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vash

Hash with input validation

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Version information

  • 0.2.0 (latest)
  • 0.1.7
  • 0.1.6
  • 0.1.5
  • 0.1.4
  • 0.1.3
  • 0.1.2
released Jan 27th 2017

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Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'ptomulik-vash', '0.2.0'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add ptomulik-vash
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install ptomulik-vash --version 0.2.0

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Documentation

ptomulik/vash — version 0.2.0 Jan 27th 2017

ptomulik-vash

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Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Module Description
  3. Beginning with vash
  4. Usage
  5. Reference
  6. Testing
  7. Limitations
  8. Development

Overview

Vash (a validating hash) provides mixins to create Hash-like classes with simple validation and munging of input data.

Module Description

Vash provides mixins that add Hash interface to receiving classes. The mixins allow you to enable simple data validation and munging, such that you may define restrictions on keys, values and pairs entering your hash and coalesce them at input.

Beginning with vash

There are two ways to add Vash functionality to your class. The first one is to use Vash::Contained mixin, as follows

require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/contained'
class MyVash
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Contained
end

The second pattern is to use Vash::Inherited

require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/inherited'
class MyVash < Hash
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Inherited
end

With the first pattern, hash data is kept in an instance variable named @vash_underlying_hash and may be internally accessed via vash_underlying_hash private method.

With second pattern the superclass of MyVash must provide Hash interface (read - it should be a subclass of standard Hash).

Once you have included Vash::Contained or Vash::Inherited module to your class, you may use it as ordinary Hash:

vash = MyVash[ [[:a,:A],[:b,:B]] ]
vash[:c] = :C
# .. and so on

The default rules for validation and munging are "allow anything" and "do not modify", so MyVash behaves exactly same way Hash does. Simple validation may be added by defining vash_valid_key?, vash_valid_value? and vash_valid_pair? methods (note, all methods that are specific to Vash, have vash_ prefix):

require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/contained'
class MyVash
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Contained
  # accept only integers as keys
  def vash_valid_key?(key)
    true if Integer(key) rescue false
  end
end
vash = MyVash[1,2]
# => {1=>2}
vash[2] = 3
# => 3
vash
# => {1=>2, 2=>3}
vash['a'] = 1
# InvalidKeyError: invalid key "a"

Restrictions may further be defined for values and pairs. The following subsections shall give more detailed explanations.

Usage

Custom Hash with validation and munging (call it "custom Vash") may be created by including Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Contained or Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Inherited module to your class and then overwriting some of its methods. It's also good to prepare some specs/tests for your customized class (see Testing).

We'll start with simple customized Vash in Example 3.1 and will continue extending it in subsequent examples.

Example 3.1: Defining restrictions for keys and values

Let's prepare simple container for integer variables:

require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/contained'
class Variables
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Contained
  # accept only valid identifiers as keys
  def vash_valid_key?(key)
    key.is_a?(String) and (key=~/^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/)
  end
  # accept only what is convertible to integer
  def vash_valid_value?(val)
    true if Integer(val) rescue false
  end
end

When you perform simple experiments, you shall see:

vars = Variables['ten', 10, 'nine', 9]
# => {"nine"=>9,"ten"=>10}
vars[2] = 20
# InvalidKeyError: invalid key 2
vars['eight'] = 'e'
# InvalidValueError: invalid value "e" at key "eight"
vars['seven'] = '7'
# => "7"
vars
# => {"nine"=>9, "ten"=>10, "seven"=>"7"}

Example 3.2: Munging keys and values

The class from Example 3.1 has one drawback - it doesn't convert values to integers. For example vars['seven'] is "7" (a string). Value munging may be added to Variables in order to convert data provided by user.

class Variables
  def vash_munge_value(val)
    Integer(val)
  end
end

Now we have

vars = Variables['seven','7']
# => {"seven"=>7}

We may also munge keys, for example convert camelCase to under\_score:

class Variables
  def vash_munge_key(key)
    key.gsub(/([a-z])([A-Z])/,'\1_\2').downcase
  end
end
vars = Variables['TwentyFive','25']
# => {"twenty_five"=>25}

Example 3.3: Defining restrictions for pairs

Some variables may not accept certain values. To prevent Vash from accepting such pairs, a pair validation may be used. In this example we prevent variables ending with _price from accepting negative values:

class Variables
  # for keys ending with _price we accept only non-negative values
  def vash_valid_pair?(pair)
    (pair[0]=~/price$/) ? (pair[1]>=0) : true
  end
end
vars = Variables['lemonPrice', '-4']
# InvalidPairError: invalid (key,value) combination ("lemon_price",-4) at index 0

Example 3.4: Munging pairs

We may also munge pairs entering our Variables container. In this example we'll append variable value to its name, such that vars['my_var'] = 1 will result with variable my_var1=1 being added to Variables:

class Variables
  def vash_munge_pair(pair)
    [pair[0] + pair[1].to_s, pair[1]]
  end
end
vars = Variables['myVar', 1]
# => {"my_var1"=>1}
vars['my_var'] = 2
# => 2
vars
# => {"my_var2"=>2, "my_var1"=>1}

Example 3.5: Customizing error messages

Default error messages may be misleading in certain applications. To circumvent this, we may override vash_key_name, vash_value_name and vash_pair_name, for example:

class Variables
  def vash_key_name(*args); 'variable name'; end
  def vash_value_name(*args); 'variable value'; end
  def vash_pair_name(*args); 'value for variable'; end
end
vars = Variables[:xxx, 1]
# InvalidKeyError: invalid variable name :xxx at index 0
vars = Variables['var', 'xxx']
# InvalidValueError: invalid variable value "xxx" at index 1
vars = Variables['lemonPrice', '-4']
# InvalidPairError: invalid value for variable ("lemon_price",-4) at index 0

The last message is still not well-formed. We may overwrite default #vash_pair_exception to have better effect:

class Variables
  # note: args[0] optionally contains index of a failing pair
  def vash_pair_exception(pair, *args)
    msg  = "invalid value #{pair[1].inspect} for variable #{pair[0].inspect}"
    msg += " at index #{args[0]}" unless args[0].nil?
    [Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::InvalidPairError, msg]
  end
end
vars = Variables['lemonPrice', -1]
# InvalidPairError: invalid value -1 for variable lemon_price at index 0

Reference

The detailed method documentation may be generated with yardoc. Here, we only present briefly how Vash works.

When new data enters Vash (via #[]=, #store or any other method that modifies content of the underlying hash), the workflow is following:

  1. Input items are passed to #vash_validate_item (the term item is used for original [key,value] pair as entered by user).
  2. The key and value are validated separately by #vash_validate_key and #vash_validate_value. These methods call #vash_valid_key? and #vash_valid_value? to ask, if the key and value may be further processed.
  3. If key and value are acceptable, the #vash_munge_key and #vash_munge_value are called to perform optional data munging. The #vash_validate_key and #vash_validate_value return munged key and value.
  4. The munged [key,value] pair is referred to as pair. It is passed to #vash_validate_pair in order to ensure, that it satisfies pair restrictions. The #vash_validate_pair asks #vash_valid_pair? whether the given pair may be accepted or not (note: both methods operate on already munged keys and values).
  5. If verification succeeds, the pair is passed to #vash_munge_pair and added to Vash container.

In any of these points, if the validation fails, an exception is raised. The Vash by default raises following exceptions:

  • Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::InvalidKeyError (key validation failed),
  • Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::InvalidValueError (value validation failed),
  • Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::InvalidPairError (pair validation failed).

All the above exceptions are subclasses of

  • Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::VashArgumentError.

which is a subclass of ::ArumentError.

Testing

To run existing unit tests simply type

bundle exec rake spec

Note, that you may need to install necessary gems to run tests:

bundle install --path vendor/bundle

Shared examples overview

The module provides quite extensive set of rspec shared examples for developers. The tests are designed such that they compare behaviour of a subject class with an already-tested (model) class (such as standard Hash). Reusable shared_examples are provided for developers who want to implement custom Vashes. If you're starting your new Vash class, it's recommended to prepare simple test that includes Vash::Inherited or Vash::Contained shared examples and run test each time you overwrite some of Vash::Contained, Vash::Inherited or Vash::Validator methods. This shall quickly reveal any (unintended) changes introduced to your Vash behaviour.

The shared examples may be found in following files:

  • spec/unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/hash.rb
  • spec/unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/validator.rb
  • spec/unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/contained.rb
  • spec/unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/inherited.rb

Example 6.1

Say, we want to ensure, that our new class:

class MyHash < Hash; end

has all the functionality of standard Hash. We may use Vash::Hash shared_examples to verify, that our class has the expected behaviour:

# spec/unit/my_hash_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
require 'unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/hash'

class MyHash < Hash; end

describe MyHash do
  it_behaves_like 'Vash::Hash', {
    :sample_items   => [ [:a,:A,], ['b','B'] ],
    :hash_arguments => [ { :a=>:X, :d=>:D } ],
    :missing_key    => :c,
    :missing_value  => :C
  }
end

The above snippet shall generate about 700 test cases. Because MyHash has all the functionality of Hash, we expect all tests to pass.

The :sample_items array is used to initialize hash during the tests and also to generate input arguments to some hash functions (keys/values from sample_items may be used as existing_key and existing_value). The :hash_arguments is an array of hashes used to test methods accepting hash as an argument (e.g. merge!). The :missing_key and :missing_value are sample key and value that are correct (should pass key/value and pair validation) but is not present in :sample_items.

Example 6.2

Now suppose, you want to add input validation to MyHash and then test its behaviour. For that, we include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Inherited module, and use Vash::Inherited shared examples.

# spec/unit/my_vash_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
require 'unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/inherited'
require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/inherited'

class MyHash < Hash
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Inherited 
  # accept only valid identifiers as keys
  def vash_valid_key?(key)
    key.is_a?(String) and (key=~/^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/)
  end
end

describe MyHash do
  it_behaves_like 'Vash::Inherited', {
    :valid_keys        => ['iden_tifier', 'IdenTifier'],
    :invalid_keys      => ['', '$#', :a, {}, [], nil],
    :valid_items       => [ ['x', 1] ],
    :invalid_items     => [ [[:x, 'a'], :key] ],
    :hash_arguments    => [ { 'a'=>:A, 'b'=>'B' } ],
    :missing_key       => 'c',
    :missing_value     => :C,
    :methods           => {
      :vash_valid_key? => lambda{|key| key.is_a?(String) and (key=~/^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/)}
    }
  }
end

In the above snippet, we've indicated that MyHash has the behaviour of Vash::Inherited, but the vash_valid_key? method was overridden. We indicate this by setting :vash_valid_key? parameter in :methods.

Shared examples reference

Vash::Hash shared examples

Ensures that a class behaves like standard Hash.

Synopsis:

it_behaves_like 'Vash::Hash', params

The params is a Hash with parameters used by test driver.

Example usage:

require 'unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/hash'
# ...
# MyHash is the class under test
describe MyHash do
  it_behaves_like 'Vash::Hash', {
    :sample_items   => [ [:a,:A,], ['b','B'] ],
    :hash_arguments => [ { :a=>:X, :d=>:D } ],
    :missing_key    => :c,
    :missing_value  => :C
  }
end

Parameters:

  • sample_items (required) - used to determine key/value arguments to tested methods and existing_key/ existing_value (if not present in params); also used to initialize instances of described class before they get tested (unless hash_initializers parameter is provided); the sample_items parameter may be a Hash or an array of items (array of 2-element arrays),

  • missing_key (required) - an example key that is not in sample_items,

  • missing_value (required) - an example value that is not in sample_items,

  • hash_arguments (required) - an array of hashes used as arguments to some tested methods (those, that accept hash as argument, for example merge!),

  • model_class (optional) - a class which models expected Hash behaviour, by default Puppet::SharedBehaviours::PTomulik::Vash::Hash is used, which is direct subclass of standard Hash,

  • methods (optional) - a hash of procs/lambdas used to override methods in the model class. This may be used to slightly modify model behaviour used by shared examples, for example:

    # slightly modified hash ...
    class MyHash < Hash
      def default; nil; end
      def default=(v); raise RuntimeError, "can't change default value"; end
    end
    describe MyHash do
      it_behaves_like 'Vash::Hash', {
        # ... other params ...
        :methods => {
          :default  => lambda { nil } # our #default method always returns nil
          :default= => lambda { |v| raise RuntimeError, "can't change default value" }
        }
      }
    end
    
  • hash_initializers (optional) - an Array of hashes, used to initialize instances of the tested class and generate tests with such an initialized instances; if not provided, sample_items parameter is used to initialize one instance per method.

  • disable_exception_matching (optional) - if set to true, do not specify, that subject's methods behave exactly as model's method with respect to the raised exceptions,

  • disable_value_matching (optional) - if set to true, do not verify whether the values returned by the subject's methods are same as values returned by model's methods,

  • disable_class_check (optional) - if set to true, do not check whether the classes of values returned by subject's methods are correct,

  • disable_value_is_self_check (optional) - some Hash methods are supposed to return self object, (for example merge!); if this flag is set to true, do not check whether these methods return self object properly,

  • match_attributes (optional) - an array of subject's attributes to match against appropriate attributes; the attributes are not part of hash content; an example attribute is default value.

  • match_attributes_at_end (optional) - an array of attributes to match against model after the operation under test (e.g. :match_attributes => :default causes that default values of subject and model hashes are compared after the tested method is invoked),

  • disable_content_matching - do not test whether the content of subject and model hash is same after the operation under test,

  • raises - an array of exception classes that may be raised by function as a part of its normal behaviour (for example as a result of argument validation)

Most of these parameters might be overwritten on per-method basis, for example:

it_behaves_like 'Hash::Vash', {
  # ...
  :fetch => { :disable_value_matching => true },
}

Vash::Validator shared examples

Ensure that a class provides all functionalities of Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Validator.

Synopsis

it_behaves_like 'Vash::Validator', params

Example::

require 'puppet/util/ptomulik/vash/validator'
require 'unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/validator'
class MyValidator
  include Puppet::Util::PTomulik::Vash::Validator
  # accept only valid identifiers as keys
  def vash_valid_key?(key)
    key.is_a?(String) and (key=~/^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/)
  end
  # accept only what is convertible to integer
  def vash_valid_value?(val)
    true if Integer(val) rescue false
  end
end

describe MyValidator do
  it_behaves_like 'Vash::Validator', {
    :valid_keys     => ['one', 'two'],
    :invalid_keys   => ["7'th",''],
    :valid_values   => [1,-1,'0'],
    :invalid_values => [{},'x'],
  }
end

Parameters:

See comments in source code: spec/unit/puppet/shared_behaviours/ptomulik/vash/validator.rb.

Vash::Contained and Vash::Inherited shared examples

The Vash::Contained (or Vash::Inherited) combines Vash:Hash and Vash::Validator shared examples into single set of shared examples.

Synopsis

it_behaves_like 'Vash::Contained', params

or

it_behaves_like 'Vash::Inherited', params

where params is a Hash of mixed parameters to Vash::Hash and Vash::Validator behaviours. Note, that you don't have to define sample_items, because they are internally generated from valid_items and invalid_items. The hash_initializers, if provided, must consists only of valid items or your tests will fail.

Development

The project is held at github:

Issue reports, patches, pull requests are welcome!