NAME

Data::Validate::Struct - Validate recursive Hash Structures

SYNOPSIS

use Data::Validate::Struct;
my $validator = new Data::Validate::Struct($reference);
if ( $validator->validate($config_hash_reference) ) {
  print "valid\n";
}
else {
  print "invalid " . $validator->errstr() . "\n";
}

DESCRIPTION

This module validates a config hash reference against a given hash structure in contrast to Data::Validate in which you have to check each value separately using certain methods.

This hash could be the result of a config parser or just any hash structure. Eg. the hash returned by XML::Simple could be validated using this module. You may also use it to validate CGI input, just fetch the input data from CGI, map it to a hash and validate it.

Data::Validate::Struct uses some of the methods exported by Data::Validate, so you need to install it too.

PREDEFINED BUILTIN DATA TYPES

int

Match a simple integer number.

range(a-b)

Match a simple integer number in a range between a and b. Eg:

{ loginport => 'range(22-23)' }
hex

Match a hex value.

oct

Match an octagonal value.

number

Match a decimal number, it may contain , or . and may be signed.

word

Match a single word, _ and - are tolerated.

line

Match a line of text - no newlines are allowed.

text

Match a whole text(blob) including newlines. This expression is very loosy, consider it as an alias to any.

regex

Match a perl regex using the operator qr(). Valid examples include:

qr/[0-9]+/
qr([^%]*)
qr{\w+(\d+?)}

Please note, that this doesn't mean you can provide here a regex against config options must match.

Instead this means that the config options contains a regex.

eg:

$cfg = {
  grp  = qr/root|wheel/
};

regex would match the content of the variable 'grp' in this example.

To add your own rules for validation, use the type() method, see below.

uri

Match an internet URI.

ipv4

Match an IPv4 address.

cidrv4

The same as above including cidr netmask (/24), IPv4 only, eg:

10.2.123.0/23

Note: shortcuts are not supported for the moment, eg:

10.10/16

will fail while it is still a valid IPv4 cidr notation for a network address (short for 10.10.0.0/16). Must be fixed in Regex::Common.

ipv6

Match an IPv6 address. Some examples:

3ffe:1900:4545:3:200:f8ff:fe21:67cf
fe80:0:0:0:200:f8ff:fe21:67cf
fe80::200:f8ff:fe21:67cf
ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:1
ff02::1
cidrv6

The same as above including cidr netmask (/64), IPv6 only, eg:

2001:db8:dead:beef::1/64
2001:db8::/32
quoted

Match a text quoted with single quotes, eg:

'barbara is sexy'
hostname

Match a valid hostname, it must qualify to the definitions in RFC 2396.

resolvablehost

Match a hostname resolvable via dns lookup. Will fail if no dns is available at runtime.

path

Match a valid absolute path, it won't do a stat() system call. This will work on any operating system at runtime. So this one:

C:\Temp

will return TRUE if running on WIN32, but FALSE on FreeBSD!

fileexists

Look if value is a file which exists. Does a stat() system call.

user

Looks if the given value is an existent user. Does a getpwnam() system call.

group

Looks if the given value is an existent group. Does a getgrnam() system call.

port

Match a valid tcp/udp port. Must be a digit between 0 and 65535.

vars

Matches a string of text containing variables (perl style variables though) eg:

$user is $attribute
I am $(years) old
Missing ${points} points to succeed

MIXED TYPES

If there is an element which could match more than one type, this can be matched by using the pipe sign | to separate the types.

{ name => 'int | number' }

There is no limit on the number of types that can be checked for, and the check is done in the sequence written (first the type 'int', and then 'number' in the example above).

OPTIONAL ITEMS

If there is an element which is optional in the hash, you can use the type 'optional' in the type. The 'optional' type can also be mixed with ordinary types, like:

{ name => 'text | optional' }

The type 'optional' can be placed anywhere in the type string.

NEGATIVE MATCHING

In some rare situations you might require a negative match. So a test shall return TRUE if a particular value does NOT match the given type. This might be useful to prevent certain things.

To achieve this, you just have to prepend one of the below mentioned types with the keyword no.

Example:

$ref = { path => 'novars' }

This returns TRUE if the value of the given config hash does NOT contain ANY variables.

VALIDATOR STRUCTURE

The expected structure must be a standard perl hash reference. This hash may look like the config you are validating but instead of real-live values it contains types that define of what type a given value has to be.

In addition the hash may be deeply nested. In this case the validated config must be nested the same way as the reference hash.

Example:

$reference = { user => 'word', uid => 'int' };

The following config would be validated successful:

$config = { user => 'HansDampf',  uid => 92 };

this one not:

$config = { user => 'Hans Dampf', uid => 'nine' };
                         ^                ^^^^
                         |                |
                         |                +----- is not a number
                         +---------------------- space not allowed

For easier writing of references you yould use a configuration file parser like Config::General or Config::Any, just write the definition using the syntax of such a module, get the hash of it and use this hash as validation reference.

NESTED HASH STRUCTURES

You can also match against nested structures. Data::Validate::Struct iterates into the given config hash the same way as the reference hash looks like.

If the config hash doesn't match the reference structure, perl will throw an error, which Data::Validate::Struct catches and returns FALSE.

Given the following reference hash:

$ref = {
    'b1' => {
        'b2' => {
            'b3' => {
                'item' => 'int'
            }
        }
    }
}

Now if you validate it against the following config hash it will return TRUE:

$cfg = {
    'b1' => {
        'b2' => {
            'b3' => {
                'item' => '100'
            }
        }
    }
}

If you validate it for example against this hash, it will return FALSE:

$cfg = {
    'b1' => {
        'b2' => {
            'item' => '100'
        }
    }
}

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

validate($config)

$config must be a hash reference you'd like to validate.

It returns a true value if the given structure looks valid.

If the return value is false (0), then the error message will be written to the variable $!.

type(%types)

You can enhance the validator by adding your own rules. Just add one or more new types using a simple hash using the type() method. Values in this hash can be regexes or anonymous subs.

type does accept either a hash (%hash), a hash ref (%$hash) or a list of key/values (key => value) as input.

For details see "CUSTOM VALIDATORS".

debug()

Enables debug output which gets printed to STDERR.

errors

Returns an array ref with the errors found when validating the hash. Each error is on the format '<value> doesn't match <types> at <ref>', where <ref> is a comma separated tree view depicting where in the the error occurred.

errstr()

Returns the last error, which is useful to notify the user about what happened. The format is like in "errors".

EXPORTED FUNCTIONS

add_validators

This is a class function which adds types not per object but globally for each instance of Data::Validate::Struct.

use Data::Validate::Struct qw(add_validators);
add_validators( name => .. );
my $v = Data::Validate::Struct->new(..);

Parameters to add_validators are the same as of the type method.

For details see "CUSTOM VALIDATORS".

CUSTOM VALIDATORS

You can add your own validators, which maybe regular expressions or anonymous subs. Validators can be added using the type() method or globally using the add_validators() function.

CUSTOM REGEX VALIDATORS

If you add a validator which is just a regular expressions, it will evaluated as is. This is the most simplest way to customize validation.

Sample:

use Data::Validate::Struct qw(add_validators);
add_validators(address => qr(^\w+\s\s*\d+$));
my $v = Data::Validate::Struct->new({place => 'address'});
$v->validate({place => 'Livermore 19'});

Regexes will be executed exactly as given. No flags or ^ or $ will be used by the module. Eg. if you want to match the whole value from beginning to the end, add ^ and $, like you can see in our 'address' example above.

CUSTOM VALIDATOR FUNCTIONS

If the validator is a coderef, it will be executed as a sub.

Example:

use Data::Validate::Struct qw(add_validators);
add_validators(
   list => sub {
     my $list = shift;
     my @list = split /\s*,\s*/, $list;
     return scalar @list > 1;
   },
);

In this example we add a new type 'list', which is really simple. 'list' is a subroutine which gets called during evaluation for each option which you define as type 'list'.

Such a subroutine must return a true value in order to produce a match. It receives the following arguments:

  • value to be evaluated

  • unparsed arguments, if defined in the reference

  • array of parsed arguments, tokenized by , and -

That way you may define a type which accepts an arbitrary number of arguments, which makes the type customizable. Sample:

# new validator
$v4 = Data::Validate::Struct->new({ list => nwords(4) });

# define type 'nwords' with support for 1 argument
$v4->type(
  nwords => sub {
    my($val, $ignore, $count) = @_;
    return (scalar(split /\s+/, $val) == $count) ? 1 : 0;
  },
);

# validate
$v4->validate({ list => 'these are four words' });

CUSTOM VALIDATORS USING A GRAMMAR

Sometimes you want to be more flexible, in such cases you may use a parser generator to validate input. This is no feature of Data::Validate::Struct, you will just write a custom code ref validator, which then uses the grammar.

Here's a complete example using Parse::RecDescent:

use Parse::RecDescent;
use Data::Validate::Struct qw(add_validators);

my $grammar = q{
   line: expr(s)
   expr: number operator number
   number: int | float
   int: /\d+/
   float: /\d*\\.\d+/
   operator: '+' | '-' | '*' | '/'
};

my $parse = Parse::RecDescent->new($grammar);

add_validators(calc => sub { defined $parse->line($_[0]) ? 1 : 0; });

my $val = Data::Validate::Struct->new({line => 'calc'});

if ($val->validate({line => "@ARGV"})) {
  my $r;
  eval "\$r = @ARGV";
  print "$r\n";
}
else {
  print "syntax error\n";
}

Now you can use it as follows:

./mycalc 54 + 100 - .1
153.9

./mycalc 8^2
syntax error

NEGATED VALIDATOR

A negative/reverse match is automatically added as well, see "NEGATIVE MATCHING".

EXAMPLES

Take a look to t/run.t for lots of examples.

CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT

No environment variables will be used.

SEE ALSO

I recommend you to read the following documentations, which are supplied with perl:

perlreftut Perl references short introduction.

perlref Perl references, the rest of the story.

perldsc Perl data structures intro.

perllol Perl data structures: arrays of arrays.

Data::Validate common data validation methods.

Data::Validate::IP common data validation methods for IP-addresses.

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2007-2015 T. v.Dein

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

Some implementation details as well as the API may change in the future. This will no more happen if entering a stable release (starting with 1.00).

To submit use http://rt.cpan.org.

INCOMPATIBILITIES

None known.

DIAGNOSTICS

To debug Data::Validate::Struct use debug() or the perl debugger, see perldebug.

For example to debug the regex matching during processing try this:

perl -Mre=debug yourscript.pl

DEPENDENCIES

Data::Validate::Struct depends on the module Data::Validate, Data::Validate:IP, Regexp::Common, File::Spec and File::stat.

AUTHORS

T. v.Dein <tlinden |AT| cpan.org>

Per Carlson <pelle |AT| cpan.org>

Thanks to David Cantrell for his helpful hints.

VERSION

0.11