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.. _validation-overview:
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Validation overview
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===================
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.. note::
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This page gives an overview of ConfML and ImplML validation with ConE.
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For the actual CLI action see :ref:`cli-action-validate`
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ConE supports validation of the ConfML and ImplML files in configurations
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projects. This basically means that you can pass a configuration for validation
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and ConE will spit out a list for *problems*, which can be errors, warnings or
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informational messages associated with a file and a line number.
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For example, a list of validation problems might look something like the
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following:
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=================================== ====== ====================================== =========== ===========================================================================
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File Line Type Severity Message
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=================================== ====== ====================================== =========== ===========================================================================
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Layer1/confml/broken.confml 1 xml.confml error no element found: line 1, column 0
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Layer1/confml/test.confml 11 model.confml.invalid_value.maxlength error Setting ValidationTest.Foo: Maximum number of characters is 3 (value has 6)
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Layer1/confml/test.confml 12 model.confml.missing_feature_for_data error Feature 'ValidationTest.Bar' not found
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Layer1/implml/00000002_foo.crml 6 model.implml.crml.invalid_ref error Setting 'Foo.Bar' not found in configuration
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Layer1/implml/00000003_bar.crml 10 model.implml.crml.duplicate_uid error Duplicate key UID 0x00000001 (duplicate with keys on lines 6, 7 and 8)
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Layer1/root.confml 7 schema.confml error Element 'foo': This element is not expected.
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=================================== ====== ====================================== =========== ===========================================================================
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From a slightly lower-level perspective validation happens on three levels:
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#. XML level - Files that contain invalid XML data are caught here
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#. XML Schema level - Things like missing attributes in elements are caught here
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#. Model level - The rest of possible problems that the other validation levels
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cannot handle are caught here
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Problem types and filtering
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---------------------------
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You might have noticed the *type* column in the example above. This is a
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hierarchical problem type ID that can be used to filter a list of problems to
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narrow it down to only problems of interest. *Hierarchical* here means that
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the parts separated by commas are basically sub-IDs, the highest level sub-ID
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being the leftmost one. For example, suppose that we have a problem whose type
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is ``model.implml.crml.invalid_ref``. Reading the sub-IDs from left to right
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we can see that:
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#. It is a problem caught during model-level validation
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#. It is an ImplML problem
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#. The specific ImplML in this case is CRML
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#. The problem is that a CRML key references a ConfML setting that does not exist
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Filtering of problems by type happens by specifying a list of *includes* and
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a list of *excludes*. The output will contain only problems that match any of
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the includes, but do not match any of the excludes.
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If we wanted to set up a filter that shows only problems of the type in the
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example above, we could simply use a single include: ``model.implml.crml.invalid_ref``.
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However, if we wanted to see all model-level CRML problems *except* that one,
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we could include ``model.implml.crml`` and exclude ``model.implml.crml.invalid_ref``.
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Now invalid reference errors would not show up, but duplicate UID errors
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(type ``model.implml.crml.duplicate_uid``) would. Wildcards are also possible,
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so including ``*.confml`` would include all ConfML problems: XML-level,
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schema-level and model-level, or ``model.implml.*.invalid_ref`` would include
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all ImplML errors for references to non-existent settings.
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The two first sub-IDs for problem types come from the three validation
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levels and the fact that ConfML and ImplML can be validated. The following
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table shows the problem types for all cases:
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+-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+
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| | **ConfML** | **ImplML** |
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+-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+
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| **XML-level** | ``xml.confml`` | ``xml.implml`` |
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+-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+
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| **Schema-level** | ``schema.confml`` | ``schema.implml`` |
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+-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+
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| **Model-level** | ``model.confml`` | ``model.implml`` |
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+-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+
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The sub-IDs after that depend on the context. For example, ImplML validation
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typically has the implementation language as the next sub-ID: ``model.implml.crml``
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or ``schema.implml.genconfml``.
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