Grails validation capability is built on Spring's Validator API and data binding capabilities. However Grails takes this further and provides a unified way to define validation "constraints" with its constraints mechanism.Constraints in Grails are a way to declaratively specify validation rules. Most commonly they are applied to domain classes, however URL Mappings and Command Objects also support constraints.Within a domain class a constraints are defined with the constraints property that is assigned a code block:class User {
String login
String password
String email
Integer age static constraints = {
…
}
}
You then use method calls that match the property name for which the constraint applies in combination with named parameters to specify constraints:
class User {
... static constraints = {
login(size:5..15, blank:false, unique:true)
password(size:5..15, blank:false)
email(email:true, blank:false)
age(min:18, nullable:false)
}
}
In this example we've declared that the login
property must be between 5 and 15 characters long, it cannot be blank and must be unique. We've all applied other constraints to the password
, email
and age
properties.
A complete reference for the available constraints can be found on the reference guide
Validation Basics
To validate a domain class you can call the validate method on any instance:def user = new User(params)if(user.validate()) {
// do something with user
}
else {
user.errors.allErrors.each {
println it
}
}
The errors
property on domain classes is an instance of the Spring Errors interface. The Errors
interface provides methods to navigate the validation errors and also retrieve the original values.Validation Phases
Within Grails there are essentially 2 phases of validation, the first phase is data binding which occurs when you bind request parameters onto an instance such as:def user = new User(params)
At this point you may already have errors in the errors
property due to type conversion (such as converting Strings to Dates). You can check these and obtain the original input value using the Errors
API:if(user.hasErrors()) {
if(user.hasFieldError("login")) {
println user.getFieldError("login").rejectedValue
}
}
The second phase of validation happens when you call validate or save. This is when Grails will validate the bound values againts the constraints you defined. For example, by default the persistent save method calls validate
before executing hence allowing you to write code like:if(user.save()) {
return user
}
else {
user.errors.allErrors.each {
println it
}
}
Displaying Errors
Typically if you get a validation error you want to redirect back to the view for rendering. Once there you need some way of rendering errors. Grails supports a rich set of tags for dealing with errors. If you simply want to render the errors as a list you can use renderErrors:<g:renderErrors bean="${user}" />
If you need more control you can use hasErrors and eachError:<g:hasErrors bean="${user}">
<ul>
<g:eachError var="err" bean="${user}">
<li>${err}</li>
</g:eachError>
</ul>
</g:hasErrors>
Highlighting Errors
It is often useful to highlight using a red box or some indicator when a field has been incorrectly input. This can also be done with the hasErrors by invoking it as a method. For example:<div class='value ${hasErrors(bean:user,field:'login','errors')}'>
<input type="text" name="login" value="${fieldValue(bean:user,field:'login')}"/>
</div>
What this code does is check if the login
field of the user
bean has any errors and if it does adds an errors
CSS class to the div
thus allowing you to use CSS rules to highlight the div
.
Retrieving Input Values
Each error is actually an instance of the FieldError class in Spring, which retains the original input value within it. This is useful as you can use the error object to restore the value input by the user using the fieldValue tag:<input type="text" name="login" value="${fieldValue(bean:user,field:'login')}"/>
This code will look if there is an existing FieldError
in the User
bean and if there is obtain the originally input value for the login
field.Another important thing to note about errors in Grails is that the messages that the errors display are not hard coded anywhere. The FieldError class in Spring essentially resolves messages from message bundles using Grails' i18n support.Constraints and Message Codes
The codes themselves are dictated by a convention. For example consider the constraints we looked at earlier:package com.mycompany.myappclass User {
... static constraints = {
login(size:5..15, blank:false, unique:true)
password(size:5..15, blank:false)
email(email:true, blank:false)
age(min:18, nullable:false)
}
}
If the blank
constraint was violated Grails will, by convention, look for a message code in the form:[Class Name].[Property Name].[Constraint Code]
In the case of the blank
constraint this would be user.login.blank
so you would need a message such as the following in your grails-app/i18n/messages.properties
file:user.login.blank=Your login name must be specified!
The class name is looked for both with and without a package, with the packaged version taking precedence. So for example, com.mycompany.myapp.User.login.blank will be used before user.login.blank. This allows for cases where you domain class encounters message code clashes with plugins.For a reference on what codes are for which constraints refer to the reference guide for each constraint.Displaying Messages
The renderErrors tag will automatically deal with looking up messages for you using the message tag. However, if you need more control of rendering you will need to do this yourself:<g:hasErrors bean="${user}">
<ul>
<g:eachError var="err" bean="${user}">
<li><g:message error="${err}" /></li>
</g:eachError>
</ul>
</g:hasErrors>
In this example within the body of the eachError tag we use the message tag in combination with its error
argument to read the message for the given error.