3.7 KiB
Clojure.spec Coercion
The clojure.spec library specifies the structure of data, validates or destructures it, and can generate data based on the spec.
Warning
clojure.spec by itself doesn't support coercion. reitit uses spec-tools that adds coercion to spec. Like clojure.spec, it's alpha as it leans both on spec walking and clojure.spec.alpha/conform, which is considered a spec internal, that might be changed or removed later.
Usage
For simple specs (core predicates, spec-tools.core/spec, s/and, s/or, s/coll-of, s/keys, s/map-of, s/nillable and s/every), the transformation is inferred using spec-walker and is automatic. To support all specs (like regex-specs), specs need to be wrapped into Spec Records.
There are CLJ-2116 and CLJ-2251 that would help solve this elegantly. Go vote 'em up.
Example
(require '[reitit.coercion.spec])
(require '[reitit.coercion :as coercion])
(require '[spec-tools.spec :as spec])
(require '[clojure.spec.alpha :as s])
(require '[reitit.core :as r])
;; simple specs, inferred
(s/def ::company string?)
(s/def ::user-id int?)
(s/def ::path-params (s/keys :req-un [::company ::user-id]))
(def router
(r/router
["/:company/users/:user-id" {:name ::user-view
:coercion reitit.coercion.spec/coercion
:parameters {:path ::path-params}}]
{:compile coercion/compile-request-coercers}))
(defn match-by-path-and-coerce! [path]
(if-let [match (r/match-by-path router path)]
(assoc match :parameters (coercion/coerce! match))))
Successful coercion:
(match-by-path-and-coerce! "/metosin/users/123")
; #Match{:template "/:company/users/:user-id",
; :data {:name :user/user-view,
; :coercion <<:spec>>
; :parameters {:path ::path-params}},
; :result {:path #object[reitit.coercion$request_coercer$]},
; :path-params {:company "metosin", :user-id "123"},
; :parameters {:path {:company "metosin", :user-id 123}}
; :path "/metosin/users/123"}
Failing coercion:
(match-by-path-and-coerce! "/metosin/users/ikitommi")
; => ExceptionInfo Request coercion failed...
Deeply nested
Spec-tools allow deeply nested specs to be coerced. One can test the coercion easily in the REPL.
Define some specs:
(require '[clojure.spec.alpha :as s])
(require '[spec-tools.core :as st])
(s/def :sku/id keyword?)
(s/def ::sku (s/keys :req-un [:sku/id]))
(s/def ::skus (s/coll-of ::sku :into []))
(s/def :photo/id int?)
(s/def ::photo (s/keys :req-un [:photo/id]))
(s/def ::photos (s/coll-of ::photo :into []))
(s/def ::my-json-api (s/keys :req-un [::skus ::photos]))
Apply a string->edn coercion to the data:
(st/coerce
::my-json-api
{:skus [{:id "123"}]
:photos [{:id "123"}]}
st/string-transformer)
; {:skus [{:id :123}]
; :photos [{:id 123}]}
Apply a json->edn coercion to the data:
(st/coerce
::my-json-api
{:skus [{:id "123"}]
:photos [{:id "123"}]}
st/json-transformer)
; {:skus [{:id :123}]
; :photos [{:id "123"}]}
By default, reitit uses custom transformers that also strip out extra keys from s/keys specs:
(require '[reitit.coercion.spec :as rcs])
(st/coerce
::my-json-api
{:TOO "MUCH"
:skus [{:id "123"
:INFOR "MATION"}]
:photos [{:id "123"
:HERE "TOO"}]}
rcs/json-transformer)
; {:skus [{:id :123}]
; :photos [{:id "123"}]}