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@bufferpunk/schema

v3.0.0

Published

A runtime schema and type validator for JavaScript and TypeScript.

Downloads

488

Readme

@bufferpunk/schema

A lightweight runtime schema validator for JavaScript and TypeScript models with support for immutability and field-level validation hooks.

@bufferpunk/schema is built around a base class that validates plain objects using a static schema definition. It is especially useful when working with NoSQL data, API payloads, and nested objects that need runtime guarantees and immutability constraints.

What It Does

When a model extends Base and defines a static schema, instance creation and updates will:

  • enforce required fields
  • apply defaults (primitive values or factory functions)
  • coerce values to the configured type when possible
  • validate nested objects and arrays recursively
  • validate allowed values with enum
  • run custom beforeChecks and afterChecks hooks if present
  • run custom validate hook for final validation if present
  • enforce immutability at class or field level

Installation

npm install @bufferpunk/schema

Quick Start (JavaScript)

import Base from "@bufferpunk/schema";

class User extends Base {
  static version = 1;

  static schema = {
    name: {
      type: String,
      minLength: 2,
      maxLength: 80,
      beforeChecks: (value) => typeof value === "string" ? value.trim() : value,
      afterChecks: (value) => value.replace(/\s+/g, " ")
    },
    role: {
      type: String,
      enum: ["admin", "editor", "viewer"],
      default: "viewer",
      beforeChecks: (value) => typeof value === "string" ? value.toLowerCase() : value
    },
    confirmed: { type: Boolean, optional: true, default: false }
  };
}

const user = new User({
  name: "   John    Doe   ",
  role: "EDITOR"
});

console.log(user);
// {
//   name: "John Doe",
//   role: "editor",
//   confirmed: false,
//   version: 1
// }

// Update the user
user.update({ role: "admin" });

Quick Start (TypeScript)

import Base, { SchemaDefinition } from "@bufferpunk/schema";

class User extends Base {
  static version = 1;

  static schema: SchemaDefinition = {
    name: {
      type: String,
      minLength: 2,
      maxLength: 80,
      beforeChecks: (value: any) => typeof value === "string" ? value.trim() : value,
      afterChecks: (value: any) => value.replace(/\s+/g, " ")
    },
    language: {
      type: String,
      enum: ["english", "spanish", "portuguese"],
      default: "english",
      beforeChecks: (value: any) => typeof value === "string" ? value.toLowerCase().trim() : value,
      afterChecks: (value: any) => value.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + value.slice(1)
    }
  };
}

const user = new User({ name: "   Ana   Silva   " });
console.log(user);

Now you have safe user input, and can safely work with the objects knowing they conform to the defined schema, with all the transformations and validations applied.

Field Configuration

Each field in a schema can include:

  • type (required): constructor such as String, Number, Boolean, Date, Array, Object
  • optional: allows missing value
  • default: fallback value when input is null or undefined (function values are executed)
  • enum: list of allowed values
  • minLength, maxLength: length constraints for values with a length property
  • immutable: prevent this field from being changed after creation
  • beforeChecks(value): transforms/sanitizes raw input before required/type checks
  • afterChecks(value): transforms value after type/length/enum checks and before validation
  • validate(value): custom final validation logic
  • values: required for Array types to validate each array item
  • keys: required for Object types to validate nested properties

the type property is the only required configuration for a field. All other properties are optional and can be used as needed to enforce constraints and transformations.

Validation Order

For each field, validation runs in this order:

  1. beforeChecks (you can handle user input normalization here, e.g trimming strings, coercing types, etc.)
  2. required/optional and default handling
  3. type validation/coercion
  4. minLength / maxLength
  5. enum
  6. afterChecks (best for output formatting)
  7. custom validate (best business rules)
  8. immutability check (if field is immutable)

This order allows you to normalize input first, enforce constraints, then apply final formatting while respecting immutability.

Immutability

Mark classes or individual fields as immutable to prevent modifications:

class ImmutableUser extends Base {
  static immutable = true; // entire class cannot be updated
  
  static schema: SchemaDefinition = {
    id: { type: String, immutable: true }, // this field cannot change
    name: { type: String } // this field can be updated
  };
}

const user = new ImmutableUser({ id: "123", name: "John" });
user.update({ name: "Jane" }); // Error: Cannot update immutable object

Or mix immutable and mutable fields:

class User extends Base {
  static schema: SchemaDefinition = {
    id: { type: String, immutable: true },
    createdAt: { type: Date, immutable: true, default: () => new Date() },
    name: { type: String }, // can be updated
    role: { type: String, default: "user" } // can be updated
  };
}

const user = new User({ id: "123", name: "John" });
user.update({ name: "Jane" }); // works
user.update({ id: "456" }); // Error: Cannot change immutable property 'id'

Updating Instances

Use the update() method to safely modify instance properties:

const user = new User({ name: "John", role: "user" });
user.update({ role: "admin" });
// All validation, defaults, and hooks run again

The constructor automatically includes the version if defined on the class:

class User extends Base {
  static version = 1;
  static schema = { /* ... */ };
}

const user = new User({ name: "John" });
console.log(user.version); // 1

Custom Base Models

If you already have your own base model class, you can extend Base first and add shared behavior there. Your app models can then inherit both the schema validation and your own methods.

import Base from "@bufferpunk/schema";

class BaseModel extends Base {
  save() {
    // save to db
  }
}

class User extends BaseModel {
  static collection = "users";
  static schema = {
    name: { type: String }
  };
}

This pattern is useful when you want schema validation in a shared domain base class, while still keeping your own persistence or business methods in one place.

If you want a CommonJS-style example, the same pattern looks like this:

const Base = require("@bufferpunk/schema").default;

class BaseModel extends Base {
  save() {
    // save to db
  }
}

class User extends BaseModel {
  static collection = "users";
  static schema = { name: { type: String } };
}

See examples/inheritance.ts and examples/inheritance.js for a complete working example.

Nested Objects and Arrays

Use keys for objects and values for arrays:

preferences: {
  type: Object,
  keys: {
    theme: { type: String, enum: ["light", "dark"], default: "light" },
    notifications: { type: Boolean, default: true }
  }
},
cars: {
  type: Array,
  values: {
    type: Object,
    keys: {
      make: { type: String },
      model: { type: String },
      color: {
        type: String,
        enum: ["blue", "red", "black"],
        beforeChecks: (v) => typeof v === "string" ? v.toLowerCase().trim() : v,
        afterChecks: (v) => v.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + v.slice(1)
      }
    }
  }
}

Included Files

  • base.ts / base.js / base.d.ts: base validator implementation
  • example.ts / example.js: thin launchers for the main demo in examples/
  • examples/user.ts / examples/user.js: the main example model with nested schemas, hooks, and immutability
  • examples/inheritance.ts / examples/inheritance.js: custom base model inheritance example

Example Layout

The full demo now lives under examples/ so the root example files stay small.

If you want to copy the pattern into your own app, treat examples/user.ts as the main reference and build your own model files the same way.

Migration from v2.x

If upgrading from v2.x, see CHANGELOG.md for breaking changes and migration steps.

Notes

This package is intentionally small and framework-agnostic. It gives you runtime schema safety, immutability constraints, and field-level validation without requiring a full ORM or heavyweight validation framework.