Package Exports
- express-validator
- express-validator/lib/express_validator
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (express-validator) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
express-validator
An express.js middleware for node-validator.
This is basically a copy of a gist by node-validator author chriso.
Installation
npm install express-validatorUsage
var util = require('util'),
express = require('express'),
expressValidator = require('express-validator'),
app = express.createServer();
app.use(express.bodyParser());
app.use(expressValidator([options])); // this line must be immediately after express.bodyParser()!
app.post('/:urlparam', function(req, res) {
// checkBody only checks req.body; none of the other req parameters
// Similarly checkParams only checks in req.params (URL params) and
// checkQuery only checks req.query (GET params).
req.checkBody('postparam', 'Invalid postparam').notEmpty().isInt();
req.checkParams('urlparam', 'Invalid urlparam').isAlpha();
req.checkQuery('getparam', 'Invalid getparam').isInt();
// OR assert can be used to check on all 3 types of params.
// req.assert('postparam', 'Invalid postparam').notEmpty().isInt();
// req.assert('urlparam', 'Invalid urlparam').isAlpha();
// req.assert('getparam', 'Invalid getparam').isInt();
req.sanitize('postparam').toBoolean();
var errors = req.validationErrors();
if (errors) {
res.send('There have been validation errors: ' + util.inspect(errors), 400);
return;
}
res.json({
urlparam: req.param('urlparam'),
getparam: req.param('getparam'),
postparam: req.param('postparam')
});
});
app.listen(8888);Which will result in:
$ curl -d 'postparam=1' http://localhost:8888/test?getparam=1
{"urlparam":"test","getparam":"1","postparam":true}
$ curl -d 'postparam=1' http://localhost:8888/t1est?getparam=1
There have been validation errors: [
{ param: 'urlparam', msg: 'Invalid urlparam', value: 't1est' } ]
$ curl -d 'postparam=1' http://localhost:8888/t1est?getparam=1ab
There have been validation errors: [
{ param: 'getparam', msg: 'Invalid getparam', value: '1ab' },
{ param: 'urlparam', msg: 'Invalid urlparam', value: 't1est' } ]
$ curl http://localhost:8888/test?getparam=1&postparam=1
There have been validation errors: [
{ param: 'postparam', msg: 'Invalid postparam', value: undefined} ]Middleware Options
####errorFormatter
function(param,msg,value)
The errorFormatter option can be used to specify a function that can be used to format the objects that populate the error array that is returned in req.validationErrors(). It should return an Object that has param, msg, and value keys defined.
// In this example, the formParam value is going to get morphed into form body format useful for printing.
app.use(expressValidator({
errorFormatter: function(param, msg, value) {
var namespace = param.split('.')
, root = namespace.shift()
, formParam = root;
while(namespace.length) {
formParam += '[' + namespace.shift() + ']';
}
return {
param : formParam,
msg : msg,
value : value
};
}
}));Validation errors
You have two choices on how to get the validation errors:
req.assert('email', 'required').notEmpty();
req.assert('email', 'valid email required').isEmail();
req.assert('password', '6 to 20 characters required').len(6, 20);
var errors = req.validationErrors();
var mappedErrors = req.validationErrors(true);errors:
[
{param: "email", msg: "required", value: "<received input>"},
{param: "email", msg: "valid email required", value: "<received input>"},
{param: "password", msg: "6 to 20 characters required", value: "<received input>"}
]mappedErrors:
{
email: {
param: "email",
msg: "valid email required",
value: "<received input>"
},
password: {
param: "password",
msg: "6 to 20 characters required",
value: "<received input>"
}
}Nested input data
Example:
<input name="user[fields][email]" />Provide an array instead of a string:
req.assert(['user', 'fields', 'email'], 'valid email required').isEmail();
var errors = req.validationErrors();
console.log(errors);Output:
[
{
param: "user_fields_email",
msg: "valid email required",
value: "<received input>"
}
]Alternatively you can use dot-notation to specify nested fields to be checked:
req.assert(['user.fields.email'], 'valid email required').isEmail();Regex routes
Express allows you to define regex routes like:
app.get(/\/test(\d+)/, function() {});You can validate the extracted matches like this:
req.assert(0, 'Not a three-digit integer.').len(3, 3).isInt();Extending
You can add your own validators using expressValidator.validator.extend(name, fn)
expressValidator.validator.extend('isFinite', function (str) {
return isFinite(str);
});Changelog
v0.4.1
- Update this readme
v0.4.0
- Added
req.checkBody()(@zero21xxx). - Upgraded validator dependency to 1.1.3
v0.3.0
req.validationErrors()now returnsnullinstead offalseif there are no errors.
v0.2.4
- Support for regex routes (@Cecchi)
v0.2.3
- Fix checkHeader() (@pimguilherme)
v0.2.2
- Add dot-notation for nested input (@sharonjl)
- Add validate() alias for check()
v0.2.1
- Fix chaining validators (@rapee)
v0.2.0
- Added
validationErrors()method (by @orfaust) - Added support for nested form fields (by @orfaust)
- Added test cases
v0.1.3
- Readme update
v0.1.2
- Expose Filter and Validator instances to allow adding custom methods
v0.1.1
- Use req.param() method to get parameter values instead of accessing req.params directly.
- Remove req.mixinParams() method.
v0.1.0
- Initial release
Contributors
- Christoph Tavan dev@tavan.de - Wrap the gist in an npm package
- @orfaust - Add
validationErrors()and nested field support - @zero21xxx - Added
checkBodyfunction
License
Copyright (c) 2010 Chris O'Hara cohara87@gmail.com, MIT License
