NAME
Data::FormValidator - Validates user input (usually from an HTML form) based on input profile.
SYNOPSIS
use Data::FormValidator;
my $results = Data::FormValidator->check(\%input_hash, \%dfv_profile);
if ($results->has_invalid or $results->has_missing) {
# do something with $results->invalid, $results->missing
# or $results->msgs
}
else {
# do something with $results->valid
}
DESCRIPTION
Data::FormValidator's main aim is to make input validation expressible in a simple format.
Data::FormValidator lets you define profiles which declare the required and optional fields and any constraints they might have.
The results are provided as an object which makes it easy to handle missing and invalid results, return error messages about which constraints failed, or process the resulting valid data.
VALIDATING INPUT
check()
my $results = Data::FormValidator->check(\%input_hash, \%dfv_profile);
check
is the recommended method to use to validate forms. It returns its results as a Data::FormValidator::Results object. A deprecated method validate
is also available, returning its results as an array described below.
use Data::FormValidator;
my $results = Data::FormValidator->check(\%input_hash, \%dfv_profile);
Here, check()
is used as a class method, and takes two required parameters.
The first a reference to the data to be be validated. This can either be a hash reference, or a CGI.pm-like object. In particular, the object must have a param() method that works like the one in CGI.pm does. CGI::Simple and Apache::Request objects are known to work in particular. Note that if you use a hash reference, multiple values for a single key should be presented as an array reference.
The second argument is a reference to the profile you are validating.
validate()
my( $valids, $missings, $invalids, $unknowns ) =
Data::FormValidator->validate( \%input_hash, \%dfv_profile);
validate()
provides a deprecated alternative to check()
. It has the same input syntax, but returns a four element array, described as follows
- valids
-
This is a hash reference to the valid fields which were submitted in the data. The data may have been modified by the various filters specified.
- missings
-
This is a reference to an array which contains the name of the missing fields. Those are the fields that the user forget to fill or filled with spaces. These fields may comes from the required list or the dependencies list.
- invalids
-
This is a reference to an array which contains the name of the fields which failed one or more of their constraint checks. If there are no invalid fields, an empty arrayref will be returned.
Fields defined with multiple constraints will have an array ref returned in the @invalids array instead of a string. The first element in this array is the name of the field, and the remaining fields are the names of the failed constraints.
- unknowns
-
This is a list of fields which are unknown to the profile. Whether or not this indicates an error in the user input is application dependant.
new()
Using new()
is only needed for advanced usage, including these cases:
- o
-
Loading more than one profile at a time. Then you can select the profile you want by name later with
check()
. Here's an example:my $dfv = Data::FormValidator->new({ profile_1 => { # usual profile definition here }, profile_2 => { # another profile definition }, });
As illustrated, multiple profiles are defined through a hash ref whose keys point to profile definitions.
You can also load several profiles from a file, by defining several profiles as shown above in an external file. Then just pass in the name of the file:
my $dfv = Data::FormValidator->new('/path/to/profiles.pl');
If the input profile is specified as a file name, the profiles will be reread each time that the disk copy is modified.
Now when calling
check()
, you just need to supply the profile name:my $results = $dfv->check(\%input_hash,'profile_1');
- o
-
Applying defaults to more than one input profile. There are some parts of the validation profile that you might like to re-use for many form validations.
To facilitate this,
new()
takes a second argument, a hash reference. Here the usual input profile definitions can be made. These will act as defaults for any subsequent calls tocheck()
on this object.Currently the logic for this is very simple. Any definition of a key in your validation profile will completely overwrite your default value.
This means you can't define two keys for
constraint_regexp_map
and expect they will always be there. This kind of feature may be added in the future.The exception here is definitions for your
msgs
key. You will safely be able to define some defaults for this key and not have them entirely clobbered just becausemsgs
was defined in a validation profile.One way to use this feature is to create your own sub-class that always provides your defaults to
new()
.Another option is to create your own wrapper routine which provides these defaults to
new()
. Here's an example of a routine you might put in a CGI::Application super-class to make use of this feature:# Always use the built-in CGI object as the form data # and provide some defaults to new constructor sub check_form { my $self = shift; my $profile = shift || die 'check_form: missing required profile'; require Data::FormValidator; my $dfv = Data::FormValidator->new({},{ # your defaults here }); return $dfv->check($self->query,$profile); }
INPUT PROFILE SPECIFICATION
An input profile is a hash reference containing one or more of the following keys.
Here is a very simple input profile. Examples of more advanced options are described below.
use Data::FormValidator::Constraints qw(:closures);
my $profile = {
optional => [qw( company
fax
country )],
required => [qw( fullname
phone
email
address )],
constraint_methods => {
email => email(),
}
};
That defines some fields as optional, some as required, and defines that the field named 'email' must pass the constraint named 'email'.
Here is a complete list of the keys available in the input profile, with examples of each.
required
This is an array reference which contains the name of the fields which are required. Any fields in this list which are not present or contain only spaces will be reported as missing.
required_regexp
required_regexp => qr/city|state|zipcode/,
This is a regular expression used to specify additional field names for which values will be required.
require_some
require_some => {
# require any two fields from this group
city_or_state_or_zipcode => [ 2, qw/city state zipcode/ ],
}
This is a reference to a hash which defines groups of fields where 1 or more fields from the group should be required, but exactly which fields doesn't matter. The keys in the hash are the group names. These are returned as "missing" unless the required number of fields from the group has been filled in. The values in this hash are array references. The first element in this array should be the number of fields in the group that is required. If the first field in the array is not an a digit, a default of "1" will be used.
optional
optional => [qw/meat coffee chocolate/],
This is an array reference which contains the name of optional fields. These are fields which MAY be present and if they are, they will be checked for valid input. Any fields not in optional or required list will be reported as unknown.
optional_regexp
optional_regexp => qr/_province$/,
This is a regular expression used to specify additional fields which are optional. For example, if you wanted all fields names that begin with user_ to be optional, you could use the regular expression, /^user_/
dependencies
dependencies => {
# If cc_no is entered, make cc_type and cc_exp required
"cc_no" => [ qw( cc_type cc_exp ) ],
# if pay_type eq 'check', require check_no
"pay_type" => {
check => [ qw( check_no ) ],
}
},
This is for the case where an optional field has other requirements. The dependent fields can be specified with an array reference.
If the dependencies are specified with a hash reference then the additional constraint is added that the optional field must equal a key for the dependencies to be added.
Any fields in the dependencies list that is missing when the target is present will be reported as missing.
dependency_groups
dependency_groups => {
# if either field is filled in, they all become required
password_group => [qw/password password_confirmation/],
}
This is a hash reference which contains information about groups of interdependent fields. The keys are arbitrary names that you create and the values are references to arrays of the field names in each group.
defaults
defaults => {
country => "USA",
},
This is a hash reference where keys are field names and values are defaults to use if input for the field is missing.
The values can be code refs which will be used to calculate the value if needed. These code refs will be passed in the DFV::Results object as the only parameter.
The defaults are set shortly before the constraints are applied, and will be returned with the other valid data.
filters
# trim leading and trailing whitespace on all fields
filters => ['trim'],
This is a reference to an array of filters that will be applied to ALL optional and required fields, before any constraints are applied.
This can be the name of a built-in filter (trim,digit,etc) or an anonymous subroutine which should take one parameter, the field value and return the (possibly) modified value.
Filters modify the data returned through the results object, so use them carefully.
See Data::FormValidator::Filters for details on the built-in filters.
field_filters
field_filters => {
cc_no => ['digit'],
},
A hash ref with field names as keys. Values are array references of built-in filters to apply (trim,digit,etc) or an anonymous subroutine which should take one parameter, the field value and return the (possibly) modified value.
Filters are applied before any constraints are applied.
See Data::FormValidator::Filters for details on the built-in filters.
field_filter_regexp_map
field_filter_regexp_map => {
# Upper-case the first letter of all fields that end in "_name"
qr/_name$/ => ['ucfirst'],
},
This is a hash reference where the keys are the regular expressions to use and the values are references to arrays of filters which will be applied to specific input fields. Used to apply filters to fields that match a regular expression.
constraint_methods
use Data::FormValidator::Constraints qw(:closures);
constraint_methods => {
cc_no => cc_number({fields => ['cc_type']}),
cc_type => cc_type(),
cc_exp => cc_exp(),
},
A hash ref which contains the constraints that will be used to check whether or not the field contains valid data.
Note: To use the built-in constraints, they need to first be loaded into your name space using the syntax above. (Unless you are using the old constraints
key, documented in "BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY").
The keys in this hash are field names. The values can be any of the following:
- o
-
A named constraint.
Example:
my_zipcode_field => 'zip',
See Data::FormValidator::Constraints for the details of which built-in constraints that are available.
- o
-
A perl regular expression
Example:
my_zipcode_field => qr/^\d{5}$/, # match exactly 5 digits
If this field is named in
untaint_constraint_fields
oruntaint_regexp_map
, oruntaint_all_constraints
is effective, be aware of the following: If you write your own regular expressions and only match part of the string then you'll only get part of the string in the valid hash. It is a good idea to write you own constraints like /^regex$/. That way you match the whole string. - o
-
a subroutine reference, to supply custom code
This will check the input and return true or false depending on the input's validity. By default, the constraint function recieves a Data::FormValidator::Results object as its first argument, and the value to be validated as the second. To validate a field based more inputs than just the field itself, see "VALIDATING INPUT BASED ON MULTIPLE FIELDS".
Examples:
# Notice the use of 'pop'-- # the object is the first arg passed to the method # while the value is the second, and last arg. my_zipcode_field => sub { my $val = pop; return $val =~ '/^\d{5}$/' }, # OR you can reference a subroutine, which should work like the one above my_zipcode_field => \&my_validation_routine, # An example of setting the constraint name. my_zipcode_field => sub { my ($dfv, $val) = @_; $dfv->set_current_constraint_name('my_constraint_name'); return $val =~ '/^\d{5}$/' },
- o
-
an array reference
An array reference is used to apply multiple constraints to a single field. Any of the above options are valid entries the array. See "MULTIPLE CONSTRAINTS" below.
For more details see "VALIDATING INPUT BASED ON MULTIPLE FIELDS".
constraint_method_regexp_map
use Data::FormValidator::Constraints qw(:closures);
# In your profile.
constraint_method_regexp_map => {
# All fields that end in _postcode have the 'postcode' constraint applied.
qr/_postcode$/ => postcode(),
},
A hash ref where the keys are the regular expressions to use and the values are the constraints to apply.
If one or more constraints have already been defined for a given field using constraint_methods
, constraint_method_regexp_map
will add an additional constraint for that field for each regular expression that matches.
untaint_all_constraints
untaint_all_constraints => 1,
If this field is set, all form data that passes a constraint will be untainted. The untainted data will be returned in the valid hash. Untainting is based on the pattern match used by the constraint. Note that some constraint routines may not provide untainting.
See "WRITING YOUR OWN CONSTRAINT ROUTINES" in the Data::FormValidator::Constraints documention for more information.
This is overridden by untaint_constraint_fields
and untaint_regexp_map
.
untaint_constraint_fields
untaint_constraint_fields => [qw(zipcode state)],
Specifies that one or more fields will be untainted if they pass their constraint(s). This can be set to a single field name or an array reference of field names. The untainted data will be returned in the valid hash.
This overrides the untaint_all_constraints flag.
untaint_regexp_map
untaint_regexp_map => [qr/some_field_\d/],
Specifies that certain fields will be untained if they pass their constraints and match one of the regular expressions supplied. This can be set to a single regex, or an array reference of regexes. The untainted data will be returned in the valid hash.
The above example would untaint the fields named some_field_1
, and some_field_2
but not some_field
.
This overrides the untaint_all_constraints flag.
missing_optional_valid
missing_optional_valid => 1
This can be set to a true value to cause optional fields with empty values to be included in the valid hash. By default they are not included-- this is the historical behavior.
This is an important flag if you are using the contents of an "update" form to update a record in a database. Without using the option, fields that have been set back to "blank" may fail to get updated.
validator_packages
# load all the constraints and filters from these modules
validator_packages => [qw(Data::FormValdidator::Constraints::Upload)],
This key is used to define other packages which contain constraint routines or filters. Set this key to a single package name, or an arrayref of several. All of its constraint and filter routines beginning with 'match_', 'valid_' and 'filter_' will be imported into Data::FormValidator. This lets you reference them in a constraint with just their name, just like built-in routines. You can even override the provided validators.
See "WRITING YOUR OWN CONSTRAINT ROUTINES" in the Data::FormValidator::Constraints documentation for more information
msgs
This key is used to define parameters related to formatting error messages returned to the user.
By default, invalid fields have the message "Invalid" associated with them while missing fields have the message "Missing" associated with them.
In the simplest case, nothing needs to be defined here, and the default values will be used.
The default formatting applied is designed for display in an XHTML web page. That formatting is as followings:
<span style="color:red;font-weight:bold"><span class="dfv_errors">* %s</span></span>
The %s
will be replaced with the message. The effect is that the message will appear in bold red with an asterisk before it. This style can be overriden by simply defining "dfv_errors" appropriately in a style sheet, or by providing a new format string.
Here's a more complex example that shows how to provide your own default message strings, as well as providing custom messages per field, and handling multiple constraints:
msgs => {
# set a custom error prefix, defaults to none
prefix=> 'error_',
# Set your own "Missing" message, defaults to "Missing"
missing => 'Not Here!',
# Default invalid message, default's to "Invalid"
invalid => 'Problematic!',
# message separator for multiple messages
# Defaults to ' '
invalid_separator => ' <br /> ',
# formatting string, default given above.
format => 'ERROR: %s',
# Error messages, keyed by constraint name
# Your constraints must be named to use this.
constraints => {
'date_and_time' => 'Not a vaild time format',
# ...
},
# This token will be included in the hash if there are
# any errors returned. This can be useful with templating
# systems like HTML::Template
# The 'prefix' setting does not apply here.
# defaults to undefined
any_errors => 'some_errors',
}
The hash that's prepared can be retrieved through the msgs
method described in the Data::FormValidator::Results documentation.
msgs - callback
This is a new feature. While it expected to be forward-compatible, it hasn't yet received the testing the rest of the API has.
If the built-in message generation doesn't suit you, it is also possible to provide your own by specifying a code reference:
msgs => \&my_msgs_callback
This will be called as a Data::FormValidator::Results method. It may receive as arguments an additional hash reference of control parameters, corresponding to the key names in the usually used in the msgs
area of the profile. You can ignore this information if you'd like.
If you have an alternative error message handler you'd like to share, stick in the Data::FormValidator::ErrMsgs
and upload it to CPAN.
debug
This method is used to print details about what is going on to STDERR.
Currently only level '1' is used. It provides information about which fields matched constraint_regexp_map.
A shortcut for array refs
A number of parts of the input profile specification include array references as their values. In any of these places, you can simply use a string if you only need to specify one value. For example, instead of
filters => [ 'trim' ]
you can simply say
filters => 'trim'
A note on regular expression formats
In addition to using the preferred method of defining regular expressions using qr
, a deprecated style of defining them as strings is also supported.
Preferred:
qr/this is great/
Deprecated, but supported
'm/this still works/'
VALIDATING INPUT BASED ON MULTIPLE FIELDS
You can pass more than one value into a constraint routine. For that, the value of the constraint should be a hash reference. If you are creating your own routines, be sure to read the section labeled "WRITING YOUR OWN CONSTRAINT ROUTINES", in the Data::FormValidator::Constraints documentation. It describes a newer and more flexible syntax.
Using the original syntax, one key should be named constraint
and should have a value set to the reference of the subroutine or the name of a built-in validator. Another required key is params
. The value of the params
key is a reference to an array of the other elements to use in the validation. If the element is a scalar, it is assumed to be a field name. The field is known to Data::FormValidator, the value will be filtered through any defined filteres before it is passed in. If the value is a reference, the reference is passed directly to the routine. Don't forget to include the name of the field to check in that list, if you are using this syntax.
Example:
cc_no => {
constraint => "cc_number",
params => [ qw( cc_no cc_type ) ],
},
MULTIPLE CONSTRAINTS
Multiple constraints can be applied to a single field by defining the value of the constraint to be an array reference. Each of the values in this array can be any of the constraint types defined above.
When using multiple constraints it is important to return the name of the constraint that failed so you can distinquish between them. To do that, either use a named constraint, or use the hash ref method of defining a constraint and include a name
key with a value set to the name of your constraint. Here's an example:
my_zipcode_field => [
'zip',
{
constraint => '/^406/',
name => 'starts_with_406',
}
],
You can use an array reference with a single constraint in it if you just want to have the name of your failed constraint returned in the above fashion.
Read about the validate()
function above to see how multiple constraints are returned differently with that method.
ADVANCED VALIDATION
For even more advanced validation, you will likely want to read the documentation for other modules in this distribution, linked below. Also keep in mind that the Data::FormValidator profile structure is just another data structure. There is no reason why it needs to be defined statically. The profile could also be built on the fly with custom Perl code.
BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY
validate()
my( $valids, $missings, $invalids, $unknowns ) =
Data::FormValidator->validate( \%input_hash, \%dfv_profile);
validate()
provides a deprecated alternative to check()
. It has the same input syntax, but returns a four element array, described as follows
- valids
-
This is a hash reference to the valid fields which were submitted in the data. The data may have been modified by the various filters specified.
- missings
-
This is a reference to an array which contains the name of the missing fields. Those are the fields that the user forget to fill or filled with spaces. These fields may comes from the required list or the dependencies list.
- invalids
-
This is a reference to an array which contains the name of the fields which failed one or more of their constraint checks.
Fields defined with multiple constraints will have an array ref returned in the @invalids array instead of a string. The first element in this array is the name of the field, and the remaining fields are the names of the failed constraints.
- unknowns
-
This is a list of fields which are unknown to the profile. Whether or not this indicates an error in the user input is application dependant.
constraints (profile key)
This is a supported but deprecated profile key. Using constraint_methods
is recommended instead, which provides a simpler, more versatile interface.
constraints => {
cc_no => {
constraint => "cc_number",
params => [ qw( cc_no cc_type ) ],
},
cc_type => "cc_type",
cc_exp => "cc_exp",
},
A hash ref which contains the constraints that will be used to check whether or not the field contains valid data.
The keys in this hash are field names. The values can be any of the following:
- o
-
A named constraint.
Example:
my_zipcode_field => 'zip',
See Data::FormValidator::Constraints for the details of which built-in constraints that are available.
hashref style of specifying constraints
Using a hash reference to specify a constraint is an older technique used to name a constraint or supply multiple parameters.
Both of these interface issues are now better addressed with constraint_methods
and $self-\
name_this('foo')>.
# supply multiple parameters
cc_no => {
constraint => "cc_number",
params => [ qw( cc_no cc_type ) ],
},
# name a constraint, useful for returning error messages
last_name => {
name => "ends_in_name",
constraint => qr/_name$/,
},
Using a hash reference for a constraint permits the passing of multiple arguments. Required arguments are constraint
or constraint_method
. Optional arguments are name
and params
.
A name
on a constraints 'glues' the constraint to its error message in the validator profile (refer msgs
section below). If no name
is given then it will default to the value of constraint
or constraint_method
IF they are NOT a CODE ref or a RegExp ref.
The params
value is a reference to an array of the parameters to pass to the constraint method. If an element of the params
list is a scalar, it is assumed to be naming a key of the %input_hash and that value is passed to the routine. If the parameter is a reference, then it is treated literally and passed unchanged to the routine.
If you are using the older constraint
over the new constraint_method
then don't forget to include the name of the field to check in the params
list. constraint_method
provides access to this value via the get_current_*
methods (refer Data::FormValidator::Constraints)
For more details see "VALIDATING INPUT BASED ON MULTIPLE FIELDS".
constraint_regexp_map (profile key)
This is a supported by deprecated profile key. Using constraint_methods_regexp_map
is recommended instead.
constraint_regexp_map => {
# All fields that end in _postcode have the 'postcode' constraint applied.
qr/_postcode$/ => 'postcode',
},
A hash ref where the keys are the regular expressions to use and the values are the constraints to apply.
If one or more constraints have already been defined for a given field using "constraints", constraint_regexp_map will add an additional constraint for that field for each regular expression that matches.
SEE ALSO
Other modules in this distribution:
Data::FormValidator::Constraints
Data::FormValidator::Constraints::Dates
Data::FormValidator::Constraints::Upload
Data::FormValidator::ConstraintsFactory
A sample application by the maintainer:
Validating Web Forms with Perl, http://mark.stosberg.com/Tech/perl/form-validation/
Related modules:
Data::FormValidator::Util::HTML
CGI::Application::ValidateRM, a CGI::Application & Data::FormValidator glue module
HTML::Template::Associate::FormValidator is designed to make some kinds of integration with HTML::Template easier.
Params::Validate is useful for validating function parameters.
Regexp::Common, Data::Types, Data::Verify, Email::Valid, String::Checker, CGI::ArgChecker, CGI::FormMagick::Validator, CGI::Validate
Document Translations:
Japanese: http://perldoc.jp/docs/modules/
Distributions which include Data::formValidator
FreeBSD includes a port named p5-Data-FormValidator
Debian GNU/Linux includes a port named libdata-formvalidator-perl
CREDITS
Some of those input validation functions have been taken from MiniVend by Michael J. Heins.
The credit card checksum validation was taken from contribution by Bruce Albrecht to the MiniVend program.
BUGS
Bug reports and patches are welcome. Reports which include a failing Test::More style test are helpful will receive priority.
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Data-FormValidator
CONTRIBUTING
This project is managed using the darcs source control system ( http://www.darcs.net/ ). My darcs archive is here: http://mark.stosberg.com/darcs_hive/dfv/
Support Mailing List
If you have any questions, comments, or feature suggestions, post them to the support mailing list! To join the mailing list, visit
http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cascade-dataform
Messages about DFV sent directly to the maintainer may be redirected here.
AUTHOR
Parts Copyright 2001-2006 by Mark Stosberg <mark at summersault.com>, (Current Maintainer)
Copyright (c) 1999 Francis J. Lacoste and iNsu Innovations Inc. All rights reserved. (Original Author)
Parts Copyright 1996-1999 by Michael J. Heins <mike@heins.net>
Parts Copyright 1996-1999 by Bruce Albrecht <bruce.albrecht@seag.fingerhut.com>
LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms as perl itself.