jest-validate

Generic configuration validation tool that helps you with warnings, errors and deprecation messages as well as showing users examples of correct configuration.

bash npm install --save jest-validate

Usage

```js import {validate} from 'jest-validate';

validate((config: Object), (options: ValidationOptions)); // => {hasDeprecationWarnings: boolean, isValid: boolean} ```

Where ValidationOptions are:

```js type ValidationOptions = { blacklist?: Array, comment?: string, condition?: (option: any, validOption: any) => boolean, deprecate?: ( config: Object, option: string, deprecatedOptions: Object, options: ValidationOptions, ) => true, deprecatedConfig?: {[key: string]: Function}, error?: ( option: string, received: any, defaultValue: any, options: ValidationOptions, ) => void, exampleConfig: Object, recursive?: boolean, title?: Title, unknown?: ( config: Object, exampleConfig: Object, option: string, options: ValidationOptions, ) => void, };

type Title = {| deprecation?: string, error?: string, warning?: string, |}; ```

exampleConfig is the only option required.

API

By default jest-validate will print generic warning and error messages. You can however customize this behavior by providing options: ValidationOptions object as a second argument:

Almost anything can be overwritten to suite your needs.

Options

You will find examples of condition, deprecate, error, unknown, and deprecatedConfig inside source of this repository, named respectively.

exampleConfig syntax

exampleConfig should be an object with key/value pairs that contain an example of a valid value for each key. A configuration value is considered valid when:

The last condition is a special syntax that allows validating where more than one type is permissible; see example below. It's acceptable to have multiple values of the same type in the example, so you can also use this syntax to provide more than one example. When a validation failure occurs, the error message will show all other values in the array as examples.

Examples

Minimal example:

js validate(config, {exampleConfig});

Example with slight modifications:

js validate(config, { comment: ' Documentation: http://custom-docs.com', deprecatedConfig, exampleConfig, title: { deprecation: 'Custom Deprecation', // leaving 'error' and 'warning' as default }, });

This will output:

Warning:

```bash ● Validation Warning:

Unknown option transformx with value "/node_modules/babel-jest" was found. This is either a typing error or a user mistake. Fixing it will remove this message.

Documentation: http://custom-docs.com ```

Error:

```bash ● Validation Error:

Option transform must be of type: object but instead received: string

Example: { "transform": { "^.+\.js$": "/preprocessor.js" } }

Documentation: http://custom-docs.com ```

Example validating multiple types

```js import {multipleValidOptions} from 'jest-validate';

validate(config, { // bar will accept either a string or a number bar: multipleValidOptions('string is ok', 2), }); ```

Error:

```bash ● Validation Error:

Option foo must be of type: string or number but instead received: array

Example: { "bar": "string is ok" }

or

{ "bar": 2 }

Documentation: http://custom-docs.com ```

Deprecation

Based on deprecatedConfig object with proper deprecation messages. Note custom title:

```bash Custom Deprecation:

Option scriptPreprocessor was replaced by transform, which support multiple preprocessors.

Jest now treats your current configuration as: { "transform": {".*": "xxx"} }

Please update your configuration.

Documentation: http://custom-docs.com ```