public interface ConstraintValidatorContext
ConstraintViolation
must be defined (either the default one,
of if the default ConstraintViolation
is disabled, a custom one).Modifier and Type | Interface and Description |
---|---|
static interface |
ConstraintValidatorContext.ConstraintViolationBuilder
ConstraintViolation builder allowing to optionally associate
the violation report to a sub path. |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
ConstraintValidatorContext.ConstraintViolationBuilder |
buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate(String messageTemplate)
Returns a constraint violation builder building a violation report
allowing to optionally associate it to a sub path.
|
void |
disableDefaultConstraintViolation()
Disables the default
ConstraintViolation object generation (which
is using the message template declared on the constraint). |
ClockProvider |
getClockProvider()
Returns the provider for obtaining the current time in the form of a
Clock ,
e.g. |
String |
getDefaultConstraintMessageTemplate() |
<T> T |
unwrap(Class<T> type)
Returns an instance of the specified type allowing access to
provider-specific APIs.
|
void disableDefaultConstraintViolation()
ConstraintViolation
object generation (which
is using the message template declared on the constraint).
Useful to set a different violation message or generate a ConstraintViolation
based on a different property.
String getDefaultConstraintMessageTemplate()
ClockProvider getClockProvider()
Clock
,
e.g. when validating the Future
and Past
constraints.null
. If no
specific provider has been configured during bootstrap, a default implementation using
the current system time and the current default time zone as returned by
Clock.systemDefaultZone()
will be returned.ConstraintValidatorContext.ConstraintViolationBuilder buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate(String messageTemplate)
To create the ConstraintViolation
, one must call either one of
the addConstraintViolation()
methods available in one of the
interfaces of the fluent API.
If another method is called after addConstraintViolation()
on
ConstraintViolationBuilder
or any of its associated nested interfaces
an IllegalStateException
is raised.
If ConstraintValidator.isValid(Object, ConstraintValidatorContext)
returns
false
, a ConstraintViolation
object will be built per constraint
violation report including the default one (unless
disableDefaultConstraintViolation()
has been called).
ConstraintViolation
objects generated from such a call
contain the same contextual information (root bean, path and so on) unless
the path has been overridden.
To create a different ConstraintViolation
, a new constraint violation builder
has to be retrieved from ConstraintValidatorContext
Here are a few usage examples:
//assuming the following domain model public class User { public Map<String,Address> getAddresses() { ... } } public class Address { public String getStreet() { ... } public Country getCountry() { ... } } public class Country { public String getName() { ... } } //From a property-level constraint on User.addresses //Build a constraint violation on the default path - i.e. the "addresses" property context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "this detail is wrong" ) .addConstraintViolation(); //From a class level constraint on Address //Build a constraint violation on the default path + "street" //i.e. the street property of Address context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "this detail is wrong" ) .addPropertyNode( "street" ) .addConstraintViolation(); //From a property-level constraint on User.addresses //Build a constraint violation on the default path + the bean stored //under the "home" key in the map context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "Incorrect home address" ) .addBeanNode() .inContainer( Map.class, 1 ) .inIterable().atKey( "home" ) .addConstraintViolation(); //From a class level constraint on User //Build a constraint violation on the default path + addresses["home"].country.name //i.e. property "country.name" on the object stored under "home" in the map context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "this detail is wrong" ) .addPropertyNode( "addresses" ) .addPropertyNode( "country" ) .inContainer( Map.class, 1 ) .inIterable().atKey( "home" ) .addPropertyNode( "name" ) .addConstraintViolation(); //From a class level constraint on User //Build a constraint violation on the default path + addresses["home"].<map key> //i.e. a container element constraint violation for the map key context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "the map key is invalid" ) .addPropertyNode( "addresses" ) .addContainerElementNode( "<map key>", Map.class, 0 ) .inIterable().atKey( "invalid" ) .addConstraintViolation();
Cross-parameter constraints on a method can create a node specific to a particular parameter if required. Let's explore a few examples:
//Cross-parameter constraint on method //createUser(String password, String passwordRepeat) //Build a constraint violation on the default path + "passwordRepeat" context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate("Passwords do not match") .addParameterNode(1) .addConstraintViolation(); //Cross-parameter constraint on a method //mergeAddresses(Map<String,Address> addresses, // Map<String,Address> otherAddresses) //Build a constraint violation on the default path + "otherAddresses["home"] //i.e. the Address bean hosted in the "home" key of the "otherAddresses" map parameter context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "Map entry home present in both and does not match") .addParameterNode(1) .addBeanNode() .inContainer( Map.class, 1 ) .inIterable().atKey("home") .addConstraintViolation(); //Cross-parameter constraint on a method //mergeAddresses(Map<String,Address> addresses, // Map<String,Address> otherAddresses) //Build a constraint violation on the default path + "otherAddresses["home"].city //i.e. on the "city" property of the Address bean hosted in //the "home" key of the "otherAddresses" map context.buildConstraintViolationWithTemplate( "Map entry home present in both but city does not match") .addParameterNode(1) .addPropertyNode("city") .inContainer( Map.class, 1 ) .inIterable().atKey("home") .addConstraintViolation();
messageTemplate
- new un-interpolated constraint message<T> T unwrap(Class<T> type)
ValidationException
is thrown.T
- the type of the object to be returnedtype
- the class of the object to be returnedValidationException
- if the provider does not support the callCopyright © 2019 JBoss by Red Hat. All rights reserved.