Skip to content

Provides a convenient way to validate incoming parameters of your Phoenix application's controllers by offering you small but useful DSL.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

implicitly-awesome/exop_plug

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

28 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Hex.pm API Docs Build Status

ExopPlug

This library provides a convenient way to validate incoming parameters of your Phoenix application's controllers by offering you small but useful DSL which makes as little magic behind the scenes as possible leaves you all the control under HTTP request.

Table of Contents

CHANGELOG

Installation

def deps do
  [
    {:exop, "~> 1.4"},
    {:exop_plug, "~> 1.1"}
  ]
end

How it works

Basically speaking ExopPlug utilizes the power of Exop library by generating in compile time Exop-operations for your actions defined in a plug.

So, you define a plug with number of actions and parameters with validation checks. Then you use this plug in corresponding controller and that's it: once HTTP request comes, your controller's plug takes an action: it figures out whether this particular HTTP request's parameters should be validated or not, and if yes - validates them.

If parameters pass the validation ExopPlug returns Plug.Conn (as usual plug does), if not - it returns Exop's error-tuple as described here. And it is up to you then to decide how you want to handle the result.

Please keep in mind: ExopPlug doesn't transform your HTTP request nor Plug.Conn.t() structure. So, if you define get '/user/:user_id' in your router you receive %{"user_id" => "1"} for the request http://localhost:4000/user/1. There is no any coercion or type inference done under the scenes.

(if such feature(-s) will be requested, they'll be added and you'll need to specify them explicitly in an action definition)

Step-by-step

1. create a plug

Create a new module plug and define actions with parameters you want to validate. A parameter's validations are the same as Exop has for an operation parameter checks. You can find all them here along with other features like coercion.

defmodule MyAppWeb.UserControllerPlug do
  use ExopPlug

  action(:show, params: %{"id" => [type: :string, length: %{min: 5}]}, on_fail: &__MODULE__.on_fail/3)

  def on_fail(conn, action_name, errors_map) do
    Plug.Conn.assign(conn, :errors, errors_map)
  end
end

Here we also defined an on_fail callback. This 3-arity function is called when an action's parameters failed the specified validation.

2. in a controller

Simply add plug MyAppWeb.UserControllerPlug at the top of your controller.

defmodule MyAppWeb.UserController do
  use MyAppWeb, :controller

  plug MyAppWeb.UserControllerPlug

  # ...

  def show(conn, params) do
    json(conn, params)
  end

  # ...
end

Now, if you receive invalid parameters for your show you get (for example) errors: %{"id" => ["has wrong type"]}} within your Plug.Conn assigns (as you earlier specified in your plug). And then it is up to you how to deal with this errors map.

More examples

The power of ExopPlug actually is provided by Exop and its validation capabilities. Basically, every check you use in Exop you can apply for an action's parameter in your plug.

Below I put a couple of examples just in order to show different checks and things you can do with a parameter or validation errors.

coercing

In the example above there is one tricky thing which I've just omit for the sake of example: with get '/user/:user_id' route you'll get user_id parameter as string, always, because it is path parameter.

But you can coerce it before the validation:

action(:show, params: %{"id" => [type: :integer, coerce_with: &__MODULE__.coerce_integer/2]})

def coerce_integer({_, param_value}, _) when is_binary(param_value) do
  {integer, ""} = Integer.parse(param_value)
  integer
end

(and again: read more about :coerce_with option in Exop docs)

rely on action_fallback

After assigning errors to a connection you can later pattern-match it in a controller's action and invoke your action_fallback's fallback controller:

# in a plug ...

action(:show, params: %{"id" => [type: :integer]}, on_fail: &__MODULE__.on_fail/3)

def on_fail(conn, action_name, errors_map) do
  Plug.Conn.assign(conn, :errors, errors_map)
end

# in a controller ...

action_fallback MyAppWeb.FallbackController

def show(%Plug.Conn{assigns: %{errors: errors_map}}, _params) do
  {:error, errors_map}
end

# in the fallback controller ...

def call(conn, {:error, errors_map}) do
  json(conn, errors_map)
end

respond directly from on_fail callback

It might be useful not to assign validation errors to a connection, but respond immediately:

action(:show, params: %{"id" => [type: :integer]}, on_fail: &__MODULE__.on_fail/3)

def on_fail(conn, action_name, errors_map) do
  response = %{
    action: action_name,
    errors: errors_map
  }

  Phoenix.Controller.json(conn, response)
end

LICENSE

Copyright © 2019 - 2020 Andrey Chernykh ( [email protected] )

This work is free. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more details.

About

Provides a convenient way to validate incoming parameters of your Phoenix application's controllers by offering you small but useful DSL.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages