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OVal is a pragmatic and extensible validation framework for any kind of Java objects (not only JavaBeans). Constraints can be declared with annotations (@NotNull, @MaxLength), POJOs or XML.Custom constraints can be expressed as custom Java classes or by using scripting languages such as JavaScript, Groovy, BeanShell, OGNL or MVEL.
The OVal plugin provides support for using the OVal Validation Framework
The plugin defines the interceptor "ovalValidation" and the interceptor stack "ovalValidationStack" in the "oval-default" package. To use this interceptor, extend the "oval-default" package and apply the interceptor to your action, like:
OVal provides many annotations for validations that can be used out of the box (custom validators can also be defined). Once the "ovalValidation" interceptor is applied to an action, you can annotate it:
Use the @AssertValid annotation to validate nested objects, like
OVal provides support for defining the validation via XML. Validation files must end in "-validation.xml" and the rules to find them, are the same rules used to find the validation XML files used by the regular validation mechanisms (default validation in xwork):
Here is an example of an XML validation file:
A profile is a set of validations, that can be enabled for a method in an action, for example:
In this example, when firstAndLast() is executed, the fields firstName and lastName will be validated. When middle() is executed, only middleName will be validated. When a method is annotated with the Profiles annotation, only the validations in the specified profiles will be performed. If no profile is specified for an action method, all the validations in the class will be evaluated.
The OVal annotations (and corresponding XML tags) have a message attribute that can be used to specify either the error message, or the key of the error message. If a key is found in a property file, matching the value of the massage attribute, it will be used as the message, otherwise the value will be used as a literal string. For example, given this property file:
and this class:
When that action is validated, the field errors would be:
The current OVal "context" object is pushed into the stack for each validator, so it can be accessed from the property file to build the error message. See the OVal javadoc for more properties available in the FieldContext class.
This interceptor runs the action through the standard validation framework, which in turn checks the action against any validation rules (found in files such as ActionClass-validation.xml) and adds field-level and action-level error messages (provided that the action implements com.opensymphony.xwork2.ValidationAware). This interceptor is often one of the last (or second to last) interceptors applied in a stack, as it assumes that all values have already been set on the action.
This interceptor does nothing if the name of the method being invoked is specified in the excludeMethods parameter. excludeMethods accepts a comma-delimited list of method names. For example, requests to foo!input.action and foo!back.action will be skipped by this interceptor if you set the excludeMethods parameter to "input, back".
Note that this has nothing to do with the com.opensymphony.xwork2.Validateable interface and simply adds error messages to the action. The workflow of the action request does not change due to this interceptor. Rather, this interceptor is often used in conjuction with the workflow interceptor.
NOTE: As this method extends off MethodFilterInterceptor, it is capable of deciding if it is applicable only to selective methods in the action class. See MethodFilterInterceptor for more info.
The param alwaysInvokeValidate (default to true), will make the interceptor invoke validate() on the action, if the action implements Validateable.
The param programmatic (defaults to true), will make the plugin call validateX() where X is the name of the method that will be invoked in the action. If this param is set to false, alwaysInvokeValidate is ignored and validate() won't be invoked.
The jar plugin needs to be added to the lib directory of your application as well as other dependencies. If you are using XML validation, XStream needs to be included. Here is the maven dependency example:
Add a constant element to your struts config file to change the value of a configuration setting, like:
Name | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
struts.oval.validateJPAAnnotations | false |