one'}) + {1: 'one'} + +Extra dictionary keys +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +By default any additional keys in the data, not in the schema will +trigger exceptions: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}) + >>> try: + ... schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[1]" + True + +This behaviour can be altered on a per-schema basis. To allow additional +keys use ``Schema(..., extra=ALLOW_EXTRA)``: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import ALLOW_EXTRA + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=ALLOW_EXTRA) + >>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + {1: 2, 2: 3} + +To remove additional keys use ``Schema(..., extra=REMOVE_EXTRA)``: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import REMOVE_EXTRA + >>> schema = Schema({2: 3}, extra=REMOVE_EXTRA) + >>> schema({1: 2, 2: 3}) + {2: 3} + +It can also be overridden per-dictionary by using the catch-all marker +token ``extra`` as a key: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Extra + >>> schema = Schema({1: {Extra: object}}) + >>> schema({1: {'foo': 'bar'}}) + {1: {'foo': 'bar'}} + +Required dictionary keys +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +By default, keys in the schema are not required to be in the data: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) + >>> schema({3: 4}) + {3: 4} + +Similarly to how extra\_ keys work, this behaviour can be overridden +per-schema: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, 3: 4}, required=True) + >>> try: + ... schema({3: 4}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + +And per-key, with the marker token ``Required(key)``: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema({Required(1): 2, 3: 4}) + >>> try: + ... schema({3: 4}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + >>> schema({1: 2}) + {1: 2} + +Optional dictionary keys +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +If a schema has ``required=True``, keys may be individually marked as +optional using the marker token ``Optional(key)``: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Optional + >>> schema = Schema({1: 2, Optional(3): 4}, required=True) + >>> try: + ... schema({}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "required key not provided @ data[1]" + True + >>> schema({1: 2}) + {1: 2} + >>> try: + ... schema({1: 2, 4: 5}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "extra keys not allowed @ data[4]" + True + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema({1: 2, 3: 4}) + {1: 2, 3: 4} + +Recursive schema +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +There is no syntax to have a recursive schema. The best way to do it is +to have a wrapper like this: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema, Any + >>> def s2(v): + ... return s1(v) + ... + >>> s1 = Schema({"key": Any(s2, "value")}) + >>> s1({"key": {"key": "value"}}) + {'key': {'key': 'value'}} + +Extending an existing Schema +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Often it comes handy to have a base ``Schema`` that is extended with +more requirements. In that case you can use ``Schema.extend`` to create +a new ``Schema``: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Schema + >>> person = Schema({'name': str}) + >>> person_with_age = person.extend({'age': int}) + >>> sorted(list(person_with_age.schema.keys())) + ['age', 'name'] + +The original ``Schema`` remains unchanged. + +Objects +~~~~~~~ + +Each key-value pair in a schema dictionary is validated against each +attribute-value pair in the corresponding object: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Object + >>> class Structure(object): + ... def __init__(self, q=None): + ... self.q = q + ... def __repr__(self): + ... return ''.format(self) + ... + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=Structure)) + >>> schema(Structure(q='one')) + + +Allow None values +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +To allow value to be None as well, use Any: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> from voluptuous import Any + + >>> schema = Schema(Any(None, int)) + >>> schema(None) + >>> schema(5) + 5 + +Error reporting +--------------- + +Validators must throw an ``Invalid`` exception if invalid data is passed +to them. All other exceptions are treated as errors in the validator and +will not be caught. + +Each ``Invalid`` exception has an associated ``path`` attribute +representing the path in the data structure to our currently validating +value, as well as an ``error_message`` attribute that contains the +message of the original exception. This is especially useful when you +want to catch ``Invalid`` exceptions and give some feedback to the user, +for instance in the context of an HTTP API. + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> def validate_email(email): + ... """Validate email.""" + ... if not "@" in email: + ... raise Invalid("This email is invalid.") + ... return email + >>> schema = Schema({"email": validate_email}) + >>> exc = None + >>> try: + ... schema({"email": "whatever"}) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "This email is invalid. for dictionary value @ data['email']" + >>> exc.path + ['email'] + >>> exc.msg + 'This email is invalid.' + >>> exc.error_message + 'This email is invalid.' + +The ``path`` attribute is used during error reporting, but also during +matching to determine whether an error should be reported to the user or +if the next match should be attempted. This is determined by comparing +the depth of the path where the check is, to the depth of the path where +the error occurred. If the error is more than one level deeper, it is +reported. + +The upshot of this is that *matching is depth-first and fail-fast*. + +To illustrate this, here is an example schema: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema = Schema([[2, 3], 6]) + +Each value in the top-level list is matched depth-first in-order. Given +input data of ``[[6]]``, the inner list will match the first element of +the schema, but the literal ``6`` will not match any of the elements of +that list. This error will be reported back to the user immediately. No +backtracking is attempted: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> try: + ... schema([[6]]) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == "not a valid value @ data[0][0]" + True + +If we pass the data ``[6]``, the ``6`` is not a list type and so will +not recurse into the first element of the schema. Matching will continue +on to the second element in the schema, and succeed: + +.. code:: pycon + + >>> schema([6]) + [6] + +Running tests. +-------------- + +Voluptuous is using nosetests: + +:: + + $ nosetests + +Why use Voluptuous over another validation library? +--------------------------------------------------- + +**Validators are simple callables** + No need to subclass anything, just use a function. +**Errors are simple exceptions.** + A validator can just ``raise Invalid(msg)`` and expect the user to + get useful messages. +**Schemas are basic Python data structures.** + Should your data be a dictionary of integer keys to strings? + ``{int: str}`` does what you expect. List of integers, floats or + strings? ``[int, float, str]``. +**Designed from the ground up for validating more than just forms.** + Nested data structures are treated in the same way as any other + type. Need a list of dictionaries? ``[{}]`` +**Consistency.** + Types in the schema are checked as types. Values are compared as + values. Callables are called to validate. Simple. + +Other libraries and inspirations +-------------------------------- + +Voluptuous is heavily inspired by +`Validino `__, and to a lesser +extent, `jsonvalidator `__ and +`json\_schema `__. + +I greatly prefer the light-weight style promoted by these libraries to +the complexity of libraries like FormEncode. + +.. |Build Status| image:: https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous.png + :target: https://travis-ci.org/alecthomas/voluptuous +.. |Stories in Ready| image:: https://badge.waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous.png?label=ready&title=Ready + :target: https://waffle.io/alecthomas/voluptuous diff --git a/python/voluptuous/setup.cfg b/python/voluptuous/setup.cfg new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f5b3b4dec --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/setup.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +[nosetests] +doctest-extension = md +with-doctest = 1 +where = . + +[egg_info] +tag_build = +tag_date = 0 +tag_svn_revision = 0 + diff --git a/python/voluptuous/setup.py b/python/voluptuous/setup.py new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2fc07251d --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/setup.py @@ -0,0 +1,54 @@ +try: + from setuptools import setup +except ImportError: + from distutils.core import setup + +import sys +import os +import atexit +sys.path.insert(0, '.') +version = __import__('voluptuous').__version__ + +try: + import pypandoc + long_description = pypandoc.convert('README.md', 'rst') + with open('README.rst', 'w') as f: + f.write(long_description) + atexit.register(lambda: os.unlink('README.rst')) +except (ImportError, OSError): + print('WARNING: Could not locate pandoc, using Markdown long_description.') + with open('README.md') as f: + long_description = f.read() + +description = long_description.splitlines()[0].strip() + + +setup( + name='voluptuous', + url='https://github.com/alecthomas/voluptuous', + download_url='https://pypi.python.org/pypi/voluptuous', + version=version, + description=description, + long_description=long_description, + license='BSD', + platforms=['any'], + py_modules=['voluptuous'], + author='Alec Thomas', + author_email='alec@swapoff.org', + classifiers=[ + 'Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable', + 'Intended Audience :: Developers', + 'License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License', + 'Operating System :: OS Independent', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 2', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3', + 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4', + ], + install_requires=[ + 'setuptools >= 0.6b1', + ], +) diff --git a/python/voluptuous/tests.md b/python/voluptuous/tests.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..18f6fbafa --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/tests.md @@ -0,0 +1,268 @@ +Error reporting should be accurate: + + >>> from voluptuous import * + >>> schema = Schema(['one', {'two': 'three', 'four': ['five'], + ... 'six': {'seven': 'eight'}}]) + >>> schema(['one']) + ['one'] + >>> schema([{'two': 'three'}]) + [{'two': 'three'}] + +It should show the exact index and container type, in this case a list +value: + + >>> try: + ... schema(['one', 'two']) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) == 'expected a dictionary @ data[1]' + True + +It should also be accurate for nested values: + + >>> try: + ... schema([{'two': 'nine'}]) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "not a valid value for dictionary value @ data[0]['two']" + + >>> try: + ... schema([{'four': ['nine']}]) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "not a valid value @ data[0]['four'][0]" + + >>> try: + ... schema([{'six': {'seven': 'nine'}}]) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "not a valid value for dictionary value @ data[0]['six']['seven']" + +Errors should be reported depth-first: + + >>> validate = Schema({'one': {'two': 'three', 'four': 'five'}}) + >>> try: + ... validate({'one': {'four': 'six'}}) + ... except Invalid as e: + ... print(e) + ... print(e.path) + not a valid value for dictionary value @ data['one']['four'] + ['one', 'four'] + +Voluptuous supports validation when extra fields are present in the +data: + + >>> schema = Schema({'one': 1, Extra: object}) + >>> schema({'two': 'two', 'one': 1}) == {'two': 'two', 'one': 1} + True + >>> schema = Schema({'one': 1}) + >>> try: + ... schema({'two': 2}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "extra keys not allowed @ data['two']" + +dict, list, and tuple should be available as type validators: + + >>> Schema(dict)({'a': 1, 'b': 2}) == {'a': 1, 'b': 2} + True + >>> Schema(list)([1,2,3]) + [1, 2, 3] + >>> Schema(tuple)((1,2,3)) + (1, 2, 3) + +Validation should return instances of the right types when the types are +subclasses of dict or list: + + >>> class Dict(dict): + ... pass + >>> + >>> d = Schema(dict)(Dict(a=1, b=2)) + >>> d == {'a': 1, 'b': 2} + True + >>> type(d) is Dict + True + >>> class List(list): + ... pass + >>> + >>> l = Schema(list)(List([1,2,3])) + >>> l + [1, 2, 3] + >>> type(l) is List + True + +Multiple errors are reported: + + >>> schema = Schema({'one': 1, 'two': 2}) + >>> try: + ... schema({'one': 2, 'two': 3, 'three': 4}) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... errors = sorted(e.errors, key=lambda k: str(k)) + ... print([str(i) for i in errors]) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE + ["extra keys not allowed @ data['three']", + "not a valid value for dictionary value @ data['one']", + "not a valid value for dictionary value @ data['two']"] + >>> schema = Schema([[1], [2], [3]]) + >>> try: + ... schema([1, 2, 3]) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... print([str(i) for i in e.errors]) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE + ['expected a list @ data[0]', + 'expected a list @ data[1]', + 'expected a list @ data[2]'] + +Required fields in dictionary which are invalid should not have required : + + >>> from voluptuous import * + >>> schema = Schema({'one': {'two': 3}}, required=True) + >>> try: + ... schema({'one': {'two': 2}}) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... errors = e.errors + >>> 'required' in ' '.join([x.msg for x in errors]) + False + +Multiple errors for nested fields in dicts and objects: + +> \>\>\> from collections import namedtuple \>\>\> validate = Schema({ +> ... 'anobject': Object({ ... 'strfield': str, ... 'intfield': int ... +> }) ... }) \>\>\> try: ... SomeObj = namedtuple('SomeObj', ('strfield', +> 'intfield')) ... validate({'anobject': SomeObj(strfield=123, +> intfield='one')}) ... except MultipleInvalid as e: ... +> print(sorted(str(i) for i in e.errors)) \# doctest: +> +NORMALIZE\_WHITESPACE ["expected int for object value @ +> data['anobject']['intfield']", "expected str for object value @ +> data['anobject']['strfield']"] + +Custom classes validate as schemas: + + >>> class Thing(object): + ... pass + >>> schema = Schema(Thing) + >>> t = schema(Thing()) + >>> type(t) is Thing + True + +Classes with custom metaclasses should validate as schemas: + + >>> class MyMeta(type): + ... pass + >>> class Thing(object): + ... __metaclass__ = MyMeta + >>> schema = Schema(Thing) + >>> t = schema(Thing()) + >>> type(t) is Thing + True + +Schemas built with All() should give the same error as the original +validator (Issue \#26): + + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Required('items'): All([{ + ... Required('foo'): str + ... }]) + ... }) + + >>> try: + ... schema({'items': [{}]}) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "required key not provided @ data['items'][0]['foo']" + +Validator should return same instance of the same type for object: + + >>> class Structure(object): + ... def __init__(self, q=None): + ... self.q = q + ... def __repr__(self): + ... return '{0.__name__}(q={1.q!r})'.format(type(self), self) + ... + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=Structure)) + >>> type(schema(Structure(q='one'))) is Structure + True + +Object validator should treat cls argument as optional. In this case it +shouldn't check object type: + + >>> from collections import namedtuple + >>> NamedTuple = namedtuple('NamedTuple', ('q',)) + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'})) + >>> named = NamedTuple(q='one') + >>> schema(named) == named + True + >>> schema(named) + NamedTuple(q='one') + +If cls argument passed to object validator we should check object type: + + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=Structure)) + >>> schema(NamedTuple(q='one')) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + MultipleInvalid: expected a + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'}, cls=NamedTuple)) + >>> schema(NamedTuple(q='one')) + NamedTuple(q='one') + +Ensure that objects with \_\_slots\_\_ supported properly: + + >>> class SlotsStructure(Structure): + ... __slots__ = ['q'] + ... + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one'})) + >>> schema(SlotsStructure(q='one')) + SlotsStructure(q='one') + >>> class DictStructure(object): + ... __slots__ = ['q', '__dict__'] + ... def __init__(self, q=None, page=None): + ... self.q = q + ... self.page = page + ... def __repr__(self): + ... return '{0.__name__}(q={1.q!r}, page={1.page!r})'.format(type(self), self) + ... + >>> structure = DictStructure(q='one') + >>> structure.page = 1 + >>> try: + ... schema(structure) + ... raise AssertionError('MultipleInvalid not raised') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> str(exc) + "extra keys not allowed @ data['page']" + + >>> schema = Schema(Object({'q': 'one', Extra: object})) + >>> schema(structure) + DictStructure(q='one', page=1) + +Ensure that objects can be used with other validators: + + >>> schema = Schema({'meta': Object({'q': 'one'})}) + >>> schema({'meta': Structure(q='one')}) + {'meta': Structure(q='one')} + +Ensure that subclasses of Invalid of are raised as is. + + >>> class SpecialInvalid(Invalid): + ... pass + ... + >>> def custom_validator(value): + ... raise SpecialInvalid('boom') + ... + >>> schema = Schema({'thing': custom_validator}) + >>> try: + ... schema({'thing': 'not an int'}) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... exc = e + >>> exc.errors[0].__class__.__name__ + 'SpecialInvalid' diff --git a/python/voluptuous/voluptuous.py b/python/voluptuous/voluptuous.py new file mode 100644 index 000000000..132c3c476 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/voluptuous/voluptuous.py @@ -0,0 +1,1954 @@ +# encoding: utf-8 +# +# Copyright (C) 2010-2013 Alec Thomas +# All rights reserved. +# +# This software is licensed as described in the file COPYING, which +# you should have received as part of this distribution. +# +# Author: Alec Thomas + +"""Schema validation for Python data structures. + +Given eg. a nested data structure like this: + + { + 'exclude': ['Users', 'Uptime'], + 'include': [], + 'set': { + 'snmp_community': 'public', + 'snmp_timeout': 15, + 'snmp_version': '2c', + }, + 'targets': { + 'localhost': { + 'exclude': ['Uptime'], + 'features': { + 'Uptime': { + 'retries': 3, + }, + 'Users': { + 'snmp_community': 'monkey', + 'snmp_port': 15, + }, + }, + 'include': ['Users'], + 'set': { + 'snmp_community': 'monkeys', + }, + }, + }, + } + +A schema like this: + + >>> settings = { + ... 'snmp_community': str, + ... 'retries': int, + ... 'snmp_version': All(Coerce(str), Any('3', '2c', '1')), + ... } + >>> features = ['Ping', 'Uptime', 'Http'] + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... 'exclude': features, + ... 'include': features, + ... 'set': settings, + ... 'targets': { + ... 'exclude': features, + ... 'include': features, + ... 'features': { + ... str: settings, + ... }, + ... }, + ... }) + +Validate like so: + + >>> schema({ + ... 'set': { + ... 'snmp_community': 'public', + ... 'snmp_version': '2c', + ... }, + ... 'targets': { + ... 'exclude': ['Ping'], + ... 'features': { + ... 'Uptime': {'retries': 3}, + ... 'Users': {'snmp_community': 'monkey'}, + ... }, + ... }, + ... }) == { + ... 'set': {'snmp_version': '2c', 'snmp_community': 'public'}, + ... 'targets': { + ... 'exclude': ['Ping'], + ... 'features': {'Uptime': {'retries': 3}, + ... 'Users': {'snmp_community': 'monkey'}}}} + True +""" +import collections +import datetime +import inspect +import os +import re +import sys +from contextlib import contextmanager +from functools import wraps + + +if sys.version_info >= (3,): + import urllib.parse as urlparse + long = int + unicode = str + basestring = str + ifilter = filter + iteritems = lambda d: d.items() +else: + from itertools import ifilter + import urlparse + iteritems = lambda d: d.iteritems() + + +__author__ = 'Alec Thomas ' +__version__ = '0.8.11' + + +@contextmanager +def raises(exc, msg=None, regex=None): + try: + yield + except exc as e: + if msg is not None: + assert str(e) == msg, '%r != %r' % (str(e), msg) + if regex is not None: + assert re.search(regex, str(e)), '%r does not match %r' % (str(e), regex) + + +class Undefined(object): + def __nonzero__(self): + return False + + def __repr__(self): + return '...' + + +UNDEFINED = Undefined() + + +def default_factory(value): + if value is UNDEFINED or callable(value): + return value + return lambda: value + + +# options for extra keys +PREVENT_EXTRA = 0 # any extra key not in schema will raise an error +ALLOW_EXTRA = 1 # extra keys not in schema will be included in output +REMOVE_EXTRA = 2 # extra keys not in schema will be excluded from output + + +class Error(Exception): + """Base validation exception.""" + + +class SchemaError(Error): + """An error was encountered in the schema.""" + + +class Invalid(Error): + """The data was invalid. + + :attr msg: The error message. + :attr path: The path to the error, as a list of keys in the source data. + :attr error_message: The actual error message that was raised, as a + string. + + """ + + def __init__(self, message, path=None, error_message=None, error_type=None): + Error.__init__(self, message) + self.path = path or [] + self.error_message = error_message or message + self.error_type = error_type + + @property + def msg(self): + return self.args[0] + + def __str__(self): + path = ' @ data[%s]' % ']['.join(map(repr, self.path)) \ + if self.path else '' + output = Exception.__str__(self) + if self.error_type: + output += ' for ' + self.error_type + return output + path + + def prepend(self, path): + self.path = path + self.path + + +class MultipleInvalid(Invalid): + def __init__(self, errors=None): + self.errors = errors[:] if errors else [] + + def __repr__(self): + return 'MultipleInvalid(%r)' % self.errors + + @property + def msg(self): + return self.errors[0].msg + + @property + def path(self): + return self.errors[0].path + + @property + def error_message(self): + return self.errors[0].error_message + + def add(self, error): + self.errors.append(error) + + def __str__(self): + return str(self.errors[0]) + + def prepend(self, path): + for error in self.errors: + error.prepend(path) + + +class RequiredFieldInvalid(Invalid): + """Required field was missing.""" + + +class ObjectInvalid(Invalid): + """The value we found was not an object.""" + + +class DictInvalid(Invalid): + """The value found was not a dict.""" + + +class ExclusiveInvalid(Invalid): + """More than one value found in exclusion group.""" + + +class InclusiveInvalid(Invalid): + """Not all values found in inclusion group.""" + + +class SequenceTypeInvalid(Invalid): + """The type found is not a sequence type.""" + + +class TypeInvalid(Invalid): + """The value was not of required type.""" + + +class ValueInvalid(Invalid): + """The value was found invalid by evaluation function.""" + + +class ScalarInvalid(Invalid): + """Scalars did not match.""" + + +class CoerceInvalid(Invalid): + """Impossible to coerce value to type.""" + + +class AnyInvalid(Invalid): + """The value did not pass any validator.""" + + +class AllInvalid(Invalid): + """The value did not pass all validators.""" + + +class MatchInvalid(Invalid): + """The value does not match the given regular expression.""" + + +class RangeInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not in given range.""" + + +class TrueInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not True.""" + + +class FalseInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not False.""" + + +class BooleanInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a boolean.""" + + +class UrlInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a url.""" + + +class FileInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a file.""" + + +class DirInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a directory.""" + + +class PathInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a path.""" + + +class LiteralInvalid(Invalid): + """The literal values do not match.""" + + +class VirtualPathComponent(str): + def __str__(self): + return '<' + self + '>' + + def __repr__(self): + return self.__str__() + + +class Schema(object): + """A validation schema. + + The schema is a Python tree-like structure where nodes are pattern + matched against corresponding trees of values. + + Nodes can be values, in which case a direct comparison is used, types, + in which case an isinstance() check is performed, or callables, which will + validate and optionally convert the value. + """ + + _extra_to_name = { + REMOVE_EXTRA: 'REMOVE_EXTRA', + ALLOW_EXTRA: 'ALLOW_EXTRA', + PREVENT_EXTRA: 'PREVENT_EXTRA', + } + + def __init__(self, schema, required=False, extra=PREVENT_EXTRA): + """Create a new Schema. + + :param schema: Validation schema. See :module:`voluptuous` for details. + :param required: Keys defined in the schema must be in the data. + :param extra: Specify how extra keys in the data are treated: + - :const:`~voluptuous.PREVENT_EXTRA`: to disallow any undefined + extra keys (raise ``Invalid``). + - :const:`~voluptuous.ALLOW_EXTRA`: to include undefined extra + keys in the output. + - :const:`~voluptuous.REMOVE_EXTRA`: to exclude undefined extra keys + from the output. + - Any value other than the above defaults to + :const:`~voluptuous.PREVENT_EXTRA` + """ + self.schema = schema + self.required = required + self.extra = int(extra) # ensure the value is an integer + self._compiled = self._compile(schema) + + def __repr__(self): + return "" % ( + self.schema, self._extra_to_name.get(self.extra, '??'), + self.required, id(self)) + + def __call__(self, data): + """Validate data against this schema.""" + try: + return self._compiled([], data) + except MultipleInvalid: + raise + except Invalid as e: + raise MultipleInvalid([e]) + # return self.validate([], self.schema, data) + + def _compile(self, schema): + if schema is Extra: + return lambda _, v: v + if isinstance(schema, Object): + return self._compile_object(schema) + if isinstance(schema, collections.Mapping): + return self._compile_dict(schema) + elif isinstance(schema, list): + return self._compile_list(schema) + elif isinstance(schema, tuple): + return self._compile_tuple(schema) + type_ = type(schema) + if type_ is type: + type_ = schema + if type_ in (bool, int, long, str, unicode, float, complex, object, + list, dict, type(None)) or callable(schema): + return _compile_scalar(schema) + raise SchemaError('unsupported schema data type %r' % + type(schema).__name__) + + def _compile_mapping(self, schema, invalid_msg=None): + """Create validator for given mapping.""" + invalid_msg = invalid_msg or 'mapping value' + + # Keys that may be required + all_required_keys = set(key for key in schema + if key is not Extra + and ((self.required and not isinstance(key, (Optional, Remove))) + or isinstance(key, Required))) + + # Keys that may have defaults + all_default_keys = set(key for key in schema + if isinstance(key, Required) + or isinstance(key, Optional)) + + _compiled_schema = {} + for skey, svalue in iteritems(schema): + new_key = self._compile(skey) + new_value = self._compile(svalue) + _compiled_schema[skey] = (new_key, new_value) + + candidates = list(_iterate_mapping_candidates(_compiled_schema)) + + def validate_mapping(path, iterable, out): + required_keys = all_required_keys.copy() + # keeps track of all default keys that haven't been filled + default_keys = all_default_keys.copy() + error = None + errors = [] + for key, value in iterable: + key_path = path + [key] + remove_key = False + + # compare each given key/value against all compiled key/values + # schema key, (compiled key, compiled value) + for skey, (ckey, cvalue) in candidates: + try: + new_key = ckey(key_path, key) + except Invalid as e: + if len(e.path) > len(key_path): + raise + if not error or len(e.path) > len(error.path): + error = e + continue + # Backtracking is not performed once a key is selected, so if + # the value is invalid we immediately throw an exception. + exception_errors = [] + # check if the key is marked for removal + is_remove = new_key is Remove + try: + cval = cvalue(key_path, value) + # include if it's not marked for removal + if not is_remove: + out[new_key] = cval + else: + remove_key = True + continue + except MultipleInvalid as e: + exception_errors.extend(e.errors) + except Invalid as e: + exception_errors.append(e) + + if exception_errors: + if is_remove or remove_key: + continue + for err in exception_errors: + if len(err.path) <= len(key_path): + err.error_type = invalid_msg + errors.append(err) + # If there is a validation error for a required + # key, this means that the key was provided. + # Discard the required key so it does not + # create an additional, noisy exception. + required_keys.discard(skey) + break + + # Key and value okay, mark any Required() fields as found. + required_keys.discard(skey) + + # No need for a default if it was filled + default_keys.discard(skey) + + break + else: + if remove_key: + # remove key + continue + elif self.extra == ALLOW_EXTRA: + out[key] = value + elif self.extra != REMOVE_EXTRA: + errors.append(Invalid('extra keys not allowed', key_path)) + # else REMOVE_EXTRA: ignore the key so it's removed from output + + # set defaults for any that can have defaults + for key in default_keys: + if not isinstance(key.default, Undefined): # if the user provides a default with the node + out[key.schema] = key.default() + if key in required_keys: + required_keys.discard(key) + + # for any required keys left that weren't found and don't have defaults: + for key in required_keys: + msg = key.msg if hasattr(key, 'msg') and key.msg else 'required key not provided' + errors.append(RequiredFieldInvalid(msg, path + [key])) + if errors: + raise MultipleInvalid(errors) + + return out + + return validate_mapping + + def _compile_object(self, schema): + """Validate an object. + + Has the same behavior as dictionary validator but work with object + attributes. + + For example: + + >>> class Structure(object): + ... def __init__(self, one=None, three=None): + ... self.one = one + ... self.three = three + ... + >>> validate = Schema(Object({'one': 'two', 'three': 'four'}, cls=Structure)) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "not a valid value for object value @ data['one']"): + ... validate(Structure(one='three')) + + """ + base_validate = self._compile_mapping( + schema, invalid_msg='object value') + + def validate_object(path, data): + if (schema.cls is not UNDEFINED + and not isinstance(data, schema.cls)): + raise ObjectInvalid('expected a {0!r}'.format(schema.cls), path) + iterable = _iterate_object(data) + iterable = ifilter(lambda item: item[1] is not None, iterable) + out = base_validate(path, iterable, {}) + return type(data)(**out) + + return validate_object + + def _compile_dict(self, schema): + """Validate a dictionary. + + A dictionary schema can contain a set of values, or at most one + validator function/type. + + A dictionary schema will only validate a dictionary: + + >>> validate = Schema({}) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected a dictionary'): + ... validate([]) + + An invalid dictionary value: + + >>> validate = Schema({'one': 'two', 'three': 'four'}) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "not a valid value for dictionary value @ data['one']"): + ... validate({'one': 'three'}) + + An invalid key: + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "extra keys not allowed @ data['two']"): + ... validate({'two': 'three'}) + + + Validation function, in this case the "int" type: + + >>> validate = Schema({'one': 'two', 'three': 'four', int: str}) + + Valid integer input: + + >>> validate({10: 'twenty'}) + {10: 'twenty'} + + By default, a "type" in the schema (in this case "int") will be used + purely to validate that the corresponding value is of that type. It + will not Coerce the value: + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "extra keys not allowed @ data['10']"): + ... validate({'10': 'twenty'}) + + Wrap them in the Coerce() function to achieve this: + + >>> validate = Schema({'one': 'two', 'three': 'four', + ... Coerce(int): str}) + >>> validate({'10': 'twenty'}) + {10: 'twenty'} + + Custom message for required key + + >>> validate = Schema({Required('one', 'required'): 'two'}) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "required @ data['one']"): + ... validate({}) + + (This is to avoid unexpected surprises.) + + Multiple errors for nested field in a dict: + + >>> validate = Schema({ + ... 'adict': { + ... 'strfield': str, + ... 'intfield': int + ... } + ... }) + >>> try: + ... validate({ + ... 'adict': { + ... 'strfield': 123, + ... 'intfield': 'one' + ... } + ... }) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... print(sorted(str(i) for i in e.errors)) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE + ["expected int for dictionary value @ data['adict']['intfield']", + "expected str for dictionary value @ data['adict']['strfield']"] + + """ + base_validate = self._compile_mapping( + schema, invalid_msg='dictionary value') + + groups_of_exclusion = {} + groups_of_inclusion = {} + for node in schema: + if isinstance(node, Exclusive): + g = groups_of_exclusion.setdefault(node.group_of_exclusion, []) + g.append(node) + elif isinstance(node, Inclusive): + g = groups_of_inclusion.setdefault(node.group_of_inclusion, []) + g.append(node) + + def validate_dict(path, data): + if not isinstance(data, dict): + raise DictInvalid('expected a dictionary', path) + + errors = [] + for label, group in groups_of_exclusion.items(): + exists = False + for exclusive in group: + if exclusive.schema in data: + if exists: + msg = exclusive.msg if hasattr(exclusive, 'msg') and exclusive.msg else \ + "two or more values in the same group of exclusion '%s'" % label + next_path = path + [VirtualPathComponent(label)] + errors.append(ExclusiveInvalid(msg, next_path)) + break + exists = True + + if errors: + raise MultipleInvalid(errors) + + for label, group in groups_of_inclusion.items(): + included = [node.schema in data for node in group] + if any(included) and not all(included): + msg = "some but not all values in the same group of inclusion '%s'" % label + for g in group: + if hasattr(g, 'msg') and g.msg: + msg = g.msg + break + next_path = path + [VirtualPathComponent(label)] + errors.append(InclusiveInvalid(msg, next_path)) + break + + if errors: + raise MultipleInvalid(errors) + + out = {} + return base_validate(path, iteritems(data), out) + + return validate_dict + + def _compile_sequence(self, schema, seq_type): + """Validate a sequence type. + + This is a sequence of valid values or validators tried in order. + + >>> validator = Schema(['one', 'two', int]) + >>> validator(['one']) + ['one'] + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int @ data[0]'): + ... validator([3.5]) + >>> validator([1]) + [1] + """ + _compiled = [self._compile(s) for s in schema] + seq_type_name = seq_type.__name__ + + def validate_sequence(path, data): + if not isinstance(data, seq_type): + raise SequenceTypeInvalid('expected a %s' % seq_type_name, path) + + # Empty seq schema, allow any data. + if not schema: + return data + + out = [] + invalid = None + errors = [] + index_path = UNDEFINED + for i, value in enumerate(data): + index_path = path + [i] + invalid = None + for validate in _compiled: + try: + cval = validate(index_path, value) + if cval is not Remove: # do not include Remove values + out.append(cval) + break + except Invalid as e: + if len(e.path) > len(index_path): + raise + invalid = e + else: + errors.append(invalid) + if errors: + raise MultipleInvalid(errors) + return type(data)(out) + return validate_sequence + + def _compile_tuple(self, schema): + """Validate a tuple. + + A tuple is a sequence of valid values or validators tried in order. + + >>> validator = Schema(('one', 'two', int)) + >>> validator(('one',)) + ('one',) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int @ data[0]'): + ... validator((3.5,)) + >>> validator((1,)) + (1,) + """ + return self._compile_sequence(schema, tuple) + + def _compile_list(self, schema): + """Validate a list. + + A list is a sequence of valid values or validators tried in order. + + >>> validator = Schema(['one', 'two', int]) + >>> validator(['one']) + ['one'] + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int @ data[0]'): + ... validator([3.5]) + >>> validator([1]) + [1] + """ + return self._compile_sequence(schema, list) + + def extend(self, schema, required=None, extra=None): + """Create a new `Schema` by merging this and the provided `schema`. + + Neither this `Schema` nor the provided `schema` are modified. The + resulting `Schema` inherits the `required` and `extra` parameters of + this, unless overridden. + + Both schemas must be dictionary-based. + + :param schema: dictionary to extend this `Schema` with + :param required: if set, overrides `required` of this `Schema` + :param extra: if set, overrides `extra` of this `Schema` + """ + + assert type(self.schema) == dict and type(schema) == dict, 'Both schemas must be dictionary-based' + + result = self.schema.copy() + result.update(schema) + + result_required = (required if required is not None else self.required) + result_extra = (extra if extra is not None else self.extra) + return Schema(result, required=result_required, extra=result_extra) + + +def _compile_scalar(schema): + """A scalar value. + + The schema can either be a value or a type. + + >>> _compile_scalar(int)([], 1) + 1 + >>> with raises(Invalid, 'expected float'): + ... _compile_scalar(float)([], '1') + + Callables have + >>> _compile_scalar(lambda v: float(v))([], '1') + 1.0 + + As a convenience, ValueError's are trapped: + + >>> with raises(Invalid, 'not a valid value'): + ... _compile_scalar(lambda v: float(v))([], 'a') + """ + if isinstance(schema, type): + def validate_instance(path, data): + if isinstance(data, schema): + return data + else: + msg = 'expected %s' % schema.__name__ + raise TypeInvalid(msg, path) + return validate_instance + + if callable(schema): + def validate_callable(path, data): + try: + return schema(data) + except ValueError as e: + raise ValueInvalid('not a valid value', path) + except Invalid as e: + e.prepend(path) + raise + return validate_callable + + def validate_value(path, data): + if data != schema: + raise ScalarInvalid('not a valid value', path) + return data + + return validate_value + + +def _compile_itemsort(): + '''return sort function of mappings''' + def is_extra(key_): + return key_ is Extra + + def is_remove(key_): + return isinstance(key_, Remove) + + def is_marker(key_): + return isinstance(key_, Marker) + + def is_type(key_): + return inspect.isclass(key_) + + def is_callable(key_): + return callable(key_) + + # priority list for map sorting (in order of checking) + # We want Extra to match last, because it's a catch-all. On the other hand, + # Remove markers should match first (since invalid values will not + # raise an Error, instead the validator will check if other schemas match + # the same value). + priority = [(1, is_remove), # Remove highest priority after values + (2, is_marker), # then other Markers + (4, is_type), # types/classes lowest before Extra + (3, is_callable), # callables after markers + (5, is_extra)] # Extra lowest priority + + def item_priority(item_): + key_ = item_[0] + for i, check_ in priority: + if check_(key_): + return i + # values have hightest priorities + return 0 + + return item_priority + +_sort_item = _compile_itemsort() + + +def _iterate_mapping_candidates(schema): + """Iterate over schema in a meaningful order.""" + # Without this, Extra might appear first in the iterator, and fail to + # validate a key even though it's a Required that has its own validation, + # generating a false positive. + return sorted(iteritems(schema), key=_sort_item) + + +def _iterate_object(obj): + """Return iterator over object attributes. Respect objects with + defined __slots__. + + """ + d = {} + try: + d = vars(obj) + except TypeError: + # maybe we have named tuple here? + if hasattr(obj, '_asdict'): + d = obj._asdict() + for item in iteritems(d): + yield item + try: + slots = obj.__slots__ + except AttributeError: + pass + else: + for key in slots: + if key != '__dict__': + yield (key, getattr(obj, key)) + raise StopIteration() + + +class Object(dict): + """Indicate that we should work with attributes, not keys.""" + + def __init__(self, schema, cls=UNDEFINED): + self.cls = cls + super(Object, self).__init__(schema) + + +class Marker(object): + """Mark nodes for special treatment.""" + + def __init__(self, schema, msg=None): + self.schema = schema + self._schema = Schema(schema) + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + return self._schema(v) + except Invalid as e: + if not self.msg or len(e.path) > 1: + raise + raise Invalid(self.msg) + + def __str__(self): + return str(self.schema) + + def __repr__(self): + return repr(self.schema) + + def __lt__(self, other): + return self.schema < other.schema + + +class Optional(Marker): + """Mark a node in the schema as optional, and optionally provide a default + + >>> schema = Schema({Optional('key'): str}) + >>> schema({}) + {} + >>> schema = Schema({Optional('key', default='value'): str}) + >>> schema({}) + {'key': 'value'} + >>> schema = Schema({Optional('key', default=list): list}) + >>> schema({}) + {'key': []} + + If 'required' flag is set for an entire schema, optional keys aren't required + + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Optional('key'): str, + ... 'key2': str + ... }, required=True) + >>> schema({'key2':'value'}) + {'key2': 'value'} + """ + def __init__(self, schema, msg=None, default=UNDEFINED): + super(Optional, self).__init__(schema, msg=msg) + self.default = default_factory(default) + + +class Exclusive(Optional): + """Mark a node in the schema as exclusive. + + Exclusive keys inherited from Optional: + + >>> schema = Schema({Exclusive('alpha', 'angles'): int, Exclusive('beta', 'angles'): int}) + >>> schema({'alpha': 30}) + {'alpha': 30} + + Keys inside a same group of exclusion cannot be together, it only makes sense for dictionaries: + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "two or more values in the same group of exclusion 'angles' @ data[]"): + ... schema({'alpha': 30, 'beta': 45}) + + For example, API can provides multiple types of authentication, but only one works in the same time: + + >>> msg = 'Please, use only one type of authentication at the same time.' + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Exclusive('classic', 'auth', msg=msg):{ + ... Required('email'): basestring, + ... Required('password'): basestring + ... }, + ... Exclusive('internal', 'auth', msg=msg):{ + ... Required('secret_key'): basestring + ... }, + ... Exclusive('social', 'auth', msg=msg):{ + ... Required('social_network'): basestring, + ... Required('token'): basestring + ... } + ... }) + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "Please, use only one type of authentication at the same time. @ data[]"): + ... schema({'classic': {'email': 'foo@example.com', 'password': 'bar'}, + ... 'social': {'social_network': 'barfoo', 'token': 'tEMp'}}) + """ + def __init__(self, schema, group_of_exclusion, msg=None): + super(Exclusive, self).__init__(schema, msg=msg) + self.group_of_exclusion = group_of_exclusion + + +class Inclusive(Optional): + """ Mark a node in the schema as inclusive. + + Exclusive keys inherited from Optional: + + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Inclusive('filename', 'file'): str, + ... Inclusive('mimetype', 'file'): str + ... }) + >>> data = {'filename': 'dog.jpg', 'mimetype': 'image/jpeg'} + >>> data == schema(data) + True + + Keys inside a same group of inclusive must exist together, it only makes sense for dictionaries: + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "some but not all values in the same group of inclusion 'file' @ data[]"): + ... schema({'filename': 'dog.jpg'}) + + If none of the keys in the group are present, it is accepted: + + >>> schema({}) + {} + + For example, API can return 'height' and 'width' together, but not separately. + + >>> msg = "Height and width must exist together" + >>> schema = Schema({ + ... Inclusive('height', 'size', msg=msg): int, + ... Inclusive('width', 'size', msg=msg): int + ... }) + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, msg + " @ data[]"): + ... schema({'height': 100}) + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, msg + " @ data[]"): + ... schema({'width': 100}) + + >>> data = {'height': 100, 'width': 100} + >>> data == schema(data) + True + """ + + def __init__(self, schema, group_of_inclusion, msg=None): + super(Inclusive, self).__init__(schema, msg=msg) + self.group_of_inclusion = group_of_inclusion + + +class Required(Marker): + """Mark a node in the schema as being required, and optionally provide a default value. + + >>> schema = Schema({Required('key'): str}) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "required key not provided @ data['key']"): + ... schema({}) + + >>> schema = Schema({Required('key', default='value'): str}) + >>> schema({}) + {'key': 'value'} + >>> schema = Schema({Required('key', default=list): list}) + >>> schema({}) + {'key': []} + """ + def __init__(self, schema, msg=None, default=UNDEFINED): + super(Required, self).__init__(schema, msg=msg) + self.default = default_factory(default) + + +class Remove(Marker): + """Mark a node in the schema to be removed and excluded from the validated + output. Keys that fail validation will not raise ``Invalid``. Instead, these + keys will be treated as extras. + + >>> schema = Schema({str: int, Remove(int): str}) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "extra keys not allowed @ data[1]"): + ... schema({'keep': 1, 1: 1.0}) + >>> schema({1: 'red', 'red': 1, 2: 'green'}) + {'red': 1} + >>> schema = Schema([int, Remove(float), Extra]) + >>> schema([1, 2, 3, 4.0, 5, 6.0, '7']) + [1, 2, 3, 5, '7'] + """ + def __call__(self, v): + super(Remove, self).__call__(v) + return self.__class__ + + def __repr__(self): + return "Remove(%r)" % (self.schema,) + + +def Extra(_): + """Allow keys in the data that are not present in the schema.""" + raise SchemaError('"Extra" should never be called') + + +# As extra() is never called there's no way to catch references to the +# deprecated object, so we just leave an alias here instead. +extra = Extra + +class Msg(object): + """Report a user-friendly message if a schema fails to validate. + + >>> validate = Schema( + ... Msg(['one', 'two', int], + ... 'should be one of "one", "two" or an integer')) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'should be one of "one", "two" or an integer'): + ... validate(['three']) + + Messages are only applied to invalid direct descendants of the schema: + + >>> validate = Schema(Msg([['one', 'two', int]], 'not okay!')) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int @ data[0][0]'): + ... validate([['three']]) + + The type which is thrown can be overridden but needs to be a subclass of Invalid + + >>> with raises(SchemaError, 'Msg can only use subclases of Invalid as custom class'): + ... validate = Schema(Msg([int], 'should be int', cls=KeyError)) + + If you do use a subclass of Invalid, that error will be thrown (wrapped in a MultipleInvalid) + + >>> validate = Schema(Msg([['one', 'two', int]], 'not okay!', cls=RangeInvalid)) + >>> try: + ... validate(['three']) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... assert isinstance(e.errors[0], RangeInvalid) + """ + + def __init__(self, schema, msg, cls=None): + if cls and not issubclass(cls, Invalid): + raise SchemaError("Msg can only use subclases of" + " Invalid as custom class") + self._schema = schema + self.schema = Schema(schema) + self.msg = msg + self.cls = cls + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + return self.schema(v) + except Invalid as e: + if len(e.path) > 1: + raise e + else: + raise (self.cls or Invalid)(self.msg) + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Msg(%s, %s, cls=%s)' % (self._schema, self.msg, self.cls) + + +def message(default=None, cls=None): + """Convenience decorator to allow functions to provide a message. + + Set a default message: + + >>> @message('not an integer') + ... def isint(v): + ... return int(v) + + >>> validate = Schema(isint()) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'not an integer'): + ... validate('a') + + The message can be overridden on a per validator basis: + + >>> validate = Schema(isint('bad')) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'bad'): + ... validate('a') + + The class thrown too: + + >>> class IntegerInvalid(Invalid): pass + >>> validate = Schema(isint('bad', clsoverride=IntegerInvalid)) + >>> try: + ... validate('a') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... assert isinstance(e.errors[0], IntegerInvalid) + """ + if cls and not issubclass(cls, Invalid): + raise SchemaError("message can only use subclases of Invalid as custom class") + + def decorator(f): + @wraps(f) + def check(msg=None, clsoverride=None): + @wraps(f) + def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): + try: + return f(*args, **kwargs) + except ValueError: + raise (clsoverride or cls or ValueInvalid)(msg or default or 'invalid value') + return wrapper + return check + return decorator + + +def truth(f): + """Convenience decorator to convert truth functions into validators. + + >>> @truth + ... def isdir(v): + ... return os.path.isdir(v) + >>> validate = Schema(isdir) + >>> validate('/') + '/' + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'not a valid value'): + ... validate('/notavaliddir') + """ + @wraps(f) + def check(v): + t = f(v) + if not t: + raise ValueError + return v + return check + + +class Coerce(object): + """Coerce a value to a type. + + If the type constructor throws a ValueError or TypeError, the value + will be marked as Invalid. + + Default behavior: + + >>> validate = Schema(Coerce(int)) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int'): + ... validate(None) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected int'): + ... validate('foo') + + With custom message: + + >>> validate = Schema(Coerce(int, "moo")) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'moo'): + ... validate('foo') + """ + + def __init__(self, type, msg=None): + self.type = type + self.msg = msg + self.type_name = type.__name__ + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + return self.type(v) + except (ValueError, TypeError): + msg = self.msg or ('expected %s' % self.type_name) + raise CoerceInvalid(msg) + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Coerce(%s, msg=%r)' % (self.type_name, self.msg) + + +@message('value was not true', cls=TrueInvalid) +@truth +def IsTrue(v): + """Assert that a value is true, in the Python sense. + + >>> validate = Schema(IsTrue()) + + "In the Python sense" means that implicitly false values, such as empty + lists, dictionaries, etc. are treated as "false": + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "value was not true"): + ... validate([]) + >>> validate([1]) + [1] + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "value was not true"): + ... validate(False) + + ...and so on. + + >>> try: + ... validate([]) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... assert isinstance(e.errors[0], TrueInvalid) + """ + return v + + +@message('value was not false', cls=FalseInvalid) +def IsFalse(v): + """Assert that a value is false, in the Python sense. + + (see :func:`IsTrue` for more detail) + + >>> validate = Schema(IsFalse()) + >>> validate([]) + [] + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "value was not false"): + ... validate(True) + + >>> try: + ... validate(True) + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... assert isinstance(e.errors[0], FalseInvalid) + """ + if v: + raise ValueError + return v + + +@message('expected boolean', cls=BooleanInvalid) +def Boolean(v): + """Convert human-readable boolean values to a bool. + + Accepted values are 1, true, yes, on, enable, and their negatives. + Non-string values are cast to bool. + + >>> validate = Schema(Boolean()) + >>> validate(True) + True + >>> validate("1") + True + >>> validate("0") + False + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "expected boolean"): + ... validate('moo') + >>> try: + ... validate('moo') + ... except MultipleInvalid as e: + ... assert isinstance(e.errors[0], BooleanInvalid) + """ + if isinstance(v, basestring): + v = v.lower() + if v in ('1', 'true', 'yes', 'on', 'enable'): + return True + if v in ('0', 'false', 'no', 'off', 'disable'): + return False + raise ValueError + return bool(v) + + +class Any(object): + """Use the first validated value. + + :param msg: Message to deliver to user if validation fails. + :param kwargs: All other keyword arguments are passed to the sub-Schema constructors. + :returns: Return value of the first validator that passes. + + >>> validate = Schema(Any('true', 'false', + ... All(Any(int, bool), Coerce(bool)))) + >>> validate('true') + 'true' + >>> validate(1) + True + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "not a valid value"): + ... validate('moo') + + msg argument is used + + >>> validate = Schema(Any(1, 2, 3, msg="Expected 1 2 or 3")) + >>> validate(1) + 1 + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "Expected 1 2 or 3"): + ... validate(4) + """ + + def __init__(self, *validators, **kwargs): + self.validators = validators + self.msg = kwargs.pop('msg', None) + self._schemas = [Schema(val, **kwargs) for val in validators] + + def __call__(self, v): + error = None + for schema in self._schemas: + try: + return schema(v) + except Invalid as e: + if error is None or len(e.path) > len(error.path): + error = e + else: + if error: + raise error if self.msg is None else AnyInvalid(self.msg) + raise AnyInvalid(self.msg or 'no valid value found') + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Any([%s])' % (", ".join(repr(v) for v in self.validators)) + + +# Convenience alias +Or = Any + + +class All(object): + """Value must pass all validators. + + The output of each validator is passed as input to the next. + + :param msg: Message to deliver to user if validation fails. + :param kwargs: All other keyword arguments are passed to the sub-Schema constructors. + + >>> validate = Schema(All('10', Coerce(int))) + >>> validate('10') + 10 + """ + + def __init__(self, *validators, **kwargs): + self.validators = validators + self.msg = kwargs.pop('msg', None) + self._schemas = [Schema(val, **kwargs) for val in validators] + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + for schema in self._schemas: + v = schema(v) + except Invalid as e: + raise e if self.msg is None else AllInvalid(self.msg) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'All(%s, msg=%r)' % ( + ", ".join(repr(v) for v in self.validators), + self.msg + ) + + +# Convenience alias +And = All + + +class Match(object): + """Value must be a string that matches the regular expression. + + >>> validate = Schema(Match(r'^0x[A-F0-9]+$')) + >>> validate('0x123EF4') + '0x123EF4' + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, "does not match regular expression"): + ... validate('123EF4') + + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected string or buffer'): + ... validate(123) + + Pattern may also be a _compiled regular expression: + + >>> validate = Schema(Match(re.compile(r'0x[A-F0-9]+', re.I))) + >>> validate('0x123ef4') + '0x123ef4' + """ + + def __init__(self, pattern, msg=None): + if isinstance(pattern, basestring): + pattern = re.compile(pattern) + self.pattern = pattern + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + match = self.pattern.match(v) + except TypeError: + raise MatchInvalid("expected string or buffer") + if not match: + raise MatchInvalid(self.msg or 'does not match regular expression') + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Match(%r, msg=%r)' % (self.pattern.pattern, self.msg) + + +class Replace(object): + """Regex substitution. + + >>> validate = Schema(All(Replace('you', 'I'), + ... Replace('hello', 'goodbye'))) + >>> validate('you say hello') + 'I say goodbye' + """ + + def __init__(self, pattern, substitution, msg=None): + if isinstance(pattern, basestring): + pattern = re.compile(pattern) + self.pattern = pattern + self.substitution = substitution + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + return self.pattern.sub(self.substitution, v) + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Replace(%r, %r, msg=%r)' % (self.pattern.pattern, + self.substitution, + self.msg) + + +def _url_validation(v): + parsed = urlparse.urlparse(v) + if not parsed.scheme or not parsed.netloc: + raise UrlInvalid("must have a URL scheme and host") + return parsed + + +@message('expected a Fully qualified domain name URL', cls=UrlInvalid) +def FqdnUrl(v): + """Verify that the value is a Fully qualified domain name URL. + + >>> s = Schema(FqdnUrl()) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected a Fully qualified domain name URL'): + ... s("http://localhost/") + >>> s('http://w3.org') + 'http://w3.org' + """ + try: + parsed_url = _url_validation(v) + if "." not in parsed_url.netloc: + raise UrlInvalid("must have a domain name in URL") + return v + except: + raise ValueError + + +@message('expected a URL', cls=UrlInvalid) +def Url(v): + """Verify that the value is a URL. + + >>> s = Schema(Url()) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'expected a URL'): + ... s(1) + >>> s('http://w3.org') + 'http://w3.org' + """ + try: + _url_validation(v) + return v + except: + raise ValueError + + +@message('not a file', cls=FileInvalid) +@truth +def IsFile(v): + """Verify the file exists. + + >>> os.path.basename(IsFile()(__file__)).startswith('voluptuous.py') + True + >>> with raises(FileInvalid, 'not a file'): + ... IsFile()("random_filename_goes_here.py") + """ + return os.path.isfile(v) + + +@message('not a directory', cls=DirInvalid) +@truth +def IsDir(v): + """Verify the directory exists. + + >>> IsDir()('/') + '/' + """ + return os.path.isdir(v) + + +@message('path does not exist', cls=PathInvalid) +@truth +def PathExists(v): + """Verify the path exists, regardless of its type. + + >>> os.path.basename(PathExists()(__file__)).startswith('voluptuous.py') + True + >>> with raises(Invalid, 'path does not exist'): + ... PathExists()("random_filename_goes_here.py") + """ + return os.path.exists(v) + + +class Range(object): + """Limit a value to a range. + + Either min or max may be omitted. + Either min or max can be excluded from the range of accepted values. + + :raises Invalid: If the value is outside the range. + + >>> s = Schema(Range(min=1, max=10, min_included=False)) + >>> s(5) + 5 + >>> s(10) + 10 + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'value must be at most 10'): + ... s(20) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'value must be higher than 1'): + ... s(1) + >>> with raises(MultipleInvalid, 'value must be lower than 10'): + ... Schema(Range(max=10, max_included=False))(20) + """ + + def __init__(self, min=None, max=None, min_included=True, + max_included=True, msg=None): + self.min = min + self.max = max + self.min_included = min_included + self.max_included = max_included + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + if self.min_included: + if self.min is not None and v < self.min: + raise RangeInvalid( + self.msg or 'value must be at least %s' % self.min) + else: + if self.min is not None and v <= self.min: + raise RangeInvalid( + self.msg or 'value must be higher than %s' % self.min) + if self.max_included: + if self.max is not None and v > self.max: + raise RangeInvalid( + self.msg or 'value must be at most %s' % self.max) + else: + if self.max is not None and v >= self.max: + raise RangeInvalid( + self.msg or 'value must be lower than %s' % self.max) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return ('Range(min=%r, max=%r, min_included=%r,' + ' max_included=%r, msg=%r)' % (self.min, self.max, + self.min_included, + self.max_included, + self.msg)) + + +class Clamp(object): + """Clamp a value to a range. + + Either min or max may be omitted. + >>> s = Schema(Clamp(min=0, max=1)) + >>> s(0.5) + 0.5 + >>> s(5) + 1 + >>> s(-1) + 0 + """ + + def __init__(self, min=None, max=None, msg=None): + self.min = min + self.max = max + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + if self.min is not None and v < self.min: + v = self.min + if self.max is not None and v > self.max: + v = self.max + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Clamp(min=%s, max=%s)' % (self.min, self.max) + + +class LengthInvalid(Invalid): + pass + + +class Length(object): + """The length of a value must be in a certain range.""" + + def __init__(self, min=None, max=None, msg=None): + self.min = min + self.max = max + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + if self.min is not None and len(v) < self.min: + raise LengthInvalid( + self.msg or 'length of value must be at least %s' % self.min) + if self.max is not None and len(v) > self.max: + raise LengthInvalid( + self.msg or 'length of value must be at most %s' % self.max) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Length(min=%s, max=%s)' % (self.min, self.max) + + +class DatetimeInvalid(Invalid): + """The value is not a formatted datetime string.""" + + +class Datetime(object): + """Validate that the value matches the datetime format.""" + + DEFAULT_FORMAT = '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ' + + def __init__(self, format=None, msg=None): + self.format = format or self.DEFAULT_FORMAT + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + datetime.datetime.strptime(v, self.format) + except (TypeError, ValueError): + raise DatetimeInvalid( + self.msg or 'value does not match' + ' expected format %s' % self.format) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Datetime(format=%s)' % self.format + + +class InInvalid(Invalid): + pass + + +class In(object): + """Validate that a value is in a collection.""" + + def __init__(self, container, msg=None): + self.container = container + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + check = v not in self.container + except TypeError: + check = True + if check: + raise InInvalid(self.msg or 'value is not allowed') + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'In(%s)' % (self.container,) + + +class NotInInvalid(Invalid): + pass + + +class NotIn(object): + """Validate that a value is not in a collection.""" + + def __init__(self, container, msg=None): + self.container = container + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + check = v in self.container + except TypeError: + check = True + if check: + raise NotInInvalid(self.msg or 'value is not allowed') + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'NotIn(%s)' % (self.container,) + + +def Lower(v): + """Transform a string to lower case. + + >>> s = Schema(Lower) + >>> s('HI') + 'hi' + """ + return str(v).lower() + + +def Upper(v): + """Transform a string to upper case. + + >>> s = Schema(Upper) + >>> s('hi') + 'HI' + """ + return str(v).upper() + + +def Capitalize(v): + """Capitalise a string. + + >>> s = Schema(Capitalize) + >>> s('hello world') + 'Hello world' + """ + return str(v).capitalize() + + +def Title(v): + """Title case a string. + + >>> s = Schema(Title) + >>> s('hello world') + 'Hello World' + """ + return str(v).title() + + +def Strip(v): + """Strip whitespace from a string. + + >>> s = Schema(Strip) + >>> s(' hello world ') + 'hello world' + """ + return str(v).strip() + + +class DefaultTo(object): + """Sets a value to default_value if none provided. + + >>> s = Schema(DefaultTo(42)) + >>> s(None) + 42 + >>> s = Schema(DefaultTo(list)) + >>> s(None) + [] + """ + + def __init__(self, default_value, msg=None): + self.default_value = default_factory(default_value) + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + if v is None: + v = self.default_value() + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'DefaultTo(%s)' % (self.default_value(),) + + +class SetTo(object): + """Set a value, ignoring any previous value. + + >>> s = Schema(Any(int, SetTo(42))) + >>> s(2) + 2 + >>> s("foo") + 42 + """ + + def __init__(self, value): + self.value = default_factory(value) + + def __call__(self, v): + return self.value() + + def __repr__(self): + return 'SetTo(%s)' % (self.value(),) + + +class ExactSequenceInvalid(Invalid): + pass + + +class ExactSequence(object): + """Matches each element in a sequence against the corresponding element in + the validators. + + :param msg: Message to deliver to user if validation fails. + :param kwargs: All other keyword arguments are passed to the sub-Schema + constructors. + + >>> from voluptuous import * + >>> validate = Schema(ExactSequence([str, int, list, list])) + >>> validate(['hourly_report', 10, [], []]) + ['hourly_report', 10, [], []] + >>> validate(('hourly_report', 10, [], [])) + ('hourly_report', 10, [], []) + """ + + def __init__(self, validators, **kwargs): + self.validators = validators + self.msg = kwargs.pop('msg', None) + self._schemas = [Schema(val, **kwargs) for val in validators] + + def __call__(self, v): + if not isinstance(v, (list, tuple)): + raise ExactSequenceInvalid(self.msg) + try: + v = type(v)(schema(x) for x, schema in zip(v, self._schemas)) + except Invalid as e: + raise e if self.msg is None else ExactSequenceInvalid(self.msg) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'ExactSequence([%s])' % (", ".join(repr(v) + for v in self.validators)) + + +class Literal(object): + def __init__(self, lit): + self.lit = lit + + def __call__(self, value, msg=None): + if self.lit != value: + raise LiteralInvalid( + msg or '%s not match for %s' % (value, self.lit) + ) + else: + return self.lit + + def __str__(self): + return str(self.lit) + + def __repr__(self): + return repr(self.lit) + + +class Unique(object): + """Ensure an iterable does not contain duplicate items. + + Only iterables convertable to a set are supported (native types and + objects with correct __eq__). + + JSON does not support set, so they need to be presented as arrays. + Unique allows ensuring that such array does not contain dupes. + + >>> s = Schema(Unique()) + >>> s([]) + [] + >>> s([1, 2]) + [1, 2] + >>> with raises(Invalid, 'contains duplicate items: [1]'): + ... s([1, 1, 2]) + >>> with raises(Invalid, "contains duplicate items: ['one']"): + ... s(['one', 'two', 'one']) + >>> with raises(Invalid, regex="^contains unhashable elements: "): + ... s([set([1, 2]), set([3, 4])]) + >>> s('abc') + 'abc' + >>> with raises(Invalid, regex="^contains duplicate items: "): + ... s('aabbc') + """ + + def __init__(self, msg=None): + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + set_v = set(v) + except TypeError as e: + raise TypeInvalid( + self.msg or 'contains unhashable elements: {0}'.format(e)) + if len(set_v) != len(v): + seen = set() + dupes = list(set(x for x in v if x in seen or seen.add(x))) + raise Invalid( + self.msg or 'contains duplicate items: {0}'.format(dupes)) + return v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Unique()' + + +class Set(object): + """Convert a list into a set. + + >>> s = Schema(Set()) + >>> s([]) == set([]) + True + >>> s([1, 2]) == set([1, 2]) + True + >>> with raises(Invalid, regex="^cannot be presented as set: "): + ... s([set([1, 2]), set([3, 4])]) + """ + + def __init__(self, msg=None): + self.msg = msg + + def __call__(self, v): + try: + set_v = set(v) + except Exception as e: + raise TypeInvalid( + self.msg or 'cannot be presented as set: {0}'.format(e)) + return set_v + + def __repr__(self): + return 'Set()' + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + import doctest + doctest.testmod() -- cgit v1.2.3