0.5.1 • Published 2 years ago

@randograms/schema-to-generator v0.5.1

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29
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
2 years ago

schema-to-generator

Domain driven data generators thanks to the power of json-schema, schema-to-data and lodash merge. Great for creating domain-specific functions to generate mock data based on json-schema data definitions.

Getting Started

Installation

$ npm i @randograms/schema-to-generator

Import

const {
  schemaToGenerator,
  schemasToGenerators,
} = require('@randograms/schema-to-generator');

Schema to Generator

Converts a json-schema object to a dataGenerator function.

const myJsonSchema = {
  type: 'object',
  properties: {
    firstName: { type: 'string' },
    lastName: { type: 'string' },
  },
  required: [
    'firstName',
    'lastName',
  ],
};

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator(myJsonSchema);

Schemas to Generators

Converts an object whose values are json-schema objects, into an object with the same keys, but the values are now dataGenerators. Make sure all schemas are dereferenced before passing them to schemasToGenerators. The resulting dataGenerator functions will not be able to resolve refs.

const myJsonSchemas = {
  user: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      firstName: { type: 'string' },
      lastName: { type: 'string' },
    },
    required: [
      'firstName',
      'lastName',
    ],
  },
  task: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      title: { type: 'string' },
      description: { type: 'string' },
    },
    required: [
      'title',
      'description',
    ],
  },
};

const dataGenerators = schemasToGenerators(myJsonSchemas);
dataGenerators.user //  a dataGenerator
dataGenerators.task // a dataGenerator

Data Generators

Data generators are functions created from a json-schema object. When called, a data generator will return random data that matches the schema. Data generators can take an optional argument called an override to completely or partially override the randomly generated data. Every time a data generator is called, the resulting mock data will be validated against the original schema.

Without an override

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({
  type: 'object',
  properties: {
    firstName: { type: 'string' },
    lastName: { type: 'string' },
  },
  required: [
    'firstName',
    'lastName',
  ],
});

const mockUser = dataGenerator();

mockUser:

{
  "firstName": "dolor magna mollit fugiat Lorem", // random value
  "lastName": "mollit sed"                        // random value
}

With an override

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({
  type: 'object',
  properties: {
    firstName: { type: 'string' },
    lastName: { type: 'string' },
  },
  required: [
    'firstName',
    'lastName',
  ],
});

const mockUser = dataGenerator({
  firstName: 'sam',
});

mockUser:

{
  "firstName": "sam",             // the overridden value
  "lastName": "ipsum est dolore"  // random value
}

Array Overrides

The type of the override must always match the type of the schema. For array schemas, pass an array override. The length of the resulting mock array will always be the length of the array override. Use undefined to leave placeholder spaces for random array items.

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({
  type: 'array',
  items: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      firstName: { type: 'string' },
      lastName: { type: 'string' },
    },
    required: [
      'firstName',
      'lastName',
    ],
  },
});

const mockUsers = dataGenerator([
  undefined,
  { firstName: 'neo' },
  {
    firstName: 'agent',
    lastName: 'smith',
  }
]);

mockUsers:

[                                // array length matches override length
  {
    "firstName": "dolore nulla", // both firstName and lastName are random
    "lastName": "tempor quis"
  },
  {
    "firstName": "neo",          // only lastName is random
    "lastName": "quis labore"
  },
  {
    "firstName": "agent",        // neither field is random
    "lastName": "smith"
  }
]

Options

GenerateBaseData

A function that takes a json-schema and returns mock data. This allows the user to use their own schema-to-data instance or a different library such as json-schema-faker. A dataGenerator will call generateBaseData and then merge any overridden data on top of it.

// with schema-to-data
const { createWithDefaults } = require('@randograms/schema-to-data');
const schemaToData = createWithDefaults({ /* custom defaults */ });

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({ type: 'string' }, { generateBaseData: (schema) => schemaToData(schema) });
const dataGenerators = schemasToGenerators(
  {
    username: { type: 'string' },
    userId: { type: 'integer' },
  },
  { generateBaseData: (schema) => schemaToData(schema) },
);

// with json-schema-faker
const jsf = require('json-schema-faker');
/* set additional jsf options here */
const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({ type: 'string' }, { generateBaseData: (schema) => jsf.generate(schema) });

Immutable

All mock data, including overridden values, are always validated against the original schema when a dataGenerator is called. Therefore it might be necessary to prevent further mutation of data after generation. Pass the immutable option when creating the dataGenerator function to make that function return immutable mock data. This library uses deep-freeze to freeze all nested objects and arrays.

const dataGenerator = schemaToGenerator({ type: 'string' }, { immutable: true });
const dataGenerators = schemasToGenerators(
  {
    username: { type: 'string' },
    userId: { type: 'integer' },
  },
  { immutable: true }
);

Limitations

  • Schemas cannot have '$ref' attributes. All refs must be dereferenced before using this library. This library does not provide a mechanism to dereference schemas
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