2017-04-08 07:27:05 +00:00
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The server has an endpoint called `db_validate`. What this does is take
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2017-04-05 03:10:48 +00:00
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a `key` and a `value` and compares `value` to a set of rules specified by
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`key`. This is the same function used internally by the database to scan
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values before committing them to the database. By default it returns a
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descriptive object under `data`, but you can specify the key/value pair
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`"error": True` to get a standard error response back. A standard call
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2017-04-08 07:27:05 +00:00
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to `db_validate` will look like this.
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2017-04-05 03:10:48 +00:00
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```
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{
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"key": "title",
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"value": "this title\nis bad \nbecause it contains \nnewlines"
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}
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```
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and the server will respond like this when the input should be corrected.
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```
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{
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"data": {
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"bool": False,
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"description": "Titles cannot contain whitespace characters besides spaces."
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},
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"error": False,
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"usermap": {}
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}
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```
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if everything is okay, the data object will look like this instead.
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```
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"data": {
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"bool": True,
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"description": null
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},
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```
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Alternatively, you can supply `"error": True` in the request.
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```
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{
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"error": True,
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"key": "title",
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"value": "this title\nis bad \nbecause it contains \nnewlines"
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}
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// and you get...
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{
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"data": null,
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"usermap": {},
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"error": {
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"code": 4,
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"description": "Titles cannot contain whitespace characters besides spaces."
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}
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}
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```
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The following keys are currently available.
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* "user_name"
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* "auth_hash"
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* "quip"
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* "bio"
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* "title"
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* "body"
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* "color"
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The descriptions returned are friendly, descriptive, and should be shown
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directly to users
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## Implementing good sanity checks in your client
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By using this endpoint, you will never have to validate values in your
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own code before sending them to the server. This means you can do things
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like implement an interactive prompt which will not allow the user to
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submit it unless the value is correct.
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This is used in the elisp client when registering users and for the thread
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title prompt which is shown before opening a composure window. The reason
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for rejection is displayed clearly to the user and input window is restored.
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```
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(defun bbj-sane-value (prompt key)
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"Opens an input loop with the user, where the response is
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passed to the server to check it for validity before the
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user is allowed to continue. Will recurse until the input
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is valid, then it is returned."
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2017-04-05 03:17:16 +00:00
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(let* ((value (read-from-minibuffer prompt))
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2017-04-08 07:27:05 +00:00
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(response (bbj-request! 'db_validate
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2017-04-05 03:17:16 +00:00
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'value value 'key key)))
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2017-04-05 03:10:48 +00:00
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(if (alist-get 'bool response)
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value
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(message (alist-get 'description response))
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(sit-for 2)
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(bbj-sane-value prompt key))))
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```
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