183

Spring supports two different validation methods: Spring validation and JSR-303 bean validation. Both can be used by defining a Spring validator that delegates to other delegators including the bean validator. So far so good.

But when annotating methods to actually request validation, it's another story. I can annotate like this

@RequestMapping(value = "/object", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public @ResponseBody TestObject create(@Valid @RequestBody TestObject obj, BindingResult result) {

or like this

@RequestMapping(value = "/object", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public @ResponseBody TestObject create(@Validated @RequestBody TestObject obj, BindingResult result) {

Here, @Valid is javax.validation.Valid, and @Validated is org.springframework.validation.annotation.Validated. The docs for the latter say

Variant of JSR-303's Valid, supporting the specification of validation groups. Designed for convenient use with Spring's JSR-303 support but not JSR-303 specific.

which doesn't help much because it doesn't tell exactly how it's different. If at all. Both seem to be working pretty fine for me.

4
  • 2
    Might be interesting: stackoverflow.com/questions/18911154/… Mar 23, 2016 at 8:43
  • 4
    "supporting the specification of validation groups" is a very explicit statement. Mar 23, 2016 at 8:51
  • I should think that Valid is tightly coupled with JSR 303 validations (NotNull, etc). Whereas you can create other validation/groups and have them checked in Validated.
    – Atul
    Mar 23, 2016 at 8:54
  • @zeroflagL, true, but since I have never used it, I missed the point and fixated instead on the “not JSR-303 specific” part. Now it's clear. Mar 23, 2016 at 9:19

7 Answers 7

205

A more straight forward answer. For those who still don't know what on earth is "validation group".

Usage for @Valid Validation

Controller:

@RequestMapping(value = "createAccount")
public String stepOne(@Valid Account account) {...}

Form object:

public class Account {

    @NotBlank
    private String username;

    @Email
    @NotBlank
    private String email;

}

Usage for @Validated Validation Group
Source: http://blog.codeleak.pl/2014/08/validation-groups-in-spring-mvc.html

Controller:

@RequestMapping(value = "stepOne")
public String stepOne(@Validated(Account.ValidationStepOne.class) Account account) {...}

@RequestMapping(value = "stepTwo")
public String stepTwo(@Validated(Account.ValidationStepTwo.class) Account account) {...}

Form object:

public class Account {

    @NotBlank(groups = {ValidationStepOne.class})
    private String username;

    @Email(groups = {ValidationStepOne.class})
    @NotBlank(groups = {ValidationStepOne.class})
    private String email;

    @NotBlank(groups = {ValidationStepTwo.class})
    @StrongPassword(groups = {ValidationStepTwo.class})
    private String password;

    @NotBlank(groups = {ValidationStepTwo.class})
    private String confirmedPassword;

}
2
  • 2
    To keep in mind. \@Validated doesn't validate nested DTOs, you need to put \@Valid on those nested fields (Account#user for example) in order to propagate validation for them. Aug 16, 2022 at 21:53
  • @Validated also can be used on classes to enable validation of @Min/@Max that reside next to method arguments of that class, which doesn't happen by default. public void update(@Min(10) Long count) {} Aug 16, 2022 at 21:55
120

As you quoted from the documentation, @Validated was added to support "validation groups", i.e. group of fields in the validated bean. This can be used in multi step forms where you may validate name, email, etc.. in first step and then other fields in following step(s).

The reason why this wasn't added into @Valid annotation is because that it is standardized using the java community process (JSR-303), which takes time and Spring developers wanted to allow people to use this functionality sooner.

Go to this jira ticket to see how the annotation came into existence.

22

In the example code snippets of the question, @Valid and @Validated make no difference. But if the @RequestBody is annotated with a List object, or is a string value annotated by @RequestParam, the validation will not take effect.

We can use the @Validated's method-level validation capability to make it work. To achieve this, the key point is to place @Validated on the class. This may be another important difference between @Valid and @Validated in spring framework.

Refrence

4
  • 2
    Could you explain why the annotation has no effect for List objects? I assume that this will also not work for other collections like Map? Maybe you could give me a more detailed explanation in my question: stackoverflow.com/questions/60167961/…
    – Theiaz
    Feb 12, 2020 at 11:31
  • 1
    @Theiaz As you wish
    – Lebecca
    Feb 12, 2020 at 16:07
  • What I was looking for! Apr 1, 2021 at 14:39
  • 1
    This is actually a more important distinction than validation groups. No one uses validation groups. Jan 19, 2022 at 12:42
12

Just for simplifying:

@Validated annotation is a class-level annotation that we can use to tell Spring to validate parameters that are passed into a method of the annotated class.

and

@Valid annotation on method parameters and fields to tell Spring that we want a method parameter or field to be validated.

3

besides above, you can only apply @Valid on a domain/field for nested validation, not with a @validated.

1

@Validated at the class level of @Controller/@RestController is used to validate the @PathVariable/@RequestParam parameters

While @Valid won't work for @PathVariable/@RequestParam parameters

If validation fails for @PathVariable/@RequestParam it throws ConstraintViolationException

1
-2

@Validated can be used for a class:

@Validated
public class Person {
    @Size(min=3)
    private String name;
...

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