Valitron is a simple, minimal and elegant stand-alone validation library with NO dependencies. Valitron uses simple, straightforward validation methods with a focus on readable and concise syntax. Valitron is the simple and pragmatic validation library you've been looking for.
Valitron was created out of frustration with other validation libraries that have dependencies on large components from other frameworks like Symfony's HttpFoundation, pulling in a ton of extra files that aren't really needed for basic validation. It also has purposefully simple syntax used to run all validations in one call instead of individually validating each value by instantiating new classes and validating values one at a time like some other validation libraries require.
In short, Valitron is everything you've been looking for in a validation library but haven't been able to find until now: simple pragmatic syntax, lightweight code that makes sense, extensible for custom callbacks and validations, well tested, and without dependencies. Let's get started.
Valitron uses Composer to install and update:
curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php
php composer.phar require vlucas/valitron
The examples below use PHP 5.4 syntax, but Valitron works on PHP 5.3+.
Usage is simple and straightforward. Just supply an array of data you
wish to validate, add some rules, and then call validate()
. If there
are any errors, you can call errors()
to get them.
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array('name' => 'Chester Tester'));
$v->rule('required', 'name');
if($v->validate()) {
echo "Yay! We're all good!";
} else {
// Errors
print_r($v->errors());
}
Using this format, you can validate $_POST
data directly and easily,
and can even apply a rule like required
to an array of fields:
$v = new Valitron\Validator($_POST);
$v->rule('required', ['name', 'email']);
$v->rule('email', 'email');
if($v->validate()) {
echo "Yay! We're all good!";
} else {
// Errors
print_r($v->errors());
}
Setting language and language dir globally:
// boot or config file
use Valitron\Validator as V;
V::langDir(__DIR__.'/validator_lang'); // always set langDir before lang.
V::lang('ar');
required
- Required fieldequals
- Field must match another field (email/password confirmation)different
- Field must be different than another fieldaccepted
- Checkbox or Radio must be accepted (yes, on, 1, true)numeric
- Must be numericinteger
- Must be integer numberlength
- String must be certain lengthlengthBetween
- String must be between given lengthsmin
- Minimummax
- Maximumin
- Performs in_array check on given array valuesnotIn
- Negation ofin
rule (not in array of values)ip
- Valid IP addressemail
- Valid email addressurl
- Valid URLurlActive
- Valid URL with active DNS recordalpha
- Alphabetic characters onlyalphaNum
- Alphabetic and numeric characters onlyslug
- URL slug characters (a-z, 0-9, -, _)regex
- Field matches given regex patterndate
- Field is a valid datedateFormat
- Field is a valid date in the given formatdateBefore
- Field is a valid date and is before the given datedateAfter
- Field is a valid date and is after the given datecontains
- Field is a string and contains the given stringcreditCard
- Field is a valid credit card number
Credit card validation currently allows you to validate a Visa visa
,
Mastercard mastercard
, Dinersclub dinersclub
, American Express amex
or Discover discover
This will check the credit card against each card type
$v->rule('creditCard', 'credit_card');
To optionally filter card types, add the slug to an array as the next parameter:
$v->rule('creditCard', 'credit_card', ['visa', 'mastercard']);
If you only want to validate one type of card, put it as a string:
$v->rule('creditCard', 'credit_card', 'visa');
If the card type information is coming from the client, you might also want to still specify an array of valid card types:
$cardType = 'amex';
$v->rule('creditCard', 'credit_card', $cardType, ['visa', 'mastercard']);
$v->validate(); // false
To add your own validation rule, use the addRule
method with a rule
name, a custom callback or closure, and a error message to display in
case of an error. The callback provided should return boolean true or
false.
Valitron\Validator::addRule('alwaysFail', function($field, $value, array $params) {
return false;
}, 'Everything you do is wrong. You fail.');
As the number of rules grows, you may prefer the alternate syntax for defining multiple rules at once.
$rules = [
'required' => 'foo',
'accepted' => 'bar',
'integer' => 'bar'
];
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array('foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 1));
$v->rules($rules);
$v->validate();
If your rule requires multiple parameters or a single parameter more complex than a string, you need to wrap the rule in an array.
$rules = [
'required' => [
['foo'],
['bar']
],
'length' => [
['foo', 3]
]
];
You can also specify multiple rules for each rule type.
$rules = [
'length' => [
['foo', 5],
['bar', 5]
]
];
Putting these techniques together, you can create a complete rule definition in a relatively compact data structure.
You can continue to add individual rules with the rule
method
even after specifying a rule definition via an array. This is
especially useful if you are defining custom validation rules.
$rules = [
'required' => 'foo',
'accepted' => 'bar',
'integer' => 'bar'
];
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array('foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 1));
$v->rules($rules);
$v->rule('min', 'bar', 0);
$v->validate();
You can do this in two different ways, you can add a individual label to a rule or an array of all labels for the rules.
To add individual label to rule you simply add the label
method after the rule.
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array());
$v->rule('required', 'name')->message('{field} is required')->label('Name');
$v->validate();
There is a edge case to this method, you wouldn't be able to use a array of field names in the rule definition, so one rule per field. So this wouldn't work:
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array());
$v->rule('required', array('name', 'email'))->message('{field} is required')->label('Name');
$v->validate();
However we can use a array of labels to solve this issue by simply adding the labels
method instead:
$v = new Valitron\Validator(array());
$v->rule('required', array('name', 'email'))->message('{field} is required');
$v->labels(array(
'name' => 'Name',
'email' => 'Email address'
));
$v->validate();
This introduces a new set of tags to your error language file which looks like {field}
, if you are using a rule like equals
you can access the second value in the language file by incrementing the field with a value like {field1}
.
The test suite depends on the Composer autoloader to load and run the Valitron files. Please ensure you have downloaded and installed Composer before running the tests:
- Download Composer
curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php
- Run 'install'
php composer.phar install
- Run the tests
phpunit
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Make your changes
- Run the tests, adding new ones for your own code if necessary (
phpunit
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
- Pat yourself on the back for being so awesome