Parameter Validation & Type Coercion for Rails
This library is handy if you want to validate a few numbers of parameters directly inside your controller.
For example : you are building a search action and want to validate that the sort
parameter is set and only set to something like desc
or asc
.
This library should not be used to validate a large number of parameters or parameters sent via a form or namespaced (like params[:user][:first_name]
). There is already a great framework included in Rails (ActiveModel::Model) which can be used to create virtual classes with all the validations you already know and love from Rails. Remember to always try to stay in the “thin controller” rule.
See this page to see an example on how to build a contact form using ActiveModel::Model.
But sometimes, it’s not practical to create an external class just to validate and convert a few parameters. In this case, you may use this gem. It allows you to easily do validations and conversion of the parameters directly in your controller actions using a simple method call.
This is originally a port of the gem sinatra-param for the Rails framework.
All the credits go to @mattt.
It has all the features of the sinatra-param gem, I used bang methods (like param!) to indicate that they are destructive as they change the controller params object and may raise an exception.
As usual, in your Gemfile...
gem 'rails_param'
# GET /search?q=example
# GET /search?q=example&categories=news
# GET /search?q=example&sort=created_at&order=ASC
def search
param! :q, String, required: true
param! :categories, Array
param! :sort, String, default: "title"
param! :order, String, in: %w(asc desc), transform: :downcase, default: "asc"
param! :price, String, format: /[<\=>]\s*\$\d+/
# Access the parameters using the params object (like params[:q]) as you usually do...
end
end
By declaring parameter types, incoming parameters will automatically be transformed into an object of that type. For instance, if a param is :boolean
, values of '1'
, 'true'
, 't'
, 'yes'
, and 'y'
will be automatically transformed into true
. BigDecimal
defaults to a precision of 14, but this can but changed by passing in the optional precision:
argument. Any $
and ,
are automatically stripped when converting to BigDecimal
.
String
Integer
Float
:boolean/TrueClass/FalseClass
("1/0", "true/false", "t/f", "yes/no", "y/n")Array
("1,2,3,4,5")Hash
("key1:value1,key2:value2")Date
,Time
, &DateTime
BigDecimal
("$1,000,000")
Encapsulate business logic in a consistent way with validations. If a parameter does not satisfy a particular condition, an exception (RailsParam::Param::InvalidParameterError) is raised. You may use the rescue_from method in your controller to catch this kind of exception.
required
blank
is
in
,within
,range
min
/max
format
Passing a default
option will provide a default value for a parameter if none is passed. A default
can defined as either a default or as a Proc
:
param! :attribution, String, default: "©"
param! :year, Integer, default: lambda { Time.now.year }
Use the transform
option to take even more of the business logic of parameter I/O out of your code. Anything that responds to to_proc
(including Proc
and symbols) will do.
param! :order, String, in: ["ASC", "DESC"], transform: :upcase, default: "ASC"
param! :offset, Integer, min: 0, transform: lambda {|n| n - (n % 10)}
rails_param allows you to apply any of the above mentioned validations to attributes nested in hashes:
param! :book, Hash do |b|
b.param! :title, String, blank: false
b.param! :price, BigDecimal, precision: 4, required: true
b.param! :author, Hash, required: true do |a|
a.param! :first_name, String
a.param! :last_name, String, blank: false
end
end
Validate every element of your array, including nested hashes and arrays:
# primitive datatype syntax
param! :integer_array, Array do |array,index|
array.param! index, Integer, required: true
end
# complex array
param! :books_array, Array, required: true do |b|
b.param! :title, String, blank: false
b.param! :author, Hash, required: true, do |a|
a.param! :first_name, String
a.param! :last_name, String, required: true
end
b.param! :subjects, Array do |s,i|
s.param! i, String, blank: false
end
end
Many thanks to:
Nicolas Blanco
rails-param is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.