Each filter class has two primary methods:
$filter->filter($var)
- returns a modified version of$var
filtered to the options. If it cannot be safely modified, a default value will be returned.$filter->validate($var)
- Returns a boolean identifying if the value is valid.
alnum
- Alpha numericmin
- 0 - Minimum lengthmax
- PHP_INT_MAX - Maximum lengthdefault
-''
- Default return value
array
- Array matchingmin
- 0 - Minimum sizemaximum
- PHP_INT_MAX - Maximum sizekeys
-null
- Filter to run on the keysvalues
-null
- Filter to run on the valuesdefault
-array()
- Default return value
bool
- Boolean matchingdefault
-null
- Default return value
email
- Matches emailsfloat
- Floating point numbersmin
-null
- Minimum lengthmax
-null
- Maximum lengthdefault
- 0.0 - Default return value
int
- Integers numbersmin
-null
- Minimum lengthmax
-null
- Maximum lengthdefault
- 0 - Default return value
ip
- Matches IP addressesipv4
-true
- Boolean to match IPv4 addressesipv6
-true
- Boolean to match IPv6 addressesprivate
-true
- Include private addresses?reserved
-true
- Include reserved addresses?
object
- Objectsclass
-''
- Required class or interface namedefault
-null
- The default valuedefaultFactory
-null
- A callback to instantiate a return value
raw
- Returns whatever is passed inregex
- Matches strings via a regexmin
- 0 - Minimum lengthmax
- PHP_INT_MAX - Maximum lengthdefault
-''
- Default return valueregex
-/.?/
- The regex to run
string
- Matches stringsmin
- 0 - Minimum lengthmax
- PHP_INT_MAX - Maximum lengthdefault
-''
- Default return value
url
- Matches URLspath
-false
- Force a path to be presentquery
-false
- Force a query string to be present
Filter::map(array())
- "maps" several filters over key-value pairs. Useful for filtering associative arrays or stdclass objects.Filter::chain($filter1, $filter2...)
- Chains multiple filters together to run on the same value (similar toAND
joining filters).Filter::pool($filter1, $filter2...)
- Runs the same value through multiple filters using the first valid return (similar toOR
joining filters)
Simple filters can be specified using a comma-separated-value list. So a filter specifying a string with minimum length of 5 could be represented as:
$filter = Filter::factory('string,min:5');
Or
$filter = new Filters\String(array('min' => 5));
If you pass a filter to Filter::factory()
, it will be returned unmodified. So you can write functions like:
function foo($bar, $filter) {
// do something with $bar and set in $baz
return Filter::factory($filter)->filter($baz);
}
Complex chaining can also be supported. So if you wanted to check if an array with a minimum size of 4, with numeric keys and containing strings of minimum length 5, that could be built like so:
$filter = Filter::array('min:4', 'int', 'string,min:5');
If we wanted to validate an associative array, we would use a "map" filter:
$array = array(
'foo' => 2,
'bar' => 'test',
);
$filter = Filter::map(array(
'foo' => 'int',
'bar' => 'string,min:4',
));
var_dump($filter->validate($array)); // true
Filterus also ships with a procedural interface for calling filters.
\Filterus\filter($var, $filter);
And
\Filterus\validate($var, $filter);
Any filter is supported (both are basically simple wrappers):
function \Filterus\filter($var, $filter) {
return \Filterus\Filter::factory($filter)->filter($var);
}
Both are just convenience functions.
If you have found a security issue, please contact the author directly at me@ircmaxell.com.