I don't think this use case is so uncommon. I was doing this years ago with
custom extensions to Apache BVal. I suppose there is no reason one couldn't
generate XML in response to a reflective examination of a set of classes
and bootstrap a validator using the result, but that does seem cumbersome
compared to a custom API.
Matt
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 11:01 AM, Richard Fanning <
Richard.Fanning(a)fineos.com> wrote:
Hi guys,
Thanks for the responses. You’re probably both correct in that this is an
uncommon use case..
Another scenario in our company where we thought this feature might be
useful was again around the area of defaults. So for example a String
property on an @Entity would not need to define any @Size but a sensible
default (255) would apply akin to JPA providers [1]
But we’d still like to get ConstraintViolations during validation phase
rather than some JPA/DB errors complaining about the strings length.
Anywho using the programmatic HV API is certainly a better approach than
“hacking my into the guts of HV” albeit they pretty well organized guts J
I guess a take away for the Bean Validations EG might be that the HV
programmatic constraints API has it’s uses and would be useful as part of
JSR SPEC.
Thanks for your time.
Rich
[1]
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7509769/how-to-increase-length-of-a-st...
*From:* beanvalidation-dev-bounces(a)lists.jboss.org [mailto:
beanvalidation-dev-bounces(a)lists.jboss.org] *On Behalf Of *Gunnar Morling
*Sent:* 29 July 2014 14:53
*To:* beanvalidation-dev List
*Subject:* Re: [bv-dev] Feature Suggestion :: Implicit constraints
Hi,
2014-07-29 15:31 GMT+02:00 Richard Fanning <Richard.Fanning(a)fineos.com>:
Hi there,
We are starting to use bean validation in our product and something we
would like to do is what I’ve coined as “implicit constraints”. I’d like to
run this by the mailing list and get your thoughts on this as a potential
feature in the spec.
The use case we have is we have a “DateTime” object which represents Date
& Time. Our DateTime object pre-dates JDK 8 (and JodaTime). A DateTime for
us has some constraints
1. The DateTime cannot me before LOW_DATE à 01-01-1970 00:00:00
2. The DateTime cannot me after HIGH_DATE à 31-12-2150 23:59:59
Not sure of the exact history of these constraints but it would seem like
we are trying to invent a new y2k J
These constraints were enforced prior to our usage of Bean Validation as
these were burnt into the setter of generated POJO’s (domain objects) but
now that we are moving from generated domain objects to JPA style POJO’s
we’d like to use Bean Validation to apply the same constraints.
Assume we have an object which has a DateTime property as shown below
*public* *class* TestObject {
*private* DateTime myDateTime;
*public* DateTime getMyDateTime() {
*return* myDateTime;
}
*public* *void* setMyDateTime(DateTime myDateTime) {
*this*.myDateTime = myDateTime;
}
}
We’d like if developers did not need to add an annotation all DateTime
properties to constrain with the implicit constraints.. i.e.
@Date
*private* DateTime myDateTime;
In our opinion this annotation serves no additional purpose and would be
an extra onus on the developer to add this so they ensure the value meets
internal DateTime criteria.
Looking at the 1.1 spec I cannot see any way of applying constraints
without annotating (well you can use HV XML but that would need to be done
for all fields).. Is that correct.
Yes, the spec defines constraint declaration via annotations and XML.
Hibernate Validator in addition has a (public) API for programmatic
constraint declaration.
I’ve managed to implement “implicit constraints” by using non-standard
Hibernate Validator API’s (i.e. using reflection I added an additional
MetaDataProvider which added ConstrainedElements ( to the
BeanConfiguration)). I can share this on GitHub is anyone is interested in
taking a look.
You should better use the HV constraint API for this [1]. You could
inspect your beans using reflection and define a @Date constraint for each
DateTime property you find. MetaDataProvider et al. are internal APIs which
may change without notice between releases.
Standardizing this API might be a useful addition as it allows to
implement cases as yours in a portable manner. Not sure whether the spec
should explicitly support this requirement, as it may be very specific.
Appreciate any feedback you might have.
Thanks
Rich
--Gunnar
[1]
http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/validator/5.1/reference/en-US/html_single...
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