Documentation

Validation and Serialization

Fastify uses a schema-based approach, and even if it is not mandatory we recommend using JSON Schema to validate your routes and serialize your outputs. Internally, Fastify compiles the schema into a highly performant function.

Validation

The route validation internally relies upon Ajv, which is a high-performance JSON schema validator. Validating the input is very easy: just add the fields that you need inside the route schema, and you are done! The supported validations are:

  • body: validates the body of the request if it is a POST or a PUT.
  • querystring: validates the query string. This can be a complete JSON Schema object (with a type property of 'object' and a 'properties' object containing parameters) or a simpler variation in which the type and properties attributes are forgone and the query parameters are listed at the top level (see the example below).
  • params: validates the route params.
  • headers: validates the request headers.

Example:

const schema = {
  body: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      someKey: { type: 'string' },
      someOtherKey: { type: 'number' }
    }
  },

  querystring: {
    name: { type: 'string' },
    excitement: { type: 'integer' }
  },

  params: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      par1: { type: 'string' },
      par2: { type: 'number' }
    }
  },

  headers: {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
      'x-foo': { type: 'string' }
    },
    required: ['x-foo']
  }
}

fastify.post('/the/url', { schema }, handler)

Note that Ajv will try to coerce the values to the types specified in your schema type keywords, both to pass the validation and to use the correctly typed data afterwards.

Adding a shared schema

Thanks to the addSchema API, you can add multiple schemas to the Fastify instance and then reuse them in multiple parts of your application. (Note that this API is not encapsulated)

const fastify = require('fastify')()

fastify.addSchema({
  $id: 'greetings',
  type: 'object',
  properties: {
    hello: { type: 'string' }
  }
})

fastify.route({
  method: 'POST',
  url: '/',
  schema: {
    body: 'greetings#'
  },
  handler: () => {}
})

You can use the shared schema everywhere, as top level schema or nested inside other schemas:

const fastify = require('fastify')()

fastify.addSchema({
  $id: 'greetings',
  type: 'object',
  properties: {
    hello: { type: 'string' }
  }
})

fastify.route({
  method: 'POST',
  url: '/',
  schema: {
    body: {
      type: 'object',
      properties: {
        greeting: 'greetings#',
        timestamp: { type: 'number' }
      }
    }
  },
  handler: () => {}
})

Schema Compiler

The schemaCompiler is a function that returns a function that validates the body, url parameters, headers, and query string. The default schemaCompiler returns a function that implements the ajv validation interface. Fastify uses it internally to speed the validation up.

While you cannot change the configuration options of the default ajv instance, you can create your own:

const fastify = require('fastify')()
const Ajv = require('ajv')
const ajv = new Ajv({
  // the fastify defaults
  removeAdditional: true,
  useDefaults: true,
  coerceTypes: true
})
fastify.setSchemaCompiler(function (schema) {
  return ajv.compile(schema)
})

But maybe you want to change the validation library. Perhaps you like Joi. In this case, you can use it to validate the url parameters, body, and query string!

const Joi = require('joi')

fastify.post('/the/url', {
  schema: {
    body: Joi.object().keys({
      hello: Joi.string().required()
    }).required()
  },
  schemaCompiler: schema => data => Joi.validate(data, schema)
}, handler)

In that case the function returned by schemaCompiler returns an object like:

  • error: filled with an instance of Error or a string that describes the validation error
  • value: the coerced value that passed the validation

Serialization

Usually you will send your data to the clients via JSON, and Fastify has a powerful tool to help you, fast-json-stringify, which is used if you have provided an output schema in the route options. We encourage you to use an output schema, as it will increase your throughput by 100-400% depending on your payload and will prevent accidental disclosure of sensitive information.

Example:

const schema = {
  response: {
    200: {
      type: 'object',
      properties: {
        value: { type: 'string' },
        otherValue: { type: 'boolean' }
      }
    }
  }
}

fastify.post('/the/url', { schema }, handler)

As you can see, the response schema is based on the status code. If you want to use the same schema for multiple status codes, you can use '2xx', for example:

const schema = {
  response: {
    '2xx': {
      type: 'object',
      properties: {
        value: { type: 'string' },
        otherValue: { type: 'boolean' }
      }
    },
    201: {
      type: 'object',
      properties: {
        value: { type: 'string' }
      }
    }
  }
}

fastify.post('/the/url', { schema }, handler)

If you need a custom serializer in a very specific part of your code, you can set one with reply.serializer(...).

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