The OpenActive data model validator library.
This library allows developers to validate JSON models to the latest OpenActive Modelling Opportunity Data specification.
This library can be used in your own application, perhaps as part of your CI pipeline.
$ npm install @openactive/data-model-validator
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const data = {
'@context': 'https://openactive.io/',
'@type': 'Event',
name: 'Tai chi Class',
url: 'http://www.example.org/events/1',
startDate: '2017-03-22T20:00:00',
activity: 'Tai Chi',
location: {
'@type': 'Place',
name: 'ExampleCo Gym',
address: {
'@type': 'PostalAddress',
streetAddress: '1 High Street',
addressLocality: 'Bristol',
postalCode: 'BS1 4SD'
}
}
};
// Check whether the JSON conforms to the Event model
const result = await validate(data);
// Returns:
// [{category: 'conformance', type: 'missing_required_field', message: 'Required field is missing.', value: undefined, severity: 'failure', path: '$.context' }, ... ]
The validate
method optionally accepts options for validation:
Default: false
Whether to load remote JSON documents. For example, remote @context
definitions or activity list definitions.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const data = {
// ...
};
const options = {
loadRemoteJson: true
};
const result = await validate(data, options);
Default: null
Used in conjunction with loadRemoteJson
. If set, allows the JSON loader to cache requests.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const data = {
// ...
};
const options = {
loadRemoteJson: true,
remoteJsonCachePath: '/tmp'
};
const result = await validate(data, options);
Default: 3600
Used in conjunction with loadRemoteJson
and remoteJsonCachePath
. It sets the number of seconds that the JSON loader should cache requests for.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const data = {
// ...
};
const options = {
loadRemoteJson: true,
remoteJsonCachePath: '/tmp',
remoteJsonCacheTimeToLive: 3600
};
const result = await validate(data, options);
A limit of the number of RPDE "updated"
data items to validate. It is helpful to limit the number of items validated for performance reasons.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const feed = {
// ...
};
const options = {
rpdeItemLimit: 10
};
const result = await validate(feed, options);
The validator will detect the type of the model being validated from the @type
property. You can override this by providing a type
option.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const model = {
type: 'CustomAction'
// ...
};
const options = {
type: 'Action'
};
const result = await validate(model, options);
The version of the specification to validate against. If not provided, this will validate against the latest specification.
e.g.
const { validate } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const model = {
type: 'CustomAction'
// ...
};
const options = {
version: '2.0'
};
const result = await validate(model, options);
}
Provides context as to how the data under validation is expected to be used and therefore some validation rules may or may not apply. For example, OrderQuotes only have a customer attribute in the C2 phase and beyond of booking (so not in C1Request or C1Response nor any more generic published open data usage).
e.g. To only apply rules that are suitable for data used in a booking flow phase like C2Request:
const { validate, ValidationMode } = require('@openactive/data-model-validator');
const model = {
type: 'CustomAction'
// ...
};
const options = {
validationMode: 'C2Request'
// ...
};
const result = validate(model, options);
$ git clone git@github.com:openactive/data-model-validator.git
$ cd data-model-validator
$ npm install
This project uses Jasmine for its tests. All spec files are located alongside the files that they target.
To run tests locally, run:
$ npm test
The test run will also include a run of eslint and TypeScript. To run the tests without these, use:
$ npm run run-tests
Read the Contributing Guide for information on how to write your own rules.