19

Can I add more than one validator to an object? For example:

public interface IFoo
{
    int Id { get; set; }
    string Name { get; set; }
}

public interface IBar
{
    string Stuff { get; set; }
}

public class FooValidator : AbstractValidator<IFoo>
{
    public FooValidator ()
    {
        RuleFor(x => x.Id).NotEmpty().GreaterThan(0);
    }
}

public class BarValidator : AbstractValidator<IBar>
{
    public BarValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(x => x.Stuff).Length(5, 30);
    }
}

public class FooBar : IFoo, IBar
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public string Stuff { get; set; }
}

public class FooBarValidator : AbstractValidator<FooBar>
{
    public FooBarValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(x => x)
            .SetValidator(new FooValidator())
            .SetValidator(new BarValidator());
    }
}

Running the test.

FooBarValidator validator = new FooBarValidator();
validator.ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor(x => x.Id, 0);

I get an InvalidOperationException:

Property name could not be automatically determined for expression x => x. Please specify either a custom property name by calling 'WithName'.

Is there any way to implement this or am I trying to use FluentValidation in a way that it's not meant to be used?

4 Answers 4

25

RuleFor is trying to create a property-level rule. You can additionally use the AddRule function to add a general-purpose rule.

Using this, I created a composite rule proof of concept. It takes in a set of other validators and runs them. The yield break code came straight from FluentValidator's DelegateValidator. I wasn't sure what to do with it so I grabbed that from the source. I didn't trace its full purpose, but everything seems to work as is :)

Code

public interface IFoo
{
    int Id { get; set; }
    string Name { get; set; }
}

public interface IBar
{
    string Stuff { get; set; }
}

public class FooValidator : AbstractValidator<IFoo>
{
    public FooValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(x => x.Id).NotEmpty().GreaterThan(0);
    }
}

public class BarValidator : AbstractValidator<IBar>
{
    public BarValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(x => x.Stuff).Length(5, 30);
    }
}

public class FooBar : IFoo, IBar
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public string Stuff { get; set; }
}

public class CompositeValidatorRule : IValidationRule
{
    private IValidator[] _validators;

    public CompositeValidatorRule(params IValidator[] validators)
    {
        _validators = validators;
    }

    #region IValidationRule Members
    public string RuleSet
    {
        get; set;
    }

    public IEnumerable<ServiceStack.FluentValidation.Results.ValidationFailure> Validate(ValidationContext context)
    {
        var ret = new List<ServiceStack.FluentValidation.Results.ValidationFailure>();

        foreach(var v in _validators)
        {
            ret.AddRange(v.Validate(context).Errors);
        }

        return ret;
    }

    public IEnumerable<ServiceStack.FluentValidation.Validators.IPropertyValidator> Validators
    {
        get { yield break; }
    }
    #endregion
}

public class FooBarValidator : AbstractValidator<FooBar>
{
    public FooBarValidator()
    {
        AddRule(new CompositeValidatorRule(new FooValidator(), new BarValidator()));
    }
}

Base Test Case:

    [TestMethod]
    public void TestValidator()
    {
        FooBarValidator validator = new FooBarValidator();
        var result = validator.Validate(new FooBar());

    }

I hope this helps.

2
  • 3
    With a little bit of reflection, you could auto-find all validators that a composite validator should wire up to (i.e. find all the interfaces and base class chains and see if there's an IValidator<T> for them and if so auto-add it to the list). Just depends how far you want to take it. I'd probably opt to use reflection to find all the validators instead of a manual list. Nov 2, 2012 at 18:06
  • This reply, while it still seems to work (with minor modifications) is quite old. Is there a built-in way to do this yet? Closest I could find was the "Include" method which has been added, but it only allows including IValidators of the same type as the one doing the Include, so can't be used for multiple interfaces as per the example above.
    – Andrew
    Jan 12, 2018 at 12:41
7

Another possibility would be to override Validate:

public override ValidationResult Validate(ValidationContext<FooBar> context)
{
    var fooResult = new FooValidator().Validate(context.InstanceToValidate);
    var barResult = new BarValidator().Validate(context.InstanceToValidate);

    var errors = new List<ValidationFailure>();
    errors.AddRange(fooResult.Errors);
    errors.AddRange(barResult.Errors);

    return new ValidationResult(errors);
}
7

"Including Rules. You can include rules from other validators provided they validate the same type."

public class PersonValidator : AbstractValidator<Person> {
    public PersonValidator() {
        Include(new PersonAgeValidator());
        Include(new PersonNameValidator());
    }
}

https://docs.fluentvalidation.net/en/latest/including-rules.html

1

You could use RuleSets to apply different types of validation if that helps with what you are trying to do:

FluentValidation RuleSets

1
  • 2
    RuleSets wont fit. I would always like to run all of the validation rules. I'm trying to build up DTO's that have a lot of the same properties so it would be nice to reuse the validators without having nested obj properties in the DTO. Nov 2, 2012 at 15:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.