JulesGuesnon / garde

A powerful validation library for Rust

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Garde   Documentation Latest Version

A Rust validation library

Basic usage example

To get started, use the Validate derive macro and add some validation rules to your type. This generates an implementation of the Validate trait for you. To use it, call the validate method on an instance of the type.

Here's what that looks like in full:

use garde::{Validate, Valid};

#[derive(Validate)]
struct User<'a> {
    #[garde(ascii, length(min=3, max=25))]
    username: &'a str,
    #[garde(length(min=15))]
    password: &'a str,
}

let user = User {
    username: "test",
    password: "not_a_very_good_password",
};

if let Err(e) = user.validate(&()) {
    println!("invalid user: {e}");
}

Garde can also validate enums:

use garde::{Validate, Valid};

#[derive(Validate)]
enum Data {
    Struct {
        #[garde(range(min=-10, max=10))]
        field: i32,
    },
    Tuple(
        #[garde(ascii)]
        String
    ),
}

let data = Data::Struct { field: 100 };
if let Err(e) = data.validate(&()) {
    println!("invalid data: {e}");
}

Available validation rules

name format validation feature flag
required #[garde(required)] is value set -
ascii #[garde(ascii)] only contains ASCII -
alphanumeric #[garde(alphanumeric)] only letters and digits -
email #[garde(email)] an email according to the HTML5 spec1 email
url #[garde(url)] a URL url
ip #[garde(ip)] an IP address (either IPv4 or IPv6) -
ipv4 #[garde(ipv4)] an IPv4 address -
ipv6 #[garde(ipv6)] an IPv6 address -
credit card #[garde(credit_card)] a credit card number credit-card
phone number #[garde(phone_number)] a phone number phone-number
length #[garde(length(min=<usize>, max=<usize>)] a container with length in min..=max -
byte_length #[garde(byte_length(min=<usize>, max=<usize>)] a byte sequence with length in min..=max -
range #[garde(range(min=<expr>, max=<expr>))] a number in the range min..=max -
contains #[garde(contains(<string>))] a string-like value containing a substring -
prefix #[garde(prefix(<string>))] a string-like value prefixed by some string -
suffix #[garde(suffix(<string>))] a string-like value suffixed by some string -
pattern #[garde(pattern("<regex>"))] a string-like value matching some regular expression regex
pattern #[garde(pattern(<matcher>))] a string-like value matched by some Matcher -
dive #[garde(dive)] nested validation, calls validate on the value -
skip #[garde(skip)] skip validation -
custom #[garde(custom(<function or closure>))] a custom validator -

Additional notes:

  • required is only available for Option fields.
  • For length and range, either min or max may be omitted, but not both.
  • length and range use an inclusive upper bound (min..=max).
  • length uses .chars().count() for UTF-8 strings instead of .len().
  • For contains, prefix, and suffix, the pattern must be a string literal, because the Pattern API is currently unstable.
  • Garde does not enable the default features of the regex crate - if you need extra regex features (e.g. Unicode) or better performance, add a dependency on regex = "1" to your Cargo.toml.

If most of the fields on your struct are annotated with #[garde(skip)], you may use #[garde(allow_unvalidated)] instead:

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Foo<'a> {
    #[garde(length(min = 1))]
    a: &'a str,

    #[garde(skip)]
    b: &'a str, // this field will not be validated
}

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
#[garde(allow_unvalidated)]
struct Bar<'a> {
    #[garde(length(min = 1))]
    a: &'a str,

    b: &'a str, // this field will not be validated
                // note the lack of `#[garde(skip)]`
}

Inner type validation

If you need to validate the "inner" type of a container, such as the String in Vec<String>, then use the inner modifier:

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Test {
    #[garde(
        length(min = 1),
        inner(ascii, length(min = 1)), // wrap the rule in `inner`
    )]
    items: Vec<String>,
}

The above type would fail validation if:

  • the Vec is empty
  • any of the inner String elements is empty
  • any of the inner String elements contains non-ASCII characters

Handling Option

Every rule works on Option<T> fields. The field will only be validated if it is Some. If you additionally want to validate that the Option<T> field is Some, use the required rule:

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Test {
    #[garde(required, ascii, length(min = 1))]
    value: Option<String>,
}

The above type would fail validation if:

  • value is None
  • the inner value is empty
  • the inner value contains non-ASCII characters

Custom validation

Validation may be customized via the custom rule, and the context attribute.

The context may be any type without generic parameters. By default, the context is ().

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
#[garde(context(PasswordContext))]
struct User {
    #[garde(custom(is_strong_password))]
    password: String,
}

struct PasswordContext {
    min_entropy: f32,
    entropy: cracken::password_entropy::EntropyEstimator,
}

fn is_strong_password(value: &str, context: &PasswordContext) -> garde::Result {
    let bits = context.entropy.estimate_password_entropy(value.as_bytes())
        .map(|e| e.mask_entropy)
        .unwrap_or(0.0);
    if bits < context.min_entropy {
        return Err(garde::Error::new("password is not strong enough"));
    }
    Ok(())
}

let ctx = PasswordContext { /* ... */ };
let user = User { /* ... */ };
user.validate(&ctx)?;

The validator function may accept the value as a reference to any type which it derefs to. In the above example, it is possible to use &str, because password is a String, and String derefs to &str.

Context/Self access

It's generally possible to also access the context and self, because they are in scope in the output of the proc macro:

struct Limits {
    min: usize,
    max: usize,
}

struct Config {
    username: Limits,
}

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
#[garde(context(Config as ctx))]
struct User {
    #[garde(length(min = ctx.username.min, max = ctx.username.max))]
    username: String,
}

Implementing rules

Say you want to implement length checking for a custom string-like type. To do this, you would implement the garde::rules::length::HasLength trait for it.

#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct MyString(pub String);

impl garde::rules::length::HasLength for MyString {
    fn length(&self) -> usize {
        self.0.chars().count()
    }
}
#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Foo {
    // Now the `length` check may be used with `MyString`
    #[garde(length(min = 1, max = 1000))]
    field: MyString,
}

Each rule comes with its own trait that may be implemented by custom types in your code. They are all available under garde::rules.

Implementing Validate

In case you have a container type for which you'd like to support nested validation (using the #[garde(dive)] rule), you may implement Validate for it:

#[repr(transparent)]
struct MyVec<T>(Vec<T>);

impl<T: garde::Validate> garde::Validate for MyVec<T> {
    type Context = T::Context;

    fn validate_into(
        &self,
        ctx: &Self::Context,
        mut parent: &mut dyn FnMut() -> garde::Path,
        report: &mut garde::Report
    ) {
        for (index, item) in self.0.iter().enumerate() {
            let mut path = garde::util::nested_path!(parent, index);
            item.validate_into(ctx, &mut path, report);
        }
    }
}

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Foo {
  #[garde(dive)]
  field: MyVec<Bar>,
}

#[derive(garde::Validate)]
struct Bar {
  #[garde(range(min = 1, max = 10))]
  value: u32,
}

Integration with web frameworks

Feature flags

name description extra dependencies
derive Enables the usage of the derive(Validate) macro garde_derive
url Validation of URLs via the url crate. url
email Validation of emails according to HTML5 regex, once_cell
email-idna Support for Internationalizing Domain Names for Applications in email addresses idna
regex Support for regular expressions in pattern via the regex crate regex, once_cell
credit-card Validation of credit card numbers via the card-validate crate card-validate
phone-number Validation of phone numbers via the phonenumber crate phonenumber

Why garde?

Garde means guard in French. I am not French, nor do I speak the language, but guard was taken, and this is close enough :).

Development

Contributing to garde only requires a somewhat recent version of Rust.

This repository also makes use of the following tools, but they are optional:

  • insta for snapshot testing (tests/rules).
  • just for running recipes defined in the justfile. Run just -l to see what recipes are available.

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Acknowledgements

This crate is heavily inspired by the validator crate. It is essentially a full rewrite of validator. The creation of this crate was prompted by this comment and a few others talking about a potential rewrite.

Footnotes

  1. HTML5 forms - valid email address

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A powerful validation library for Rust

License:Apache License 2.0


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