This package wraps is-my-json-valid using V8 to do JSON schema validation in R.
You need a JSON schema file; see json-schema.org for details on writing these. Often someone else has done the hard work of writing one for you, and you can just check that the JSON you are producing or consuming conforms to the schema.
The examples below come from the JSON schema website
They describe a JSON based product catalogue, where each product has an id, a name, a price, and an optional set of tags. A JSON representation of a product is:
The schema that they derive looks like this:
{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
"title": "Product",
"description": "A product from Acme's catalog",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"id": {
"description": "The unique identifier for a product",
"type": "integer"
},
"name": {
"description": "Name of the product",
"type": "string"
},
"price": {
"type": "number",
"minimum": 0,
"exclusiveMinimum": true
},
"tags": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
},
"minItems": 1,
"uniqueItems": true
}
},
"required": ["id", "name", "price"]
}
This ensures the types of all fields, enforces presence of
id
, name
and price
, checks that
the price is not negative and checks that if present tags
is a unique list of strings.
There are two ways of passing the schema in to R; as a string or as a filename. If you have a large schema loading as a file will generally be easiest! Here’s a string representing the schema (watch out for escaping quotes):
schema <- '{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
"title": "Product",
"description": "A product from Acme\'s catalog",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"id": {
"description": "The unique identifier for a product",
"type": "integer"
},
"name": {
"description": "Name of the product",
"type": "string"
},
"price": {
"type": "number",
"minimum": 0,
"exclusiveMinimum": true
},
"tags": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
},
"minItems": 1,
"uniqueItems": true
}
},
"required": ["id", "name", "price"]
}'
Create a schema object, which can be used to validate a schema:
If we’d saved the json to a file, this would work too:
The returned object is a function that takes as its first argument a json string, or a filename of a json file. The empty list will fail validation because it does not contain any of the required fields:
## [1] FALSE
To get more information on why the validation fails, add
verbose = TRUE
:
## [1] FALSE
## attr(,"errors")
## instancePath schemaPath keyword missingProperty
## 1 #/required required id
## 2 #/required required name
## 3 #/required required price
## message schema
## 1 must have required property 'id' id, name, price
## 2 must have required property 'name' id, name, price
## 3 must have required property 'price' id, name, price
## parentSchema.$schema parentSchema.title
## 1 http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema# Product
## 2 http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema# Product
## 3 http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema# Product
## parentSchema.description parentSchema.type
## 1 A product from Acme's catalog object
## 2 A product from Acme's catalog object
## 3 A product from Acme's catalog object
## parentSchema.properties.id.description parentSchema.properties.id.type
## 1 The unique identifier for a product integer
## 2 The unique identifier for a product integer
## 3 The unique identifier for a product integer
## parentSchema.properties.name.description parentSchema.properties.name.type
## 1 Name of the product string
## 2 Name of the product string
## 3 Name of the product string
## parentSchema.properties.price.type parentSchema.properties.price.minimum
## 1 number 0
## 2 number 0
## 3 number 0
## parentSchema.properties.price.exclusiveMinimum
## 1 TRUE
## 2 TRUE
## 3 TRUE
## parentSchema.properties.tags.type parentSchema.properties.tags.type
## 1 array string
## 2 array string
## 3 array string
## parentSchema.properties.tags.minItems
## 1 1
## 2 1
## 3 1
## parentSchema.properties.tags.uniqueItems parentSchema.required dataPath
## 1 TRUE id, name, price
## 2 TRUE id, name, price
## 3 TRUE id, name, price
The attribute “errors” is a data.frame and is present only when the
json fails validation. The error messages come straight from
ajv
and they may not always be that informative.
Alternatively, to throw an error if the json does not validate, add
error = TRUE
to the call:
## Error: 3 errors validating json:
## - (#/required): must have required property 'id'
## - (#/required): must have required property 'name'
## - (#/required): must have required property 'price'
The JSON from the opening example works:
## [1] TRUE
But if we tried to enter a negative price it would fail:
obj$validate('{
"id": 1,
"name": "A green door",
"price": -1,
"tags": ["home", "green"]
}', verbose = TRUE)
## [1] FALSE
## attr(,"errors")
## instancePath schemaPath keyword params.comparison
## 1 /price #/properties/price/minimum minimum >
## params.limit message schema parentSchema.type parentSchema.minimum
## 1 0 must be > 0 0 number 0
## parentSchema.exclusiveMinimum data dataPath
## 1 TRUE -1 /price
…or duplicate tags:
obj$validate('{
"id": 1,
"name": "A green door",
"price": 12.50,
"tags": ["home", "home"]
}', verbose = TRUE)
## [1] FALSE
## attr(,"errors")
## instancePath schemaPath keyword params.i params.j
## 1 /tags #/properties/tags/uniqueItems uniqueItems 0 1
## message schema
## 1 must NOT have duplicate items (items ## 1 and 0 are identical) TRUE
## parentSchema.type parentSchema.type parentSchema.minItems
## 1 array string 1
## parentSchema.uniqueItems data dataPath
## 1 TRUE home, home /tags
or just basically everything wrong:
obj$validate('{
"id": "identifier",
"name": 1,
"price": -1,
"tags": ["home", "home", 1]
}', verbose = TRUE)
## [1] FALSE
## attr(,"errors")
## instancePath schemaPath keyword params.type
## 1 /id #/properties/id/type type integer
## 2 /name #/properties/name/type type string
## 3 /price #/properties/price/minimum minimum <NA>
## 4 /tags/2 #/properties/tags/items/type type string
## 5 /tags #/properties/tags/uniqueItems uniqueItems <NA>
## params.comparison params.limit params.i params.j
## 1 <NA> NA NA NA
## 2 <NA> NA NA NA
## 3 > 0 NA NA
## 4 <NA> NA NA NA
## 5 <NA> NA 0 1
## message schema
## 1 must be integer integer
## 2 must be string string
## 3 must be > 0 0
## 4 must be string string
## 5 must NOT have duplicate items (items ## 1 and 0 are identical) TRUE
## parentSchema.description parentSchema.type parentSchema.minimum
## 1 The unique identifier for a product integer NA
## 2 Name of the product string NA
## 3 <NA> number 0
## 4 <NA> string NA
## 5 <NA> array NA
## parentSchema.exclusiveMinimum parentSchema.type parentSchema.minItems
## 1 NA <NA> NA
## 2 NA <NA> NA
## 3 TRUE <NA> NA
## 4 NA <NA> NA
## 5 NA string 1
## parentSchema.uniqueItems data dataPath
## 1 NA identifier /id
## 2 NA 1 /name
## 3 NA -1 /price
## 4 NA 1 /tags/2
## 5 TRUE home, home, 1 /tags
The names comes from within the ajv
source, and may be
annoying to work with programmatically.
There is also a simple interface where you take the schema and the json at the same time:
json <- '{
"id": 1,
"name": "A green door",
"price": 12.50,
"tags": ["home", "green"]
}'
jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema, engine = "ajv")
## [1] TRUE
However, this will be much slower than building the schema object once and using it repeatedly.
Prior to 1.4.0, the recommended way of building a reusable validator
object was to use jsonvalidate::json_validator
; this is
still supported but note that it has different defaults to
jsonvalidate::json_schema
(using imjv for backward
compatibility).
## [1] TRUE
While we do not intend on removing this old interface, new code
should prefer both jsonvalidate::json_schema
and the
ajv
engine.
You can combine schemas with ajv
engine. You can
reference definitions within one schema
schema <- '{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
"definitions": {
"city": { "type": "string" }
},
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"city": { "$ref": "#/definitions/city" }
}
}'
json <- '{
"city": "Firenze"
}'
jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, schema, engine = "ajv")
## [1] TRUE
You can reference schema from other files
city_schema <- '{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema",
"type": "string",
"enum": ["Firenze"]
}'
address_schema <- '{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema",
"type":"object",
"properties": {
"city": { "$ref": "city.json" }
}
}'
path <- tempfile()
dir.create(path)
address_path <- file.path(path, "address.json")
city_path <- file.path(path, "city.json")
writeLines(address_schema, address_path)
writeLines(city_schema, city_path)
jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, address_path, engine = "ajv")
## [1] TRUE
You can combine schemas in subdirectories. Note that the
$ref
path needs to be relative to the schema path. You
cannot use absolute paths in $ref
and jsonvalidate will
throw an error if you try to do so.
user_schema = '{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema",
"type": "object",
"required": ["address"],
"properties": {
"address": {
"$ref": "sub/address.json"
}
}
}'
json <- '{
"address": {
"city": "Firenze"
}
}'
path <- tempfile()
subdir <- file.path(path, "sub")
dir.create(subdir, showWarnings = FALSE, recursive = TRUE)
city_path <- file.path(subdir, "city.json")
address_path <- file.path(subdir, "address.json")
user_path <- file.path(path, "schema.json")
writeLines(city_schema, city_path)
writeLines(address_schema, address_path)
writeLines(user_schema, user_path)
jsonvalidate::json_validate(json, user_path, engine = "ajv")
## [1] TRUE