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A powerful and extensible data validation and comparison tool for developers and testers.

Project description

validly

Validly

A powerful and extensible data validation and comparison tool designed for developers and testers. Easily integrate into your automation projects to ensure JSON data integrity.

Features

  • Deep, Recursive Comparison: Validates nested JSON structures seamlessly.
  • Flexible Options: Control validation with a rich set of options for every use case.
  • Order-Agnostic Lists: Intelligently compares lists of objects regardless of their order.
  • Domain-Specific Validations: Built-in checks for common data formats like UUIDs, PAN, and Aadhaar numbers.
  • Referencing Capabilities: Use a dynamic template to compare a field's value to another field in the actual JSON.
  • Custom Validators: Extend validation logic with your own Python methods from an external file.
  • Numeric Comparisons: Validate fields with operators like greater than (gt), less than (lt), and more.
  • Wildcard Matching: Use placeholders to ignore values that are dynamic or unpredictable.
  • JSON Filtering: Filter JSON data based on JSON paths and regex patterns.

Installation

Validly is available on PyPI. Install it with pip:

pip install Validly

Basic Usage

Use json_difference to compare two JSON objects. It returns a list of failure messages if differences are found.

from Validly import json_difference

expected = {"id": 100, "name": "test"}
actual = {"id": 101, "name": "test"}

differences = json_difference(expected, actual)

# Output:
# {
#   'result': False,
#   'errors': [
#     {
#       'field': 'id',
#       'jsonpath': 'id',
#       'message': "Value mismatch: expected '100', got '101'"
#     }
#   ]
# }

Advanced Usage with Options

Pass a dictionary of options to customize the validation behavior.

from Validly import json_difference

# --- Sample Data ---
expected_data = {
    "user_id": "{ACTUAL_VALUE:user.id}",
    "user": {
        "id": 1234,
        "name": "Jane Doe",
        "age": 30
    },
    "uuid_field": "{ACTUAL_VALUE:user.uuid}",
    "pan_field": "{ACTUAL_VALUE:user.pan}",
    "login_count": 5
}
actual_data = {
    "user_id": 1234,
    "user": {
        "id": 1234,
        "name": "John Doe",
        "age": 32,
        "email": "test@example.com",
        "uuid": "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6",
        "pan": "ABCDE1234F"
    },
    "uuid_field": "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6",
    "pan_field": "ABCDE1234F",
    "login_count": 6
}

# --- Validation Options ---
options = {
    "wildcard_keys": ["user.name"],
    "numeric_validations": {
        "user.age": {"operator": "gt", "value": 30},
        "login_count": {"operator": "le", "value": 5}
    },
    "is_uuid_keys": ["user.uuid", "uuid_field"],
    "is_pan_keys": ["user.pan", "pan_field"],
    "is_aadhar_keys": ["user.aadhar"],
    "custom_validators": {"user.email": "validate_email_format"},
    "custom_validator_path": "custom_validators.py",
    "skip_keys": ["user_id"]
}

# --- Running the comparison ---
differences = json_difference(expected_data, actual_data, options=options)

# Expected differences:
# {
#   'result': False,
#   'errors': [
#     {
#       'field': 'login_count',
#       'jsonpath': 'login_count',
#       'message': "Numeric validation failed: Value is not less than or equal to 5"
#     },
#     {
#       'field': 'email',
#       'jsonpath': 'user.email',
#       'message': "Extra key in actual: user.email"
#     }
#   ]
# }

List Validation Modes

Validly offers two ways to compare lists, controlled by the list_validation_type option.

1. Unordered (Default)

This mode is designed for lists of objects where the order doesn't matter. It intelligently matches objects based on a set of common keys such as "name", "id", and "qId".

from Validly import json_difference

expected_list = [
    {"id": 1, "value": "a"},
    {"id": 2, "value": "b"}
]

actual_list = [
    {"id": 2, "value": "b"},
    {"id": 1, "value": "a"}
]

# The default behavior is 'unordered', so no option is needed here.
results = json_difference(expected_list, actual_list)

# { 'result': True, 'errors': [] }

2. Symmetric

This mode is for lists where the order of items is critical. It performs a direct, index-based comparison.

options = { "list_validation_type": "symmetric" }
results = json_difference(expected_list, actual_list, options=options)

# Expected result (failure due to different order):
# {
#   'result': False,
#   'errors': [
#     {
#       'field': '0',
#       'jsonpath': '[0]',
#       'message': "Value mismatch: expected {'id': 1, 'value': 'a'}, got {'id': 2, 'value': 'b'}"
#     },
#     {
#       'field': '1',
#       'jsonpath': '[1]',
#       'message': "Value mismatch: expected {'id': 2, 'value': 'b'}, got {'id': 1, 'value': 'a'}"
#     }
#   ]
# }

Custom Validators

Create a Python file (e.g., custom_validators.py) with your custom logic. Your validator methods should accept expected and actual values and return a (bool, str) tuple.

# custom_validators.py
import re
from typing import Any, Tuple

def validate_email_format(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates if the actual value is a properly formatted email address."""
    if not isinstance(actual, str):
        return False, "Value is not a string."
    
    email_pattern = re.compile(r"^[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}$")
    if email_pattern.match(actual):
        return True, ""
    
    return False, "Value is not a valid email format."

def validate_phone_number(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates if the actual value is a properly formatted phone number."""
    if not isinstance(actual, str):
        return False, "Value is not a string."
    
    # Remove any non-digit characters for comparison
    digits_only = re.sub(r'\D', '', actual)
    
    # Check if it's a valid length for a phone number (adjust as needed)
    if 10 <= len(digits_only) <= 15:
        return True, ""
    
    return False, f"Value '{actual}' is not a valid phone number format."

def validate_date_format(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates if the actual value matches the expected date format."""
    if not isinstance(actual, str):
        return False, "Value is not a string."
    
    # Expected should be a format string like "YYYY-MM-DD"
    if isinstance(expected, str) and expected.startswith("format:"):
        format_str = expected.split(":")[1].strip()
        
        # Simple validation for common formats
        if format_str == "YYYY-MM-DD":
            pattern = r"^\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2}$"
        elif format_str == "MM/DD/YYYY":
            pattern = r"^\d{2}/\d{2}/\d{4}$"
        else:
            return False, f"Unknown date format: {format_str}"
            
        if re.match(pattern, actual):
            return True, ""
        return False, f"Value does not match the {format_str} format."
    
    # If no format specified, just do direct comparison
    return expected == actual, f"Expected {expected}, got {actual}"

Then, configure the validator in your options dictionary:

options = {
    "custom_validators": {
        "user.email": "validate_email_format",
        "user.phone": "validate_phone_number",
        "user.birthdate": "validate_date_format"
    },
    "custom_validator_path": "path/to/custom_validators.py"
}

Custom Validator Use Cases

1. Complex Format Validation

Validate complex formats that aren't covered by built-in validators:

# In custom_validators.py
def validate_credit_card(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates credit card numbers using the Luhn algorithm."""
    if not isinstance(actual, str):
        return False, "Value is not a string."
    
    # Remove spaces and dashes
    digits = re.sub(r'[\s-]', '', actual)
    if not digits.isdigit():
        return False, "Credit card contains non-digit characters."
    
    # Luhn algorithm implementation
    checksum = 0
    for i, digit in enumerate(reversed(digits)):
        n = int(digit)
        if i % 2 == 1:  # Odd position (0-indexed from right)
            n *= 2
            if n > 9:
                n -= 9
        checksum += n
    
    if checksum % 10 == 0:
        return True, ""
    return False, "Invalid credit card number (failed Luhn check)."

2. Conditional Validation

Validate fields based on the values of other fields:

# In custom_validators.py
def validate_shipping_address(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates shipping address based on country-specific rules."""
    if not isinstance(actual, dict):
        return False, "Value is not an object."
    
    country = actual.get('country', '')
    postal_code = actual.get('postalCode', '')
    
    # Different validation rules per country
    if country == 'US':
        if not re.match(r'^\d{5}(-\d{4})?$', postal_code):
            return False, "Invalid US ZIP code format."
    elif country == 'UK':
        if not re.match(r'^[A-Z]{1,2}[0-9][A-Z0-9]? ?[0-9][A-Z]{2}$', postal_code, re.I):
            return False, "Invalid UK postal code format."
    
    return True, ""

3. Integration with External Services

Validate data against external APIs or databases:

# In custom_validators.py
import requests

def validate_against_api(expected: Any, actual: Any) -> Tuple[bool, str]:
    """Validates data against an external API."""
    try:
        # Make API call to validate the data
        response = requests.post(
            "https://api.example.com/validate",
            json={"value": actual}
        )
        
        if response.status_code == 200:
            result = response.json()
            if result.get("valid"):
                return True, ""
            return False, result.get("message", "API validation failed.")
        
        return False, f"API validation error: {response.status_code}"
    except Exception as e:
        return False, f"API validation exception: {str(e)}"

CLI Usage

The Validly CLI allows you to perform validations from the command line without writing a Python script, making it ideal for CI/CD pipelines and automated testing.

# Basic usage
python -m Validly expected.json actual.json

# With options file
python -m Validly expected.json actual.json options.json

Example options.json with custom validators:

{
  "list_validation_type": "symmetric",
  "wildcard_keys": ["user.name"],
  "numeric_validations": {
    "user.age": {"operator": "gt", "value": 30},
    "login_count": {"operator": "le", "value": 5}
  },
  "is_uuid_keys": ["user.uuid"],
  "is_pan_keys": ["user.pan"],
  "custom_validators": {
    "user.email": "validate_email_format",
    "user.phone": "validate_phone_number"
  },
  "custom_validator_path": "./custom_validators.py",
  "skip_keys": ["user_id", "id"]
}

JSON Filtering

Validly provides powerful JSON filtering capabilities through two main functions: jsonfilter and jsonfilter_file.

Basic Filtering

Filter JSON data using JSON paths and regex patterns:

from Validly import jsonfilter

# Sample data
data = {
    "user": {
        "id": 1234,
        "name": "John Doe",
        "contact": {
            "email": "john@example.com",
            "phone": "555-1234"
        }
    },
    "orders": [
        {"id": 101, "product": "Laptop", "price": 999.99},
        {"id": 102, "product": "Mouse", "price": 24.99}
    ],
    "metadata": {
        "version": "1.0",
        "timestamp": "2025-09-06T06:00:00Z"
    }
}

# Filter options
options = {
    "jsonpath": ["user.name", "user.contact.email", "orders"]
}

# Apply filtering
filtered_data = jsonfilter(data, options)

# Result:
# {
#     "user": {
#         "name": "John Doe",
#         "contact": {
#             "email": "john@example.com"
#         }
#     },
#     "orders": [
#         {"id": 101, "product": "Laptop", "price": 999.99},
#         {"id": 102, "product": "Mouse", "price": 24.99}
#     ]
# }

Wildcard Filtering

Use wildcards to include multiple fields matching a pattern:

# Filter with wildcards
options = {
    "jsonpath": ["user.*", "metadata.version"]
}

filtered_data = jsonfilter(data, options)

# Result:
# {
#     "user": {
#         "id": 1234,
#         "name": "John Doe",
#         "contact": {
#             "email": "john@example.com",
#             "phone": "555-1234"
#         }
#     },
#     "metadata": {
#         "version": "1.0"
#     }
# }

Regex-based Filtering

Filter keys that match a regular expression pattern:

# Filter with regex
options = {
    "regex": "id"
}

filtered_data = jsonfilter(data, options)

# Result:
# {
#     "user": {
#         "id": 1234
#     },
#     "orders": [
#         {"id": 101},
#         {"id": 102}
#     ]
# }

Filtering from Files

Filter JSON data directly from files:

from Validly import jsonfilter_file

# Filter JSON from a file
options = {
    "jsonpath": ["user", "metadata.version"]
}

filtered_data = jsonfilter_file("data.json", options)

# Process the filtered data
print(filtered_data)

Contributing

We welcome contributions! If you have a feature idea or find a bug, please open an issue or submit a pull request on GitHub.


License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.

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