elegantweb/sanitizer

Sanitization library for PHP and the Laravel framework.

v2.2.0 2024-03-24 11:14 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-10-28 04:36:23 UTC


README

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Sanitization library for PHP and the Laravel framework.

Installation

composer require elegantweb/sanitizer

Usage

use Elegant\Sanitizer\Sanitizer;
use Elegant\Sanitizer\Filters\Enum;

$data = [
    'title' => ' ',
    'name' => ' sina ',
    'birth_date' => '06/25/1980',
    'email' => 'JOHn@DoE.com',
    'json' => '{"name":"value"}',
    'enum' => 'H',
];

$filters = [
    'title' => 'trim|empty_string_to_null',
    'name' => 'trim|empty_string_to_null|capitalize',
    'birth_date' => 'trim|empty_string_to_null|format_date:"m/d/Y","F j, Y"',
    'email' => ['trim', 'empty_string_to_null', 'lowercase'],
    'json' => 'cast:array',
    'enum' => ['trim', new Enum(BackedEnum::class)],
];

$sanitizer = new Sanitizer($data, $filters);

var_dump($sanitizer->sanitize());

Will result in:

[
    'title' => null,
    'name' => 'Sina',
    'birth_date' => 'June 25, 1980',
    'email' => 'john@doe.com',
    'json' => ['name' => 'value'],
    'enum' => BackedEnum::Hearts,
];

Laravel

In Laravel, you can use the Sanitizer through the Facade:

$newData = \Sanitizer::make($data, $filters)->sanitize();

You may also Sanitize input in your own FormRequests by using the SanitizesInput trait, and adding a filters method that returns the filters that you want applied to the input.

namespace App\Http\Requests;

use Elegant\Sanitizer\Laravel\SanitizesInput;

class MyAwesomeRequest extends Request
{
    use SanitizesInput;
    
    public function filters()
    {
        return [
            'name' => 'trim|capitalize',
        ];
    }
}

Optional

If you are planning to use sanitizer for all of your HTTP requests, you can optionally disable Laravel's TrimStrings and ConvertEmptyStringsToNull middleware from your HTTP kernel.

protected $middleware = [
    [...]
    // \App\Http\Middleware\TrimStrings::class,
    // \Illuminate\Foundation\Http\Middleware\ConvertEmptyStringsToNull::class,
    [...]
];

Then, instead, you can use trim and empty_string_to_null filters:

$filters = [
    'some_string_parameter' => 'trim|empty_string_to_null',
];

Available Filters

The following filters are available out of the box:

Custom Filters

It is possible to use a closure or name of a class that implements Elegant\Sanitizer\Contracts\Filter interface.

class RemoveStringsFilter implements \Elegant\Sanitizer\Contracts\Filter
{
    public function apply($value, array $options = [])
    {
        return str_replace($options, '', $value);
    }
}

$filters = [
    'remove_strings' => RemoveStringsFilter::class,
    'password' => fn ($value, array $options = []) => sha1($value),
];

$sanitize = new Sanitizer($data, $filters);

Laravel

You can easily extend the Sanitizer library by adding your own custom filters, just like you would the Validator library in Laravel, by calling extend from a ServiceProvider like so:

\Sanitizer::extend($filterName, $closureOrClassName);

Inspiration