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schema-inspector

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NPM version

Schema-Inspector is a powerful tool to sanitize and validate JS objects. It's designed to work both client-side and server-side and to be scalable with allowing asynchronous and synchronous calls.

See a live example: http://schema-inspector.github.io/schema-inspector/

Installation

Node.js

<pre>npm install schema-inspector</pre>

Browser

Bower uses have reported success using the library this way, using bower overrides in bower.json.

image

Bower is not officially-supported as a build tool and references to it will be removed from the repository in versions 3.0.0+.

Comparison with JSON Schema

schema-inspector is not compatable with JSON Schema. They are two different ways to validate data. However, the main difference is that schema-inspector supports sanitization of data.

Notable changelogs

Version 2.0.0

To fix a security vulnerability in the 1.x.x email Regex expression used, a new Regex expression was used which may be less flexible than the expression used in 1.x.x. Therefore, version 2.0.0 was released with this new expression. It's highly-recommended to upgrade to this new version after testing it.

If you need the old, insecure behavior, use version 1.x.x or use the custom validation function feature for your field and perform email address validation any way you like.

Version 2.0.3

The email address regular expression was changed again in this version, this time to the new approach towards email address validation that the library will use from now on. For details, see How email address validation works.

How it looks like

schema-inspector demo Click to see it live!

Usage

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

// Data that we want to sanitize and validate
var data = {
    firstname: 'sterling  ',
    lastname: '  archer',
    jobs: 'Special agent, cocaine Dealer',
    email: 'NEVER!',
};

// Sanitization Schema
var sanitization = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        firstname: { type: 'string', rules: ['trim', 'title'] },
        lastname: { type: 'string', rules: ['trim', 'title'] },
        jobs: {
            type: 'array',
            splitWith: ',',
            items: { type: 'string', rules: ['trim', 'title'] },
        },
        email: { type: 'string', rules: ['trim', 'lower'] },
    },
};
// Let's update the data
inspector.sanitize(sanitization, data);
/*
data is now:
{
    firstname: 'Sterling',
    lastname: 'Archer',
    jobs: ['Special Agent', 'Cocaine Dealer'],
    email: 'never!'
}
*/

// Validation schema
var validation = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        firstname: { type: 'string', minLength: 1 },
        lastname: { type: 'string', minLength: 1 },
        jobs: {
            type: 'array',
            items: { type: 'string', minLength: 1 },
        },
        email: { type: 'string', pattern: 'email' },
    },
};
var result = inspector.validate(validation, data);
if (!result.valid)
    console.log(result.format());
/*
 Property @.email: must match [email], but is equal to "never!"
*/

Tips: it's recommended to use one schema for the sanitization and another for the validation,

In the browser

<script type="text/javascript" src="async.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="schema-inspector.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    var schema = { /* ... */ };
    var candidate = { /* ... */ };
    SchemaInspector.validate(schema, candidate, function (err, result) {
    if (!result.valid)
        return alert(result.format());
 });
</script>

In the example below, the inspector variable will be used. For the client-side use SchemaInspector instead of inspector.

Documentation

Validation

Sanitization

Custom fields

Asynchronous call

Thanks to

Validation

<h3 id="v_type">type</h3>

Allow to check property type. If the given value is incorrect, then type is not checked.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

function Class() {}

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number' },
        ipsum: { type: 'any' },
        dolor: { type: ['number', 'string', 'null'] },
        sit: { type: Class },
    },
};

var c1 = {
    lorem: 12,
    ipsum: 'sit amet',
    dolor: 23,
    sit: new Class(),
};
var c2 = {
    lorem: 12,
    ipsum: 34,
    dolor: 'sit amet',
    sit: new Class(),
};
var c3 = {
    lorem: 12,
    ipsum: ['sit amet'],
    dolor: null,
    sit: new Class(),
};
var c4 = {
    lorem: '12',
    ipsum: 'sit amet',
    dolor: new Date(),
    sit: {},
};

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c3); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c4); // Invalid: @.lorem must be a number, @dolor must be a number, a string or null, @.sit must be an instance of Class, but is object

<h3 id="v_optional">optional</h3>

This field indicates whether or not property has to exist.

Example

var inspector = require('Roadspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'any', optional: true },
    },
};

var schema2 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'any', optional: false }, // default value
    },
};

var c1 = { lorem: 'ipsum' };
var c2 = {};

inspector.validate(schema1, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema1, c2); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema2, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema2, c2); // Invalid: "@.lorem" is missing and not optional

<h3 id="v_uniqueness">uniqueness</h3>

If true, then we ensure no element in candidate exists more than once.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'array',
    uniqueness: true,
};

var c1 = [12, 23, 34, 45];
var c2 = [12, 23, 34, 12];

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: 12 exists twice in @.

<h3 id="v_pattern">pattern</h3>

Ask Schema-Inspector to check whether or not a given matches provided patterns. When a pattern is a RegExp, it directly test the string with it. When it's a string, it's an alias of a built-in RegExp that the library supports. For example, using the string email causes the built-in RegExp for email addresses to be used.

<h4 id="v_pattern_email">How email address validation works</h4>

It is a very flexible regular expression, so that the library is only designed to catch obvious mistakes a user might make in the front end of a system that would have a 100% chance to cause email delivery to fail. An exception is made to forbid email addresses that lack a domain (used only by internal systems). It is based on the recommended regular expression posted on www.regular-expressions.info, modified to allow lowercase alphabetic characters too.

You should perform more thorough checking of email addresses that involves checking whether delivery to the email address would succeed or fail, from your server side code. This library should only be used as basic front end validation for user convenience (e.g. an error displayed in the front end before they submit a form vs. a system failure that may not make it clear to them what went wrong).

If you want to validate strings more strictly than this, you should use your own custom regular expression instead of the email pattern.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'string', pattern: /^[A-C]/ },
};

var c1 = ['Alorem', 'Bipsum', 'Cdolor', 'DSit amet'];

var schema2 = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'string', pattern: 'email' },
};

var c2 = ['lorem@ipsum.com', 'dolor@sit.com', 'amet@consectetur'];

inspector.validate(schema1, c1); // Invalid: @[3] ('DSit amet') does not match /^[A-C]/
inspector.validate(schema2, c2); // Invalid: @[2] ('amet@consectetur') does not match "email" pattern.

<h3 id="v_length">minLength, maxLength, exactLength</h3>

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'string', minLength: 4, maxLength: 8 },
        ipsum: { type: 'array', exactLength: 6 },
    },
};
var c1 = {
    lorem: '12345',
    ipsum: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6],
};

var c2 = {
    lorem: '123456789',
    ipsum: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5],
};

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: @.lorem must have a length between 4 and 8 (here 9)
// and @.ipsum must have a length of 6 (here 5)

<h3 id="v_comparators">lt, lte, gt, gte, eq, ne</h3>

Check whether comparison is true:

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', gt: 0, lt: 5 }, // Between ]0; 5[
        ipsum: { type: 'number', gte: 0, lte: 5 }, // Between [0; 5]
        dolor: { type: 'number', eq: [0, 3, 6, 9] }, // Equal to 0, 3, 6 or 9
        sit: { type: 'number', ne: [0, 3, 6, 9] }, // Not equal to 0, 3, 6 nor 9
    },
};

var c1 = { lorem: 3, ipsum: 0, dolor: 6, sit: 2 };
var c2 = { lorem: 0, ipsum: -1, dolor: 5, sit: 3 };

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid

<h3 id="v_multipleOf">multipleOf</h3>

Check whether the candidate is a multiple of the provided option. If the candidate is an array of numbers, it performs this validation on each number in the array.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'number',
    multipleOf: 2 // Even
};

var c1 = 100;
var c2 = 73;

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: 73 is not divisible by 2

<h3 id="v_someKeys">someKeys</h3>

Check whether one of the given keys exists in object (useful when they are optional).

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    someKeys: ['lorem', 'ipsum'],
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'any', optional: true },
        ipsum: { type: 'any', optional: true },
        dolor: { type: 'any' },
    },
};

var c1 = { lorem: 0, ipsum: 1, dolor: 2 };
var c2 = { lorem: 0, dolor: 2 };
var c3 = { dolor: 2 };

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c3); // Invalid: Neither @.lorem nor @.ipsum is in c3.

<h3 id="v_strict">strict</h3>

Only keys provided in field "properties" may exist in the object. Strict will be ignored if properties has the special key '*'.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    strict: true,
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'any' },
        ipsum: { type: 'any' },
        dolor: { type: 'any' },
    },
};

var c1 = { lorem: 0, ipsum: 1, dolor: 2 };
var c2 = { lorem: 0, ipsum: 1, dolor: 2, sit: 3 };

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: @.sit should not exist.

<h3 id="v_exec">exec</h3>

Custom checker =). "exec" functions take two three parameter (schema, post [, callback]). To report an error, use this.report([message], [code]). Very useful to make some custom validation.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: {
            type: 'number',
            exec: function (schema, post) {
                // here schema === schema.properties.lorem and post === @.lorem
                if (post === 3) {
                    // As soon as `this.report()` is called, candidate is not valid.
                    this.report('must not equal 3 =('); // Ok...it's exactly like "ne: 3"
                }
            },
        },
    },
};

var c1 = { lorem: 2 };
var c2 = { lorem: 3 };

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: "@.lorem must not equal 3 =(".

<h3 id="v_properties">properties</h3>

For each property in the field "properties", whose value must be a schema, validation is called deeper in object.

The special property '*' is validated against any properties not specifically listed.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: {
            type: 'object',
            properties: {
                ipsum: {
                    type: 'object',
                    properties: {
                        dolor: { type: 'string' },
                    },
                },
            },
        },
        consectetur: { type: 'string' },
        '*': { type: 'integer' },
    },
};

var c1 = {
    lorem: {
        ipsum: {
            dolor: 'sit amet',
        },
    },
    consectetur: 'adipiscing elit',
    adipiscing: 12,
};
var c2 = {
    lorem: {
        ipsum: {
            dolor: 12,
        },
    },
    consectetur: 'adipiscing elit',
};

inspector.validate(schema, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema, c2); // Invalid: @.lorem.ipsum.dolor must be a string.

<h3 id="v_items">items</h3>

Allow to apply schema validation for each element in an array. If it's an object, then it's a schema which will be used for all the element. If it's an array of object, then it's an array of schema and each element in an array will be checked with the schema which has the same position in the array.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'number' },
};

var schema2 = {
    type: 'array',
    items: [{ type: 'number' }, { type: 'number' }, { type: 'string' }],
};

var c1 = [1, 2, 3];
var c2 = [1, 2, 'string!'];

inspector.validate(schema1, c1); // Valid
inspector.validate(schema1, c2); // Invalid: @[2] must be a number.
inspector.validate(schema2, c1); // Invalid: @[2] must be a string.
inspector.validate(schema2, c2); // Valid

<h3 id="v_alias">alias</h3>

Allow to display a more explicit property name if an error is encounted.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { type: 'string' },
    },
};

var schema2 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { alias: 'id', type: 'string' },
    },
};

var c1 = { _id: 1234567890 };

var r1 = inspector.validate(schema1, c1);
var r2 = inspector.validate(schema2, c1);
console.log(r1.format()); // Property @._id: must be string, but is number
console.log(r2.format()); // Property id (@._id): must be string, but is number

<h3 id="v_error">error</h3>

This field contains a user sentence for displaying a more explicit message if an error is encounted.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { type: 'string' },
    },
};

var schema2 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { type: 'string', error: 'must be a valid ID.' },
    },
};

var c1 = { _id: 1234567890 };

var r1 = inspector.validate(schema1, c1);
var r2 = inspector.validate(schema2, c1);
console.log(r1.format()); // Property @._id: must be string, but is number.
console.log(r2.format()); // Property @._id: must be a valid ID.

<h3 id="v_code">code</h3>

This field contains a user code for displaying a more uniform system to personnalize error message.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema1 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { type: 'string' },
    },
};

var schema2 = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        _id: { type: 'string', code: 'id-format' },
    },
};

var c1 = { _id: 1234567890 };

var r1 = inspector.validate(schema1, c1);
var r2 = inspector.validate(schema2, c1);
console.log(r1.error[0].code); // null
console.log(r2.error[0].code); // 'id-format'

Sanitization

<h3 id="s_type">type</h3>

Cast property to the given type according to the following description:

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'string' },
};

var c = [12.23, -34, true, false, 'true', 'false', [123, 234, 345], { obj: "yes" }];

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
r.data: [ '12.23', '-34', 'true', 'false', 'true', 'false', '123,234,345', '{"obj":"yes"}' ]
*/

<h3 id="s_def">def</h3>

Define default value if property does not exist, or if type casting is to fail because entry type is not valid (cf type).

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', def: 10 },
        ipsum: { type: 'string', def: 'NikitaJS', optional: false },
        dolor: { type: 'string' },
    },
};

var c = {
    lorem: [12, 23], // convertion to number is about to fail
    // (array -> number is not possible)
    // ipsum is not privided
    dolor: 'sit amet', // "dolor" is already a string
};

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
r.data: {
    lorem: 10,
    ipsum: 'NikitaJS',
    dolor: 'sit amet'
}
*/

<h3 id="s_optional">optional</h3>

Property is set to schema.def if not provided and if optional is false.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', optional: false, def: 12 },
        ipsum: { type: 'string', optional: true, def: 23 },
        dolor: { type: 'string', def: 'NikitaJS', def: 34 }, // (optional: true)
    },
};

var c = {};

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
r.data: {
    lorem: 12 // Only lorem is set to 12 because it is not optional.
}
*/

<h3 id="s_rules">rules</h3>

Apply the given rule to a string. If several rules are given (array), then they are applied in the same order than in the array.

sanitization min/max

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'string', rules: 'upper' },
        ipsum: { type: 'string', rules: ['trim', 'title'] },
    },
};

var c = {
    lorem: ' tHiS is sParTa! ',
    ipsum: '   tHiS is sParTa!    ',
};

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
r.data: {
    lorem: ' THIS IS SPARTA! ',
    ipsum: 'This Is Sparta!' // has been trimed, then titled
}
*/

<h3 id="s_comparators">min, max</h3>

Define minimum and maximum value for a property. If it's less than minimum, then it's set to minimum. If it's greater than maximum, then it's set to maximum.

sanitization min/max

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'number', min: 10, max: 20 },
};

var c = [5, 10, 15, 20, 25];

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
 r.data: [10, 10, 15, 20, 20]
 c[0] (5) was less than min (10), so it's been set to 10.
 c[4] (25) was greater than max (20), so it's been set to 20.
*/

<h3 id="s_length">minLength, maxLength</h3>

Adjust string length to the given number.

TODO: We must be able to choose which character we want to fill the string with.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'array',
    items: { type: 'string', minLength: 8, maxLength: 11 },
};

var c = ['short', 'mediumSize', 'tooLongForThisSchema'];

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
 r.data: ['short---', 'mediumSize', 'tooLongForT']
*/

<h3 id="s_strict">strict</h3>

Only key provided in field "properties" will exist in object, others will be deleted.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    strict: true,
    properties: {
        good: { type: 'string' },
    },
};

var c = {
    good: 'yes',
    bad: 'nope',
};

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
r.data: {
    good: 'yes'
}
*/

<h3 id="s_exec">exec</h3>

Custom checker =). "exec" functions take two three parameter (schema, post [, callback]), and must return the new value. To report an sanitization, use this.report([message]). Very useful to make some custom sanitization.

NB: If you don't want to return a differant value, simply return post, do not return nothing (if you do so, the new value will be undefined).

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'array',
    items: {
        type: 'string',
        exec: function (schema, post) {
            if (typeof post === 'string' && !/^nikita$/i.test(post)) {
                this.report();
                return '_INVALID_';
            }
            return post;
        },
    },
};

var c = ['Nikita', 'lol', 'NIKITA', 'thisIsGonnaBeSanitized!'];

var r = inspector.sanitize(schema, c);
/*
 r.data: [ 'Nikita', '_INVALID_', 'NIKITA', '_INVALID_' ]
*/

<h3 id="s_properties">properties</h3>

Work the same way as validation "properties".


<h3 id="s_items">items</h3>

Work the same way as validation "items".

Custom fields

<h3 id="cf_punctual">punctual use</h3>

When you need to use the same function in exec field several time, instead of saving the function and declaring exec several times, just use custom field. First you have to provide a hash containing a function for each custom field you want to inject. Then you can call them in your schema with $"your field name". For example if you provide a custom field called "superiorMod", you can access it with name "$superiorMod".

<!-- markdownlint-disable-next-line MD001 -->

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 5 },
        ipsum: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 3 },
    },
};

var custom = {
    divisibleBy: function (schema, candidate) {
        var dvb = schema.$divisibleBy;
        if (candidate % dvb !== 0) {
            this.report('must be divisible by ' + dvb);
        }
    },
};

var c = {
    lorem: 10,
    ipsum: 8,
};
inspector.validate(schema, candidate, custom); // Invalid: "@.ipsum must be divisible by 3"

<h3 id="cf_extension">extension</h3>

Sometime you want to use a custom field everywhere in your program, so you may extend Schema-Inspector to do so. Just call the method inspector.Validation.extend(customFieldObject) or inspector.Sanitization.extend(customFieldObject). If you want to reset, simply call inspector.Validation.reset() or inspector.Sanitization.reset(). You also can remove a specific field by calling inspector.Validation.remove(field) or inspector.Sanitization.remove(field).

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var custom = {
    divisibleBy: function (schema, candidate) {
        var dvb = schema.$divisibleBy;
        if (candidate % dvb !== 0) {
            this.report('must be divisible by ' + dvb);
        }
    },
};

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 5 },
        ipsum: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 3 },
    },
};

inspector.Validation.extend(custom);

var candidate = {
    lorem: 10,
    ipsum: 8,
};

inspector.validate(schema, candidate);
/*
 As you can see, no more object than schema and candidate has been provided.
 Therefore we can use `$divisibleBy` everywhere in all schemas, for each
 inspector.validate() call.
*/

<h3 id="cf_context">Context</h3>

Every function you declare as a custom parameter, or with exec field will be called with a context. This context allows you to access properties, like this.report() function, but also this.origin, which is equal to the object sent to inspector.validate() or inspector.sanitize().

Example

// ...
var schema = { /* ... */ };
var custom = {
    divisibleBy: function (schema, candidate) {
        // this.origin === [12, 23, 34, 45]
        // ...
    },
};
var candidate = [12, 23, 34, 45];
var result = inspector.validate(schema, candidate, custom);
// ...

Asynchronous call

How to

All of the examples above used synchronous calls (the simplest). But sometimes you want to call validation or sanitization asynchronously, in particular with exec and custom fields. It's pretty simple: To do so, just send a callback as extra parameter. It takes 2 parameters: error and result. Actually Schema-Inspector should send back no error as it should not throw any if called synchronously. But if you want to send back and error in your custom function, inspection will be interrupted, and you will be able to retrieve it in your callback.

You also have to declare a callback in your exec or custom function to make Schema-Inspector call it asynchronously, else it will be call synchronously. That means you may use exec synchronous function normally even during and asynchronous call.

Example

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = { /* ... */ };
var candidate = { /* ... */ };

inspector.validate(schema, candidate, function (err, result) {
    console.log(result.format());
});

Example with custom field

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = { /* ... */ };
var candidate = { /* ... */ };
var custom = { /* ... */ };

inspector.validate(schema, candidate, custom, function (err, result) {
    console.log(result.format());
});

Here is a full example where you may have to use it:

var inspector = require('schema-inspector');

var schema = {
    type: 'object',
    properties: {
        lorem: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 4 },
        ipsum: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 5 },
        dolor: { type: 'number', $divisibleBy: 0, optional: true },
    },
};

var custom = {
    divisibleBy: function (schema, candidate, callback) {
        // Third parameter is declared:
        // Schema-Inspector will wait this function to call this `callback` to keep running.
        var dvb = schema.$divisibleBy;
        if (typeof dvb !== 'number' || typeof candidate !== 'number') {
            return callback();
        }
        var self = this;
        process.nextTick(function () {
            if (dvb === 0) {
                return callback(
                    new Error('Schema error: Divisor must not equal 0')
                );
            }
            var r = candidate / dvb;
            if ((r | 0) !== r) {
                self.report('should be divisible by ' + dvb);
            }
            callback();
        });
    },
};

var candidate = {
    lorem: 12,
    ipsum: 25,
};

inspector.validate(schema, candidate, custom, function (err, result) {
    console.log(result.format());
});