1# Schema
2
3(This feature was released in v1.1.0)
4
5JSON Schema is a draft standard for describing the format of JSON data. The schema itself is also JSON data. By validating a JSON structure with JSON Schema, your code can safely access the DOM without manually checking types, or whether a key exists, etc. It can also ensure that the serialized JSON conform to a specified schema.
6
7RapidJSON implemented a JSON Schema validator for [JSON Schema Draft v4](http://json-schema.org/documentation.html). If you are not familiar with JSON Schema, you may refer to [Understanding JSON Schema](http://spacetelescope.github.io/understanding-json-schema/).
8
9[TOC]
10
11# Basic Usage {#Basic}
12
13First of all, you need to parse a JSON Schema into `Document`, and then compile the `Document` into a `SchemaDocument`.
14
15Secondly, construct a `SchemaValidator` with the `SchemaDocument`. It is similar to a `Writer` in the sense of handling SAX events. So, you can use `document.Accept(validator)` to validate a document, and then check the validity.
16
17~~~cpp
18#include "rapidjson/schema.h"
19
20// ...
21
22Document sd;
23if (sd.Parse(schemaJson).HasParseError()) {
24    // the schema is not a valid JSON.
25    // ...
26}
27SchemaDocument schema(sd); // Compile a Document to SchemaDocument
28// sd is no longer needed here.
29
30Document d;
31if (d.Parse(inputJson).HasParseError()) {
32    // the input is not a valid JSON.
33    // ...
34}
35
36SchemaValidator validator(schema);
37if (!d.Accept(validator)) {
38    // Input JSON is invalid according to the schema
39    // Output diagnostic information
40    StringBuffer sb;
41    validator.GetInvalidSchemaPointer().StringifyUriFragment(sb);
42    printf("Invalid schema: %s\n", sb.GetString());
43    printf("Invalid keyword: %s\n", validator.GetInvalidSchemaKeyword());
44    sb.Clear();
45    validator.GetInvalidDocumentPointer().StringifyUriFragment(sb);
46    printf("Invalid document: %s\n", sb.GetString());
47}
48~~~
49
50Some notes:
51
52* One `SchemaDocument` can be referenced by multiple `SchemaValidator`s. It will not be modified by `SchemaValidator`s.
53* A `SchemaValidator` may be reused to validate multiple documents. To run it for other documents, call `validator.Reset()` first.
54
55# Validation during parsing/serialization {#Fused}
56
57Unlike most JSON Schema validator implementations, RapidJSON provides a SAX-based schema validator. Therefore, you can parse a JSON from a stream while validating it on the fly. If the validator encounters a JSON value that invalidates the supplied schema, the parsing will be terminated immediately. This design is especially useful for parsing large JSON files.
58
59## DOM parsing {#DOM}
60
61For using DOM in parsing, `Document` needs some preparation and finalizing tasks, in addition to receiving SAX events, thus it needs some work to route the reader, validator and the document. `SchemaValidatingReader` is a helper class that doing such work.
62
63~~~cpp
64#include "rapidjson/filereadstream.h"
65
66// ...
67SchemaDocument schema(sd); // Compile a Document to SchemaDocument
68
69// Use reader to parse the JSON
70FILE* fp = fopen("big.json", "r");
71FileReadStream is(fp, buffer, sizeof(buffer));
72
73// Parse JSON from reader, validate the SAX events, and store in d.
74Document d;
75SchemaValidatingReader<kParseDefaultFlags, FileReadStream, UTF8<> > reader(is, schema);
76d.Populate(reader);
77
78if (!reader.GetParseResult()) {
79    // Not a valid JSON
80    // When reader.GetParseResult().Code() == kParseErrorTermination,
81    // it may be terminated by:
82    // (1) the validator found that the JSON is invalid according to schema; or
83    // (2) the input stream has I/O error.
84
85    // Check the validation result
86    if (!reader.IsValid()) {
87        // Input JSON is invalid according to the schema
88        // Output diagnostic information
89        StringBuffer sb;
90        reader.GetInvalidSchemaPointer().StringifyUriFragment(sb);
91        printf("Invalid schema: %s\n", sb.GetString());
92        printf("Invalid keyword: %s\n", reader.GetInvalidSchemaKeyword());
93        sb.Clear();
94        reader.GetInvalidDocumentPointer().StringifyUriFragment(sb);
95        printf("Invalid document: %s\n", sb.GetString());
96    }
97}
98~~~
99
100## SAX parsing {#SAX}
101
102For using SAX in parsing, it is much simpler. If it only need to validate the JSON without further processing, it is simply:
103
104~~~
105SchemaValidator validator(schema);
106Reader reader;
107if (!reader.Parse(stream, validator)) {
108    if (!validator.IsValid()) {
109        // ...
110    }
111}
112~~~
113
114This is exactly the method used in the [schemavalidator](example/schemavalidator/schemavalidator.cpp) example. The distinct advantage is low memory usage, no matter how big the JSON was (the memory usage depends on the complexity of the schema).
115
116If you need to handle the SAX events further, then you need to use the template class `GenericSchemaValidator` to set the output handler of the validator:
117
118~~~
119MyHandler handler;
120GenericSchemaValidator<SchemaDocument, MyHandler> validator(schema, handler);
121Reader reader;
122if (!reader.Parse(ss, validator)) {
123    if (!validator.IsValid()) {
124        // ...
125    }
126}
127~~~
128
129## Serialization {#Serialization}
130
131It is also possible to do validation during serializing. This can ensure the result JSON is valid according to the JSON schema.
132
133~~~
134StringBuffer sb;
135Writer<StringBuffer> writer(sb);
136GenericSchemaValidator<SchemaDocument, Writer<StringBuffer> > validator(s, writer);
137if (!d.Accept(validator)) {
138    // Some problem during Accept(), it may be validation or encoding issues.
139    if (!validator.IsValid()) {
140        // ...
141    }
142}
143~~~
144
145Of course, if your application only needs SAX-style serialization, it can simply send SAX events to `SchemaValidator` instead of `Writer`.
146
147# Remote Schema {#Remote}
148
149JSON Schema supports [`$ref` keyword](http://spacetelescope.github.io/understanding-json-schema/structuring.html), which is a [JSON pointer](doc/pointer.md) referencing to a local or remote schema. Local pointer is prefixed with `#`, while remote pointer is an relative or absolute URI. For example:
150
151~~~js
152{ "$ref": "definitions.json#/address" }
153~~~
154
155As `SchemaDocument` does not know how to resolve such URI, it needs a user-provided `IRemoteSchemaDocumentProvider` instance to do so.
156
157~~~
158class MyRemoteSchemaDocumentProvider : public IRemoteSchemaDocumentProvider {
159public:
160    virtual const SchemaDocument* GetRemoteDocument(const char* uri, SizeType length) {
161        // Resolve the uri and returns a pointer to that schema.
162    }
163};
164
165// ...
166
167MyRemoteSchemaDocumentProvider provider;
168SchemaDocument schema(sd, &provider);
169~~~
170
171# Conformance {#Conformance}
172
173RapidJSON passed 262 out of 263 tests in [JSON Schema Test Suite](https://github.com/json-schema/JSON-Schema-Test-Suite) (Json Schema draft 4).
174
175The failed test is "changed scope ref invalid" of "change resolution scope" in `refRemote.json`. It is due to that `id` schema keyword and URI combining function are not implemented.
176
177Besides, the `format` schema keyword for string values is ignored, since it is not required by the specification.
178
179## Regular Expression {#Regex}
180
181The schema keyword `pattern` and `patternProperties` uses regular expression to match the required pattern.
182
183RapidJSON implemented a simple NFA regular expression engine, which is used by default. It supports the following syntax.
184
185|Syntax|Description|
186|------|-----------|
187|`ab`    | Concatenation |
188|<code>a&#124;b</code>   | Alternation |
189|`a?`    | Zero or one |
190|`a*`    | Zero or more |
191|`a+`    | One or more |
192|`a{3}`  | Exactly 3 times |
193|`a{3,}` | At least 3 times |
194|`a{3,5}`| 3 to 5 times |
195|`(ab)`  | Grouping |
196|`^a`    | At the beginning |
197|`a$`    | At the end |
198|`.`     | Any character |
199|`[abc]` | Character classes |
200|`[a-c]` | Character class range |
201|`[a-z0-9_]` | Character class combination |
202|`[^abc]` | Negated character classes |
203|`[^a-c]` | Negated character class range |
204|`[\b]`   | Backspace (U+0008) |
205|<code>\\&#124;</code>, `\\`, ...  | Escape characters |
206|`\f` | Form feed (U+000C) |
207|`\n` | Line feed (U+000A) |
208|`\r` | Carriage return (U+000D) |
209|`\t` | Tab (U+0009) |
210|`\v` | Vertical tab (U+000B) |
211
212For C++11 compiler, it is also possible to use the `std::regex` by defining `RAPIDJSON_SCHEMA_USE_INTERNALREGEX=0` and `RAPIDJSON_SCHEMA_USE_STDREGEX=1`. If your schemas do not need `pattern` and `patternProperties`, you can set both macros to zero to disable this feature, which will reduce some code size.
213
214# Performance {#Performance}
215
216Most C++ JSON libraries do not yet support JSON Schema. So we tried to evaluate the performance of RapidJSON's JSON Schema validator according to [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark), which tests 11 JavaScript libraries running on Node.js.
217
218That benchmark runs validations on [JSON Schema Test Suite](https://github.com/json-schema/JSON-Schema-Test-Suite), in which some test suites and tests are excluded. We made the same benchmarking procedure in [`schematest.cpp`](test/perftest/schematest.cpp).
219
220On a Mac Book Pro (2.8 GHz Intel Core i7), the following results are collected.
221
222|Validator|Relative speed|Number of test runs per second|
223|---------|:------------:|:----------------------------:|
224|RapidJSON|155%|30682|
225|[`ajv`](https://github.com/epoberezkin/ajv)|100%|19770 (± 1.31%)|
226|[`is-my-json-valid`](https://github.com/mafintosh/is-my-json-valid)|70%|13835 (± 2.84%)|
227|[`jsen`](https://github.com/bugventure/jsen)|57.7%|11411 (± 1.27%)|
228|[`schemasaurus`](https://github.com/AlexeyGrishin/schemasaurus)|26%|5145 (± 1.62%)|
229|[`themis`](https://github.com/playlyfe/themis)|19.9%|3935 (± 2.69%)|
230|[`z-schema`](https://github.com/zaggino/z-schema)|7%|1388 (± 0.84%)|
231|[`jsck`](https://github.com/pandastrike/jsck#readme)|3.1%|606 (± 2.84%)|
232|[`jsonschema`](https://github.com/tdegrunt/jsonschema#readme)|0.9%|185 (± 1.01%)|
233|[`skeemas`](https://github.com/Prestaul/skeemas#readme)|0.8%|154 (± 0.79%)|
234|tv4|0.5%|93 (± 0.94%)|
235|[`jayschema`](https://github.com/natesilva/jayschema)|0.1%|21 (± 1.14%)|
236
237That is, RapidJSON is about 1.5x faster than the fastest JavaScript library (ajv). And 1400x faster than the slowest one.
238
239# Schema violation reporting {#Reporting}
240
241(Unreleased as of 2017-09-20)
242
243When validating an instance against a JSON Schema,
244it is often desirable to report not only whether the instance is valid,
245but also the ways in which it violates the schema.
246
247The `SchemaValidator` class
248collects errors encountered during validation
249into a JSON `Value`.
250This error object can then be accessed as `validator.GetError()`.
251
252The structure of the error object is subject to change
253in future versions of RapidJSON,
254as there is no standard schema for violations.
255The details below this point are provisional only.
256
257## General provisions {#ReportingGeneral}
258
259Validation of an instance value against a schema
260produces an error value.
261The error value is always an object.
262An empty object `{}` indicates the instance is valid.
263
264* The name of each member
265  corresponds to the JSON Schema keyword that is violated.
266* The value is either an object describing a single violation,
267  or an array of such objects.
268
269Each violation object contains two string-valued members
270named `instanceRef` and `schemaRef`.
271`instanceRef` contains the URI fragment serialization
272of a JSON Pointer to the instance subobject
273in which the violation was detected.
274`schemaRef` contains the URI of the schema
275and the fragment serialization of a JSON Pointer
276to the subschema that was violated.
277
278Individual violation objects can contain other keyword-specific members.
279These are detailed further.
280
281For example, validating this instance:
282
283~~~json
284{"numbers": [1, 2, "3", 4, 5]}
285~~~
286
287against this schema:
288
289~~~json
290{
291  "type": "object",
292  "properties": {
293    "numbers": {"$ref": "numbers.schema.json"}
294  }
295}
296~~~
297
298where `numbers.schema.json` refers
299(via a suitable `IRemoteSchemaDocumentProvider`)
300to this schema:
301
302~~~json
303{
304  "type": "array",
305  "items": {"type": "number"}
306}
307~~~
308
309produces the following error object:
310
311~~~json
312{
313  "type": {
314    "instanceRef": "#/numbers/2",
315    "schemaRef": "numbers.schema.json#/items",
316    "expected": ["number"],
317    "actual": "string"
318  }
319}
320~~~
321
322## Validation keywords for numbers {#Numbers}
323
324### multipleOf {#multipleof}
325
326* `expected`: required number strictly greater than 0.
327  The value of the `multipleOf` keyword specified in the schema.
328* `actual`: required number.
329  The instance value.
330
331### maximum {#maximum}
332
333* `expected`: required number.
334  The value of the `maximum` keyword specified in the schema.
335* `exclusiveMaximum`: optional boolean.
336  This will be true if the schema specified `"exclusiveMaximum": true`,
337  and will be omitted otherwise.
338* `actual`: required number.
339  The instance value.
340
341### minimum {#minimum}
342
343* `expected`: required number.
344  The value of the `minimum` keyword specified in the schema.
345* `exclusiveMinimum`: optional boolean.
346  This will be true if the schema specified `"exclusiveMinimum": true`,
347  and will be omitted otherwise.
348* `actual`: required number.
349  The instance value.
350
351## Validation keywords for strings {#Strings}
352
353### maxLength {#maxLength}
354
355* `expected`: required number greater than or equal to 0.
356  The value of the `maxLength` keyword specified in the schema.
357* `actual`: required string.
358  The instance value.
359
360### minLength {#minLength}
361
362* `expected`: required number greater than or equal to 0.
363  The value of the `minLength` keyword specified in the schema.
364* `actual`: required string.
365  The instance value.
366
367### pattern {#pattern}
368
369* `actual`: required string.
370  The instance value.
371
372(The expected pattern is not reported
373because the internal representation in `SchemaDocument`
374does not store the pattern in original string form.)
375
376## Validation keywords for arrays {#Arrays}
377
378### additionalItems {#additionalItems}
379
380This keyword is reported
381when the value of `items` schema keyword is an array,
382the value of `additionalItems` is `false`,
383and the instance is an array
384with more items than specified in the `items` array.
385
386* `disallowed`: required integer greater than or equal to 0.
387  The index of the first item that has no corresponding schema.
388
389### maxItems and minItems {#maxItems-minItems}
390
391* `expected`: required integer greater than or equal to 0.
392  The value of `maxItems` (respectively, `minItems`)
393  specified in the schema.
394* `actual`: required integer greater than or equal to 0.
395  Number of items in the instance array.
396
397### uniqueItems {#uniqueItems}
398
399* `duplicates`: required array
400  whose items are integers greater than or equal to 0.
401  Indices of items of the instance that are equal.
402
403(RapidJSON only reports the first two equal items,
404for performance reasons.)
405
406## Validation keywords for objects
407
408### maxProperties and minProperties {#maxProperties-minProperties}
409
410* `expected`: required integer greater than or equal to 0.
411  The value of `maxProperties` (respectively, `minProperties`)
412  specified in the schema.
413* `actual`: required integer greater than or equal to 0.
414  Number of properties in the instance object.
415
416### required {#required}
417
418* `missing`: required array of one or more unique strings.
419  The names of properties
420  that are listed in the value of the `required` schema keyword
421  but not present in the instance object.
422
423### additionalProperties {#additionalProperties}
424
425This keyword is reported
426when the schema specifies `additionalProperties: false`
427and the name of a property of the instance is
428neither listed in the `properties` keyword
429nor matches any regular expression in the `patternProperties` keyword.
430
431* `disallowed`: required string.
432  Name of the offending property of the instance.
433
434(For performance reasons,
435RapidJSON only reports the first such property encountered.)
436
437### dependencies {#dependencies}
438
439* `errors`: required object with one or more properties.
440  Names and values of its properties are described below.
441
442Recall that JSON Schema Draft 04 supports
443*schema dependencies*,
444where presence of a named *controlling* property
445requires the instance object to be valid against a subschema,
446and *property dependencies*,
447where presence of a controlling property
448requires other *dependent* properties to be also present.
449
450For a violated schema dependency,
451`errors` will contain a property
452with the name of the controlling property
453and its value will be the error object
454produced by validating the instance object
455against the dependent schema.
456
457For a violated property dependency,
458`errors` will contain a property
459with the name of the controlling property
460and its value will be an array of one or more unique strings
461listing the missing dependent properties.
462
463## Validation keywords for any instance type {#AnyTypes}
464
465### enum {#enum}
466
467This keyword has no additional properties
468beyond `instanceRef` and `schemaRef`.
469
470* The allowed values are not listed
471  because `SchemaDocument` does not store them in original form.
472* The violating value is not reported
473  because it might be unwieldy.
474
475If you need to report these details to your users,
476you can access the necessary information
477by following `instanceRef` and `schemaRef`.
478
479### type {#type}
480
481* `expected`: required array of one or more unique strings,
482  each of which is one of the seven primitive types
483  defined by the JSON Schema Draft 04 Core specification.
484  Lists the types allowed by the `type` schema keyword.
485* `actual`: required string, also one of seven primitive types.
486  The primitive type of the instance.
487
488### allOf, anyOf, and oneOf {#allOf-anyOf-oneOf}
489
490* `errors`: required array of at least one object.
491  There will be as many items as there are subschemas
492  in the `allOf`, `anyOf` or `oneOf` schema keyword, respectively.
493  Each item will be the error value
494  produced by validating the instance
495  against the corresponding subschema.
496
497For `allOf`, at least one error value will be non-empty.
498For `anyOf`, all error values will be non-empty.
499For `oneOf`, either all error values will be non-empty,
500or more than one will be empty.
501
502### not {#not}
503
504This keyword has no additional properties
505apart from `instanceRef` and `schemaRef`.
506