Kwalify User's Guide (for Ruby)
last update: $Date$
Preface
Kwalify(*1) is a parser, schema validator, and data binding tool for YAML and JSON. Kwalify enables you to handle YAML and JSON more easily and strictly.
Topics:
- Schema validation for YAML and JSON
- Class definition generation for Ruby, PHP, and Java
- Data binding
- Preceding alias
- (*1)
- Pronounce as 'Qualify'.
Table of Contents
Schema Definition
This section describes how to define schema definition of YAML.
Sequence
schema01.yaml : sequence of stringtype: seq sequence: - type: str
document01a.yaml : valid document example- foo - bar - baz
$ kwalify -lf schema01.yaml document01a.yaml document01a.yaml#0: valid.
document01b.yaml : invalid document example- foo - 123 - baz
$ kwalify -lf schema01.yaml document01b.yaml document01b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 2) [/1] '123': not a string.
Default 'type:' is str so you can omit 'type: str'.
Mapping
schema02.yaml : mapping of scalartype: map
mapping:
"name":
type: str
required: yes
"email":
type: str
pattern: /@/
"age":
type: int
"birth":
type: date
document02a.yaml : valid document examplename: foo email: foo@mail.com age: 20 birth: 1985-01-01
$ kwalify -lf schema02.yaml document02a.yaml document02a.yaml#0: valid.
document02b.yaml : invalid document examplename: foo email: foo(at)mail.com age: twenty birth: Jun 01, 1985
$ kwalify -lf schema02.yaml document02b.yaml document02b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 2) [/email] 'foo(at)mail.com': not matched to pattern /@/. - (line 3) [/age] 'twenty': not a integer. - (line 4) [/birth] 'Jun 01, 1985': not a date.
Sequence of Mapping
schema03.yaml : sequence of mappingtype: seq
sequence:
- type: map
mapping:
"name":
type: str
required: true
"email":
type: str
document03a.yaml : valid document example- name: foo email: foo@mail.com - name: bar email: bar@mail.net - name: baz email: baz@mail.org
$ kwalify -lf schema03.yaml document03a.yaml document03a.yaml#0: valid.
document03b.yaml : invalid document example- name: foo email: foo@mail.com - naem: bar email: bar@mail.net - name: baz mail: baz@mail.org
$ kwalify -lf schema03.yaml document03b.yaml document03b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 3) [/1] key 'name:' is required. - (line 3) [/1/naem] key 'naem:' is undefined. - (line 6) [/2/mail] key 'mail:' is undefined.
Mapping of Sequence
schema04.yaml : mapping of sequence of mappingtype: map
mapping:
"company":
type: str
required: yes
"email":
type: str
"employees":
type: seq
sequence:
- type: map
mapping:
"code":
type: int
required: yes
"name":
type: str
required: yes
"email":
type: str
document04a.yaml : valid document examplecompany: Kuwata lab.
email: webmaster@kuwata-lab.com
employees:
- code: 101
name: foo
email: foo@kuwata-lab.com
- code: 102
name: bar
email: bar@kuwata-lab.com
$ kwalify -lf schema04.yaml document04a.yaml document04a.yaml#0: valid.
document04b.yaml : invalid document examplecompany: Kuwata Lab.
email: webmaster@kuwata-lab.com
employees:
- code: A101
name: foo
email: foo@kuwata-lab.com
- code: 102
name: bar
mail: bar@kuwata-lab.com
$ kwalify -lf schema04.yaml document04b.yaml document04b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 4) [/employees/0/code] 'A101': not a integer. - (line 9) [/employees/1/mail] key 'mail:' is undefined.
Rule and Constraint
type:, required:, length, ... are called constraint and set of constraints are called rule.
- Rule contains 'type:' constraint. If 'type:' is omitted, 'type: str' is used as default.
- 'sequence:' constraint takes a sequence of rule (the sequence can contain only a rule).
- 'mapping:' constraint takes a mapping which values are rules.
The following is a list of constraints.
-
required: - Value is required when true (default is false). This is similar to not-null constraint in RDBMS.
-
enum: - List of available values.
-
pattern: - Specifies regular expression pattern of value.
-
type: -
Type of value. The followings are available:
strintfloatnumber(== int or float)text(== str or number)booldatetimetimestampseqmapscalar(all but seq and map)any(means any data)
-
range: -
Range of value between max/max-ex and min/min-ex.
- 'max' means 'max-inclusive'.
- 'min' means 'min-inclusive'.
- 'max-ex' means 'max-exclusive'.
- 'min-ex' means 'min-exclusive'.
seq,map,boolandanyare not available withrange:. -
length: -
Range of length of value between max/max-ex and min/min-ex.
Only type
strandtextare available withlength:. -
assert: -
String which represents validation expression.
String should contain variable name
valwhich repsents value. (This is an experimental function and not supported in Kwartz-java). -
unique: - Value is unique for mapping or sequence. This is similar to unique constraint of RDBMS. See the next subsection for detail.
-
name: - Name of schema.
-
desc: - Description. This is not used for validation.
-
class: - Class name. This is for data-binding and is available only with type 'map'. This is also used in 'genclass' action.
-
default: -
Default value.
This is only for 'genclass' action, and have no effect to validation and parsing.
Default value should be scalar and it is not available if
type:ismaporseq, and also not available whenrequired:is true.
schema05.yaml : rule examplestype: seq
sequence:
-
type: map
mapping:
"name":
type: str
required: yes
"email":
type: str
required: yes
pattern: /@/
"password":
type: text
length: { max: 16, min: 8 }
"age":
type: int
range: { max: 30, min: 18 }
# or assert: 18 <= val && val <= 30
"blood":
type: str
enum: [A, B, O, AB]
"birth":
type: date
"memo":
type: any
"deleted":
type: bool
default: false
document05a.yaml : valid document example- name: foo email: foo@mail.com password: xxx123456 age: 20 blood: A birth: 1985-01-01 - name: bar email: bar@mail.net age: 25 blood: AB birth: 1980-01-01
$ kwalify -lf schema05.yaml document05a.yaml document05a.yaml#0: valid.
document05b.yaml : invalid document example- name: foo email: foo(at)mail.com password: xxx123 age: twenty blood: a birth: 1985-01-01 - given-name: bar family-name: Bar email: bar@mail.net age: 15 blood: AB birth: 1980/01/01
$ kwalify -lf schema05.yaml document05b.yaml document05b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 2) [/0/email] 'foo(at)mail.com': not matched to pattern /@/. - (line 3) [/0/password] 'xxx123': too short (length 6 < min 8). - (line 4) [/0/age] 'twenty': not a integer. - (line 5) [/0/blood] 'a': invalid blood value. - (line 7) [/1] key 'name:' is required. - (line 7) [/1/given-name] key 'given-name:' is undefined. - (line 8) [/1/family-name] key 'family-name:' is undefined. - (line 10) [/1/age] '15': too small (< min 18). - (line 12) [/1/birth] '1980/01/01': not a date.
Unique constraint
'unique:' constraint is available with elements of sequence or mapping.
This is equivalent to unique constraint of RDBMS.
- Type of rule which has '
unique:' entry must be scalar (str, int, float, ...). - Type of parent rule must be sequence or mapping.
schema06.yaml : unique constraint entry with mapping and sequencetype: seq
sequence:
- type: map
required: yes
mapping:
"name": { type: str, required: yes, unique: yes }
"email": { type: str }
"groups":
type: seq
sequence:
- { type: str, unique: yes }
document06a.yaml : valid document example- name: foo
email: admin@mail.com
groups:
- users
- foo
- admin
- name: bar
email: admin@mail.com
groups:
- users
- admin
- name: baz
email: baz@mail.com
groups:
- users
$ kwalify -lf schema06.yaml document06a.yaml document06a.yaml#0: valid.
document06b.yaml : invalid document example- name: foo
email: admin@mail.com
groups:
- foo
- users
- admin
- foo
- name: bar
email: admin@mail.com
groups:
- admin
- users
- name: bar
email: baz@mail.com
groups:
- users
$ kwalify -lf schema06.yaml document06b.yaml document06b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 7) [/0/groups/3] 'foo': is already used at '/0/groups/0'. - (line 13) [/2/name] 'bar': is already used at '/1/name'.
Tips
JSON
JSON is a lightweight data-interchange format, especially useful for JavaScript. JSON can be considered as a subset of YAML. It means that YAML parser can parse JSON and Kwalify can validate JSON document.
schema12.json : an example schema definition written in JSON format{ "type": "map",
"required": true,
"mapping": {
"name": { "type": "str", "required": true },
"email": { "type": "str" },
"age": { "type": "int" },
"gender": { "type": "str", "enum": ["M", "F"] },
"favorite": { "type": "seq",
"sequence": [ { "type": "str" } ]
}
}
}
document12a.json : valid JSON document example{ "name": "Foo",
"email": "foo@mail.com",
"age": 20,
"gender": "F",
"favorite": [
"football",
"basketball",
"baseball"
]
}
$ kwalify -lf schema12.json document12a.json document12a.json#0: valid.
document12b.json : invalid JSON document example{
"mail": "foo@mail.com",
"age": twenty,
"gender": "X",
"favorite": [ 123, 456 ]
}
$ kwalify -lf schema12.json document12b.json document12b.json#0: INVALID - (line 1) [/] key 'name:' is required. - (line 2) [/mail] key 'mail:' is undefined. - (line 3) [/age] 'twenty': not a integer. - (line 4) [/gender] 'X': invalid gender value. - (line 5) [/favorite/0] '123': not a string. - (line 5) [/favorite/1] '456': not a string.
Anchor and Alias
You can share rules by YAML anchor and alias.
schema13.yaml : anchor exampletype: seq
sequence:
- &employee
type: map
mapping:
"given-name": &name
type: str
required: yes
"family-name": *name
"post":
type: str
enum: [exective, manager, clerk]
"supervisor": *employee
Anchor and alias is also available in YAML document.
document13a.yaml : valid document example- &foo given-name: foo family-name: Foo post: exective - &bar given-name: bar family-name: Bar post: manager supervisor: *foo - given-name: baz family-name: Baz post: clerk supervisor: *bar - given-name: zak family-name: Zak post: clerk supervisor: *bar
$ kwalify -lf schema13.yaml document13a.yaml document13a.yaml#0: valid.
Default of Mapping
YAML allows user to specify default value of mapping.
For example, the following YAML document uses default value of mapping.
A: 10 B: 20 =: -1 # default value
This is equal to the following Ruby code.
map = ["A"=>10, "B"=>20] map.default = -1 map
Kwalify allows user to specify default rule using default value of mapping. It is useful when key names are unknown.
schema14.yaml : default rule exampletype: map
mapping:
=: # default rule
type: number
range: { max: 1, min: -1 }
document14a.yaml : valid document examplevalue1: 0 value2: 0.5 value3: -0.9
$ kwalify -lf schema14.yaml document14a.yaml document14a.yaml#0: valid.
document14b.yaml : invalid document examplevalue1: 0 value2: 1.1 value3: -2.0
$ kwalify -lf schema14.yaml document14b.yaml document14b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 2) [/value2] '1.1': too large (> max 1). - (line 3) [/value3] '-2.0': too small (< min -1).
Merging Mappings
YAML allows user to merge mappings.
- &a1 A: 10 B: 20 - <<: *a1 # merge A: 15 # override C: 30 # add
This is equal to the following Ruby code.
a1 = {"A"=>10, "B"=>20}
tmp = {}
tmp.update(a1) # merge
tmp["A"] = 15 # override
tmp["C"] = 30 # add
This feature allows Kwalify to merge rule entries.
schema15.yaml : merging rule entries exampletype: map
mapping:
"group":
type: map
mapping:
"name": &name
type: str
required: yes
"email": &email
type: str
pattern: /@/
required: no
"user":
type: map
mapping:
"name":
<<: *name # merge
length: { max: 16 } # add
"email":
<<: *email # merge
required: yes # override
document15a.yaml : valid document examplegroup: name: foo email: foo@mail.com user: name: bar email: bar@mail.com
$ kwalify -lf schema15.yaml document15a.yaml document15a.yaml#0: valid.
document15b.yaml : invalid document examplegroup: name: foo email: foo@mail.com user: name: toooooo-looooong-name
$ kwalify -lf schema15.yaml document15b.yaml document15b.yaml#0: INVALID - (line 5) [/user] key 'email:' is required. - (line 5) [/user/name] 'toooooo-looooong-name': too long (length 21 > max 16).
How to in Ruby
This section describes how to use Kwalify in Ruby.
Validation
require 'kwalify'
#require 'yaml'
## load schema data
schema = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('schema.yaml')
## or
#schema = YAML.load_file('schema.yaml')
## create validator
validator = Kwalify::Validator.new(schema)
## load document
document = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('document.yaml')
## or
#document = YAML.load_file('document.yaml')
## validate
errors = validator.validate(document)
## show errors
if errors && !errors.empty?
for e in errors
puts "[#{e.path}] #{e.message}"
end
end
Parsing with Validation
From version 0.7, Kwalify supports parsing with validation.
require 'kwalify'
#require 'yaml'
## load schema data
schema = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('schema.yaml')
## or
#schema = YAML.load_file('schema.yaml')
## create validator
validator = Kwalify::Validator.new(schema)
## create parser with validator
## (if validator is ommitted, no validation executed.)
parser = Kwalify:::Yaml::Parser.new(validator)
## parse document with validation
filename = 'document.yaml'
document = parser.parse_file(filename)
## or
#document = parser.parse(File.read(filename), filename)
## show errors if exist
errors = parser.errors()
if errors && !errors.empty?
for e in errors
puts "#{e.linenum}:#{e.column} [#{e.path}] #{e.message}"
end
end
Meta Validation
Meta validator is a validator which validates schema definition. The schema definition is placed at 'kwalify/kwalify.schema.yaml'.
Kwalify also provides Kwalify::MetaValidator class which validates schema defition.
require 'kwalify'
## meta validator
metavalidator = Kwalify::MetaValidator.instance
## validate schema definition
parser = Kwalify::Yaml::Parser.new(metavalidator)
errors = parser.parse_file('schema.yaml')
for e in errors
puts "#{e.linenum}:#{e.column} [#{e.path}] #{e.message}"
end if errors && !errors.empty?
Meta validation is also available with command-line option '-m'.
$ kwalify -m schema1.yaml schema2.yaml ...
Validator#validator_hook()
You can extend Kwalify::Validator and override Kwalify::Validator#validator_hook() method. This method is called by Kwalify::Validator#validate().
type: map
mapping:
"answers":
type: seq
sequence:
- type: map
name: Answer
mapping:
"name": { type: str, required: yes }
"answer": { type: str, required: yes,
enum: [good, not bad, bad] }
"reason": { type: str }
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'kwalify'
## validator class for answers
class AnswersValidator < Kwalify::Validator
## load schema definition
@@schema = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('answers-schema.yaml')
## or
## require 'yaml'
## @@schema = YAML.load_file('answers-schema.yaml')
def initialize()
super(@@schema)
end
## hook method called by Validator#validate()
def validate_hook(value, rule, path, errors)
case rule.name
when 'Answer'
if value['answer'] == 'bad'
reason = value['reason']
if !reason || reason.empty?
msg = "reason is required when answer is 'bad'."
errors << Kwalify::ValidationError.new(msg, path)
end
end
end
end
end
## create validator
validator = AnswersValidator.new
## parse and validate YAML document
input = ARGF.read()
parser = Kwalify::Yaml::Parser.new(validator)
document = parser.parse(input)
## show errors
errors = parser.errors()
if !errors || errors.empty?
puts "Valid."
else
puts "*** INVALID!"
for e in errors
# e.class == Kwalify::ValidationError
puts "#{e.linenum}:#{e.column} [#{e.path}] #{e.message}"
end
end
document07a.yaml : valid document exampleanswers:
- name: Foo
answer: good
reason: I like this style.
- name: Bar
answer: not bad
- name: Baz
answer: bad
reason: I don't like this style.
$ ruby answers-validator.rb document07a.yaml Valid.
document07b.yaml : invalid document exampleanswers:
- name: Foo
answer: good
- name: Bar
answer: bad
- name: Baz
answer: not bad
$ ruby answers-validator.rb document07b.yaml *** INVALID! 4:3 [/answers/1] reason is required when answer is 'bad'.
You can validate some document by a Validator instance because Validator class and Validator#validate() method are stateless. If you use instance variables in custom validator_hook() method, it becomes to be stateful.
Preceding Alias
From version 0.7, Kwalify allows aliases to appear before corresponding anchors are now appeared. These aliases are called as 'preceding alias'.
- name: Foo parent: *bar # preceding alias - &bar name: Bar parent: *baz # preceding alias - &baz name: Baz parent: null
To enable preceding alias, set Kwalify::Yaml::Parser#preceding_alias to true.
require 'kwalify'
parser = Kwalify::Yaml::Parser.new
parser.preceding_alias = true # enable preceding alias
ydoc = parser.parse_file('howto3.yaml')
require 'pp'
pp ydoc
$ ruby howto3.rb
[{"name"=>"Foo",
"parent"=>{"name"=>"Bar", "parent"=>{"name"=>"Baz", "parent"=>nil}}},
{"name"=>"Bar", "parent"=>{"name"=>"Baz", "parent"=>nil}},
{"name"=>"Baz", "parent"=>nil}]
Command-line option '-P' also enables preceding alias.
Preceding alias is very useful when document is complex.
Data Binding
From version 0.7, Kwalify supports data binding. * To enable data binding, set Kwlaify::Yaml::Parser#data_binding to true. * It is required to specify class name in schema definition. (Notice that 'class:' constraint is avaialbe only with rule which type is 'map'.) * Also instance methods '[]', '[]=', and 'keys?' must be defined in the classes. (Including Kwalify::Util::HashLike modules is easy way to define them.)
type: map
class: Config
mapping:
"host": { type: str, required: true }
"port": { type: int }
"user": { type: str, required: true }
"pass": { type: str, required: true }
host: localhost port: 8080 user: user1 pass: password1
## class definition
require 'kwalify/util/hashlike'
class Config
include Kwalify::Util::HashLike # defines [], []=, and keys?
attr_accessor :host, :posrt, :user, :pass
end
## create validator object
require 'kwalify'
schema = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('config.schema.yaml')
validator = Kwalify::Validator.new(schema)
## parse configuration file with data binding
parser = Kwalify::Yaml::Parser.new(validator)
parser.data_binding = true # enable data binding
config = parser.parse_file('config.yaml')
require 'pp'
pp config
$ ruby loadconfig.rb #<Config: @host="localhost", @pass="password1", @port=8080, @user="user1">
Data binding is available even when data is more complex. Preceding alias is also available.
For example, the following data is complex because it uses anchor and alias (including preceding alias).
teams:
- &thechildren
name: The Children
desc: Level 7 ESPers
chief: *minamoto # preceding alias
members: [*kaoru, *aoi, *shiho] # preceding aliases
members:
- &minamoto
name: Kohichi Minamoto
desc: Scientist
team: *thechildren
- &kaoru
name: Kaoru Akashi
desc: Psychokino
team: *thechildren
- &aoi
name: Aoi Nogami
desc: Teleporter
team: *thechildren
- &shiho
name: Shiho Sannomiya
desc: Psycometrer
team: *thechildren
Here is the schema definition. (Notice that 'class:' constraint is avaialbe only with rule which type is 'map'.)
type: map
required: yes
mapping:
"teams":
type: seq
required: yes
sequence:
- &team
type: map
required: yes
class: Team
mapping:
"name": {type: str, required: yes, unique: yes}
"desc": {type: str}
"chief": *member # preceding alias
"members":
type: seq
sequence: [*member] # preceding alias
"members":
type: seq
required: yes
sequence:
- &member
type: map
required: yes
class: Member
mapping:
"name": {type: str, required: yes, unique: yes}
"desc": {type: str}
"team": *team
It is required to define class 'Team' and 'Member' for data-binding. Command-line option '-a genclass-ruby' will help you to generate class definitions from schema definition. Try 'kwalify -ha genclass-ruby' for more details about 'genclass-ruby' action.
$ kwalify -a genclass-ruby -P -f BABEL.schema.yaml \
--hashlike --initialize=false --module=Babel
require 'kwalify/util/hashlike'
module Babel
##
class Team
include Kwalify::Util::HashLike
attr_accessor :name # str
attr_accessor :desc # str
attr_accessor :chief # map
attr_accessor :members # seq
end
##
class Member
include Kwalify::Util::HashLike
attr_accessor :name # str
attr_accessor :desc # str
attr_accessor :team # map
end
end
$ kwalify -a genclass-ruby -P -f BABEL.schema.yaml \
--hashlike --initialize=false --module=Babel > models.rb
Here is the ruby program.
require 'kwalify'
require 'models'
## load schema definition
schema = Kwalify::Yaml.load_file('BABEL.schema.yaml',
:untabify=>true,
:preceding_alias=>true)
## add module name to 'class:'
Kwalify::Util.traverse_schema(schema) do |rulehash|
if rulehash['class']
rulehash['class'] = 'Babel::' + rulehash['class']
end
end
## create validator
validator = Kwalify::Validator.new(schema)
## parse with data-binding
parser = Kwalify::Yaml::Parser.new(validator)
parser.preceding_alias = true
parser.data_binding = true
ydoc = parser.parse_file('BABEL.data.yaml', :untabify=>true)
## show document
require 'pp'
pp ydoc
$ ruby loadbabel.rb
{"teams"=>
[#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8
@chief=
#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0
@desc="Scientist",
@name="Kohichi Minamoto",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
@desc="Level 7 ESPers",
@members=
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d018
@desc="Psychokino",
@name="Kaoru Akashi",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50
@desc="Teleporter",
@name="Aoi Nogami",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488
@desc="Psycometrer",
@name="Shiho Sannomiya",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>],
@name="The Children">],
"members"=>
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0
@desc="Scientist",
@name="Kohichi Minamoto",
@team=
#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8
@chief=#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0 ...>,
@desc="Level 7 ESPers",
@members=
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d018
@desc="Psychokino",
@name="Kaoru Akashi",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50
@desc="Teleporter",
@name="Aoi Nogami",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488
@desc="Psycometrer",
@name="Shiho Sannomiya",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>],
@name="The Children">>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53d018
@desc="Psychokino",
@name="Kaoru Akashi",
@team=
#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8
@chief=
#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0
@desc="Scientist",
@name="Kohichi Minamoto",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
@desc="Level 7 ESPers",
@members=
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d018 ...>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50
@desc="Teleporter",
@name="Aoi Nogami",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488
@desc="Psycometrer",
@name="Shiho Sannomiya",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>],
@name="The Children">>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50
@desc="Teleporter",
@name="Aoi Nogami",
@team=
#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8
@chief=
#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0
@desc="Scientist",
@name="Kohichi Minamoto",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
@desc="Level 7 ESPers",
@members=
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d018
@desc="Psychokino",
@name="Kaoru Akashi",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50 ...>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488
@desc="Psycometrer",
@name="Shiho Sannomiya",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>],
@name="The Children">>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488
@desc="Psycometrer",
@name="Shiho Sannomiya",
@team=
#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8
@chief=
#<Babel::Member:0x53d5e0
@desc="Scientist",
@name="Kohichi Minamoto",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
@desc="Level 7 ESPers",
@members=
[#<Babel::Member:0x53d018
@desc="Psychokino",
@name="Kaoru Akashi",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53ca50
@desc="Teleporter",
@name="Aoi Nogami",
@team=#<Babel::Team:0x53e0f8 ...>>,
#<Babel::Member:0x53c488 ...>],
@name="The Children">>]}
Actions
Kwalify has the command-line '-a action' which perform a certain action to schema definition. Currently only the following actions are provided.
- genclass-ruby
-
Generate class definitions in Ruby.
- genclass-java
-
Generate class definitions in Java.
- genclass-php
-
Generate class definitions in Ruby.
In fact action name represents template filename. For example, action 'genclass-ruby' invokes template file 'kwalify/templates/genclass-ruby.eruby'.
Each action can accept some command-line properties. For example, action 'genclass-ruby' can accept the command-line properties '--module=name', '--parent=name', and so on. Type 'kwalify -h -a action' to show the list of command-line properties the action can accept.
It is able to add your on action template file. The command-line option '-I' (template path) will help you.
Class Definition Generation
Command-line option '-a genclass-ruby' or '-a genclass-java' generates class definition automatically from schema definition in Ruby or Java.
Assume the following data file and schema definition.
address_book.yaml : data filegroups:
- name: family
desc: my family
- name: friend
desc: my friends
- name: business
desc: those who works together
people:
- name: Sumire
group: family
birth: 2000-01-01
blood: A
- name: Shiina
group: friend
birth: 1995-01-01
email: shiina@mail.org
- name: Sakura
group: business
email: cherry@mail.net
phone: 012-345-6789
address_book.schema.yaml : schema definition filetype: map
class: AddressBook
desc: address-book class
mapping:
"groups":
type: seq
sequence:
- type: map
class: Group
desc: group class
mapping:
"name": { type: str, required: yes }
"desc": { type: str }
"people":
type: seq
sequence:
- type: map
class: Person
desc: person class
mapping:
"name": { type: str, required: yes }
"desc": { type: str }
"group": { type: str }
"email": { type: str, pattern: '/@/' }
"phone": { type: str }
"birth": { type: date }
"blood": { type: str, enum: [A, B, O, AB] }
"deleted": { type: bool, default: false }
Ruby Class Definition
$ kwalify -a genclass-ruby -tf address_book.schema.yaml > address_book.rb
address_book.rb : generated class definition## address-book class
class AddressBook
def initialize(hash=nil)
if hash.nil?
return
end
@groups = (v=hash['groups']) ? v.map!{|e| e.is_a?(Group) ? e : Group.new(e)} : v
@people = (v=hash['people']) ? v.map!{|e| e.is_a?(Person) ? e : Person.new(e)} : v
end
attr_accessor :groups # seq
attr_accessor :people # seq
end
## group class
class Group
def initialize(hash=nil)
if hash.nil?
return
end
@name = hash['name']
@desc = hash['desc']
end
attr_accessor :name # str
attr_accessor :desc # str
end
## person class
class Person
def initialize(hash=nil)
if hash.nil?
@deleted = false
return
end
@name = hash['name']
@desc = hash['desc']
@group = hash['group']
@email = hash['email']
@phone = hash['phone']
@birth = hash['birth']
@blood = hash['blood']
@deleted = (v=hash['deleted']).nil? ? false : v
end
attr_accessor :name # str
attr_accessor :desc # str
attr_accessor :group # str
attr_accessor :email # str
attr_accessor :phone # str
attr_accessor :birth # date
attr_accessor :blood # str
attr_accessor :deleted # bool
def deleted? ; @deleted ; end
end
example_address_book.rb : example code of using address-book.rbrequire 'address_book'
require 'yaml'
require 'pp'
str = File.read('address_book.yaml')
ydoc = YAML.load(str)
addrbook = AddressBook.new(ydoc)
pp addrbook.groups
pp addrbook.people
$ ruby example_address_book.rb [#<Group:0xddf24 @desc="my family", @name="family">, #<Group:0xddf10 @desc="my friends", @name="friend">, #<Group:0xdde84 @desc="those who works together", @name="business">] [#<Person:0xdefdc @birth=#<Date: 4903089/2,0,2299161>, @blood="A", @deleted=false, @desc=nil, @email=nil, @group="family", @name="Sumire", @phone=nil>, #<Person:0xdee9c @birth=#<Date: 4899437/2,0,2299161>, @blood=nil, @deleted=false, @desc=nil, @email="shiina@mail.org", @group="friend", @name="Shiina", @phone=nil>, #<Person:0xde8e8 @birth=nil, @blood=nil, @deleted=false, @desc=nil, @email="cherry@mail.net", @group="business", @name="Sakura", @phone="012-345-6789">]
Command-line option '-h -a genclass-ruby' shows the commpand-line properties that template can accept.
$ kwalify -ha genclass-ruby --module=name : module name in which class defined --parent=name : parent class name --include=name : module name which all classes include --initialize=false : not print initialize() method --hashlike : include Kwalify::Util::HashLike module
$ kwalify -a genclass-ruby --module=My --hashlike
If command-line property '--hashlike' (== '--hashlike=true') is specified, module Kwalify::Util::HashLike is included for each classes generated. That module is defined in 'kwalify/util/hashlike.rb'
Java Class Definition
$ kwalify -a genclass-java -tf address_book.schema.yaml generating ./AddressBook.java...done. generating ./Group.java...done. generating ./Person.java...done.
AddressBook.java : generated class definition// generated by kwalify from address_book.schema.yaml
import java.util.*;
/**
* address-book class
*/
public class AddressBook {
private List _groups;
private List _people;
public AddressBook() {}
public AddressBook(Map map) {
List seq;
Object obj;
if ((seq = (List)map.get("groups")) != null) {
for (int i = 0; i < seq.size(); i++) {
if ((obj = seq.get(i)) instanceof Map) {
seq.set(i, new Group((Map)obj));
}
}
}
_groups = seq;
if ((seq = (List)map.get("people")) != null) {
for (int i = 0; i < seq.size(); i++) {
if ((obj = seq.get(i)) instanceof Map) {
seq.set(i, new Person((Map)obj));
}
}
}
_people = seq;
}
public List getGroups() { return _groups; }
public void setGroups(List groups_) { _groups = groups_; }
public List getPeople() { return _people; }
public void setPeople(List people_) { _people = people_; }
}
Group.java : generated class definition// generated by kwalify from address_book.schema.yaml
import java.util.*;
/**
* group class
*/
public class Group {
private String _name;
private String _desc;
public Group() {}
public Group(Map map) {
_name = (String)map.get("name");
_desc = (String)map.get("desc");
}
public String getName() { return _name; }
public void setName(String name_) { _name = name_; }
public String getDesc() { return _desc; }
public void setDesc(String desc_) { _desc = desc_; }
}
Person.java : generated class definition// generated by kwalify from address_book.schema.yaml
import java.util.*;
/**
* person class
*/
public class Person {
private String _name;
private String _desc;
private String _group;
private String _email;
private String _phone;
private Date _birth;
private String _blood;
public Person() {}
public Person(Map map) {
_name = (String)map.get("name");
_desc = (String)map.get("desc");
_group = (String)map.get("group");
_email = (String)map.get("email");
_phone = (String)map.get("phone");
_birth = (Date)map.get("birth");
_blood = (String)map.get("blood");
}
public String getName() { return _name; }
public void setName(String name_) { _name = name_; }
public String getDesc() { return _desc; }
public void setDesc(String desc_) { _desc = desc_; }
public String getGroup() { return _group; }
public void setGroup(String group_) { _group = group_; }
public String getEmail() { return _email; }
public void setEmail(String email_) { _email = email_; }
public String getPhone() { return _phone; }
public void setPhone(String phone_) { _phone = phone_; }
public Date getBirth() { return _birth; }
public void setBirth(Date birth_) { _birth = birth_; }
public String getBlood() { return _blood; }
public void setBlood(String blood_) { _blood = blood_; }
}
ExampleAddressBook.java : example code of using *.javaimport java.util.*;
import kwalify.*;
public class ExampleAddressBook {
public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception {
// read schema
String schema_str = Util.readFile("address_book.schema.yaml");
schema_str = Util.untabify(schema_str);
Object schema = new YamlParser(schema_str).parse();
// read document file
String document_str = Util.readFile("address_book.yaml");
document_str = Util.untabify(document_str);
YamlParser parser = new YamlParser(document_str);
Object document = parser.parse();
// create address book object
AddressBook addrbook = new AddressBook((Map)document);
// show groups
List groups = addrbook.getGroups();
if (groups != null) {
for (Iterator it = groups.iterator(); it.hasNext(); ) {
Group group = (Group)it.next();
System.out.println("group name: " + group.getName());
System.out.println("group desc: " + group.getDesc());
System.out.println();
}
}
// show people
List people = addrbook.getPeople();
if (people != null) {
for (Iterator it = people.iterator(); it.hasNext(); ) {
Person person = (Person)it.next();
System.out.println("person name: " + person.getName());
System.out.println("person group: " + person.getGroup());
System.out.println("person email: " + person.getEmail());
System.out.println("person phone: " + person.getPhone());
System.out.println("person blood: " + person.getBlood());
System.out.println("person birth: " + person.getBirth());
System.out.println();
}
}
}
}
$ javac -classpath '.:kwalify.jar' *.java $ java -classpath '.:kwalify.jar' ExampleAddressBook group name: family group desc: my family group name: friend group desc: my friends group name: business group desc: those who works together person name: Sumire person group: family person email: null person phone: null person blood: A person birth: Tue Feb 01 00:00:00 JST 2000 person name: Shiina person group: friend person email: shiina@mail.org person phone: null person blood: null person birth: Wed Feb 01 00:00:00 JST 1995 person name: Sakura person group: business person email: cherry@mail.net person phone: 012-345-6789 person blood: null person birth: null
Command-line option '-h -a genclass-java' shows the commpand-line properties that template can accept.
$ kwalify -ha genclass-java --package=name : package name --extends=name : class name to extend --implements=name,... : interface names to implement --dir=path : directory to locate output file --basedir=path : base directory to locate output file --constructor=false : not print initialize() method
$ kwalify -a genclass-java --package=com.example.my --implements=Serializable --basedir=src
References
Usage in Command-Line
### usage1: validate YAML document in command-line $ kwalify -f schema.yaml document.yaml [document2.yaml ...] ### usage2: validate schema definition in command-line $ kwalify -m schema.yaml [schema2.yaml ...]
Command-line options:
-
-h,--help - Print help message.
-
-v - Print version.
-
-q - Quiet mode.
-
-s - (Obsolete. Use '-q' instead.) Silent mode.
-
-f schema.yaml - Specify schema definition file.
-
-m - Meta-validation of schema definition.
-
-t - Expand tab characters to spaces automatically.
-
-l - Show linenumber on which error found.
-
-E - Show errors in Emacs-compatible style (implies '-l' option).
-
-a action - Do action. Currently supported action is 'genclass-ruby' and 'genclass-java'. Try '-ha action' to get help about the action.
-
-I path1,path2,... - Template path (for '-a').
-
-P - Enable preceding alias.