I am using FluentValidation.AspNetcore 8.2.2 and have a object model that contains a list of child items of the same type. I would like to use fluent validation to validate the object. When trying to set the validator for the child object I either run into a stack overflow exception and/or the collection has changed (typical foreach loop issue).
In order to test and find resolution I have setup a simple .net core class library project with a unit test.
Base Model
using FluentValidation;
public class BaseModelItem
{
public int ItemId { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
private List<BaseModelItem> ChildItems { get; set; }
}
public class BaseModelItemValidator : AbstractValidator<BaseModelItem>
{
public BaseModelItemValidator()
{
RuleFor(i => i.ItemId).GreaterThanOrEqualTo(0).WithMessage("Item id may not be negative.");
RuleFor(i => i.Name).NotNull().NotEmpty().WithMessage("Item name cannot be empty.");
RuleFor(i => i.ChildItems).ForEach(i => i.SetValidator(new BaseModelItemValidator()));
}
}
unit test
public class Tests
{
[Test]
public void Test_Name_Cannot_Null()
{
var item = new BaseModelItem
{
ItemId = 2,
Name = null,
ChildItems = new List<BaseModelItem>()
};
var validator = new BaseModelItemValidator();
validator.ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor(t => t.Name, item);
Assert.Pass();
}
}
This test will cause a stack overflow exception. I have tried using backing fields, initializing or even changing to an array. I can successfully negate the stackover flow exception by using a custom validator.
public class BaseModelItemValidator : AbstractValidator<BaseModelItem>
{
public BaseModelItemValidator()
{
RuleFor(i => i.ItemId).GreaterThanOrEqualTo(0).WithMessage("Item id may not be negative.");
RuleFor(i => i.Name).NotNull().NotEmpty().WithMessage("Item name cannot be empty.");
RuleFor(i => i.ChildItems).Must(BeValidChildItemList);
}
private bool BeValidChildItemList(List<BaseModelItem> list)
{
if (list.Count > 0)
{
RuleFor(i => i.ChildItems).ForEach(i => i.SetValidator(new BaseModelItemValidator()));
}
return true;
}
}
Allows it to validate objects without child items. However if you run a test with populated child objects I get the error "Collection was modified; enumeration operation may not execute". Stack trace
StackTrace:
at System.ThrowHelper.ThrowInvalidOperationException_InvalidOperation_EnumFailedVersion()
at System.Collections.Generic.List`1.Enumerator.MoveNextRare()
at System.Linq.Enumerable.SelectManySingleSelectorIterator`2.MoveNext()
at System.Linq.Enumerable.WhereEnumerableIterator`1.MoveNext()
at FluentValidation.AbstractValidator`1.Validate(ValidationContext`1 context) in ****\FluentValidation\src\FluentValidation\AbstractValidator.cs:line 115
at FluentValidation.DefaultValidatorExtensions.Validate[T](IValidator`1 validator, T instance, IValidatorSelector selector, String ruleSet) in ******\FluentValidation\src\FluentValidation\DefaultValidatorExtensions.cs:line 876
at FluentValidation.TestHelper.ValidationTestExtension.TestValidate[T,TValue](IValidator`1 validator, Expression`1 expression, T instanceToValidate, TValue value, String ruleSet, Boolean setProperty) in ******\FluentValidation\src\FluentValidation\TestHelper\ValidatorTestExtensions.cs:line 101
at FluentValidation.TestHelper.ValidationTestExtension.ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor[T,TValue](IValidator`1 validator, Expression`1 expression, T objectToTest, String ruleSet) in *******\FluentValidation\src\FluentValidation\TestHelper\ValidatorTestExtensions.cs:line 40
at Tests.Tests.Test_Name_Cannot_Null_Nested() in \FluentValidationChildern\FluentValidationChildern.Tests\UnitTest1.cs:line 55
I am unable to find a feasible resolution.