Introduction
Laravel provides several different approaches to validate
your application's incoming data. It is most common to
use the validate
method available on all
incoming HTTP requests. However, we will discuss other
approaches to validation as well.
Laravel includes a wide variety of convenient validation rules that you may apply to data, even providing the ability to validate if values are unique in a given database table. We'll cover each of these validation rules in detail so that you are familiar with all of Laravel's validation features.
Validation Quickstart
To learn about Laravel's powerful validation features, let's look at a complete example of validating a form and displaying the error messages back to the user. By reading this high-level overview, you'll be able to gain a good general understanding of how to validate incoming request data using Laravel:
Defining the Routes
First, let's assume we have the following routes defined
in our routes/web.php
file:
use App\Http\Controllers\PostController;
Route::get('/post/create', [PostController::class, 'create']);
Route::post('/post', [PostController::class, 'store']);
The GET
route will display a form for the
user to create a new blog post, while the
POST
route will store the new blog post in
the database.
Creating the Controller
Next, let's take a look at a simple controller that
handles incoming requests to these routes. We'll leave
the store
method empty for now:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\RedirectResponse;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\View\View;
class PostController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show the form to create a new blog post.
*/
public function create(): View
{
return view('post.create');
}
/**
* Store a new blog post.
*/
public function store(Request $request): RedirectResponse
{
// Validate and store the blog post...
$post = /** ... */
return to_route('post.show', ['post' => $post->id]);
}
}
Writing the Validation Logic
Now we are ready to fill in our store
method
with the logic to validate the new blog post. To do
this, we will use the validate
method
provided by the Illuminate\Http\Request
object. If the validation rules pass, your code will
keep executing normally; however, if validation fails,
an
Illuminate\Validation\ValidationException
exception will be thrown and the proper error response
will automatically be sent back to the user.
If validation fails during a traditional HTTP request, a redirect response to the previous URL will be generated. If the incoming request is an XHR request, a JSON response containing the validation error messages will be returned.
To get a better understanding of the
validate
method, let's jump back into the
store
method:
/**
* Store a new blog post.
*/
public function store(Request $request): RedirectResponse
{
$validated = $request->validate([
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
]);
// The blog post is valid...
return redirect('/posts');
}
As you can see, the validation rules are passed into the
validate
method. Don't worry - all
available validation rules are documented.
Again, if the validation fails, the proper response will
automatically be generated. If the validation passes,
our controller will continue executing normally.
Alternatively, validation rules may be specified as
arrays of rules instead of a single |
delimited string:
$validatedData = $request->validate([
'title' => ['required', 'unique:posts', 'max:255'],
'body' => ['required'],
]);
In addition, you may use the validateWithBag
method to validate a request and store any error
messages within a named
error bag:
$validatedData = $request->validateWithBag('post', [
'title' => ['required', 'unique:posts', 'max:255'],
'body' => ['required'],
]);
Stopping on First Validation Failure
Sometimes you may wish to stop running validation rules
on an attribute after the first validation failure. To
do so, assign the bail
rule to the
attribute:
$request->validate([
'title' => 'bail|required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
]);
In this example, if the unique
rule on the
title
attribute fails, the max
rule will not be checked. Rules will be validated in the
order they are assigned.
A Note on Nested Attributes
If the incoming HTTP request contains "nested" field data, you may specify these fields in your validation rules using "dot" syntax:
$request->validate([
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'author.name' => 'required',
'author.description' => 'required',
]);
On the other hand, if your field name contains a literal period, you can explicitly prevent this from being interpreted as "dot" syntax by escaping the period with a backslash:
$request->validate([
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'v1\.0' => 'required',
]);
Displaying the Validation Errors
So, what if the incoming request fields do not pass the given validation rules? As mentioned previously, Laravel will automatically redirect the user back to their previous location. In addition, all of the validation errors and request input will automatically be flashed to the session.
An $errors
variable is shared with all of
your application's views by the
Illuminate\View\Middleware\ShareErrorsFromSession
middleware, which is provided by the web
middleware group. When this middleware is applied an
$errors
variable will always be available
in your views, allowing you to conveniently assume the
$errors
variable is always defined and can
be safely used. The $errors
variable will
be an instance of
Illuminate\Support\MessageBag
. For more
information on working with this object, check out its
documentation.
So, in our example, the user will be redirected to our
controller's create
method when validation
fails, allowing us to display the error messages in the
view:
<!-- /resources/views/post/create.blade.php -->
<h1>Create Post</h1>
@if ($errors->any())
<div class="alert alert-danger">
<ul>
@foreach ($errors->all() as $error)
<li>{{ $error }}</li>
@endforeach
</ul>
</div>
@endif
<!-- Create Post Form -->
Customizing the Error Messages
Laravel's built-in validation rules each have an error
message that is located in your application's
lang/en/validation.php
file. If your
application does not have a lang
directory,
you may instruct Laravel to create it using the
lang:publish
Artisan command.
Within the lang/en/validation.php
file, you
will find a translation entry for each validation rule.
You are free to change or modify these messages based on
the needs of your application.
In addition, you may copy this file to another language directory to translate the messages for your application's language. To learn more about Laravel localization, check out the complete localization documentation.
Warning!
By default, the Laravel application skeleton does not include thelang
directory. If you would like to customize Laravel's language files, you may publish them via thelang:publish
Artisan command.
XHR Requests and Validation
In this example, we used a traditional form to send data
to the application. However, many applications receive
XHR requests from a JavaScript powered frontend. When
using the validate
method during an XHR
request, Laravel will not generate a redirect response.
Instead, Laravel generates a JSON
response containing all of the validation
errors. This JSON response will be sent with a
422 HTTP status code.
The @error
Directive
You may use the @error
Blade directive to quickly
determine if validation error messages exist for a given
attribute. Within an @error
directive, you
may echo the $message
variable to display
the error message:
<!-- /resources/views/post/create.blade.php -->
<label for="title">Post Title</label>
<input id="title"
type="text"
name="title"
class="@error('title') is-invalid @enderror">
@error('title')
<div class="alert alert-danger">{{ $message }}</div>
@enderror
If you are using named error
bags, you may pass the name of the error bag as
the second argument to the @error
directive:
<input ... class="@error('title', 'post') is-invalid @enderror">
Repopulating Forms
When Laravel generates a redirect response due to a validation error, the framework will automatically flash all of the request's input to the session. This is done so that you may conveniently access the input during the next request and repopulate the form that the user attempted to submit.
To retrieve flashed input from the previous request,
invoke the old
method on an instance of
Illuminate\Http\Request
. The
old
method will pull the previously flashed
input data from the session:
$title = $request->old('title');
Laravel also provides a global old
helper.
If you are displaying old input within a Blade template, it is more
convenient to use the old
helper to
repopulate the form. If no old input exists for the
given field, null
will be returned:
<input type="text" name="title" value="{{ old('title') }}">
A Note on Optional Fields
By default, Laravel includes the TrimStrings
and ConvertEmptyStringsToNull
middleware in
your application's global middleware stack. These
middleware are listed in the stack by the
App\Http\Kernel
class. Because of this, you
will often need to mark your "optional"
request fields as nullable
if you do not
want the validator to consider null
values
as invalid. For example:
$request->validate([
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
'publish_at' => 'nullable|date',
]);
In this example, we are specifying that the
publish_at
field may be either
null
or a valid date representation. If the
nullable
modifier is not added to the rule
definition, the validator would consider
null
an invalid date.
Validation Error Response Format
When your application throws a
Illuminate\Validation\ValidationException
exception and the incoming HTTP request is expecting a
JSON response, Laravel will automatically format the
error messages for you and return a 422
Unprocessable Entity
HTTP response.
Below, you can review an example of the JSON response format for validation errors. Note that nested error keys are flattened into "dot" notation format:
{
"message": "The team name must be a string. (and 4 more errors)",
"errors": {
"team_name": [
"The team name must be a string.",
"The team name must be at least 1 characters."
],
"authorization.role": [
"The selected authorization.role is invalid."
],
"users.0.email": [
"The users.0.email field is required."
],
"users.2.email": [
"The users.2.email must be a valid email address."
]
}
}
Form Request Validation
Creating Form Requests
For more complex validation scenarios, you may wish to
create a "form request". Form requests are
custom request classes that encapsulate their own
validation and authorization logic. To create a form
request class, you may use the make:request
Artisan CLI command:
php artisan make:request StorePostRequest
The generated form request class will be placed in the
app/Http/Requests
directory. If this
directory does not exist, it will be created when you
run the make:request
command. Each form
request generated by Laravel has two methods:
authorize
and rules
.
As you might have guessed, the authorize
method is responsible for determining if the currently
authenticated user can perform the action represented by
the request, while the rules
method returns
the validation rules that should apply to the request's
data:
/**
* Get the validation rules that apply to the request.
*
* @return array<string, \Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\Rule|array|string>
*/
public function rules(): array
{
return [
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
];
}
Note:
You may type-hint any dependencies you require within therules
method's signature. They will automatically be resolved via the Laravel service container.
So, how are the validation rules evaluated? All you need to do is type-hint the request on your controller method. The incoming form request is validated before the controller method is called, meaning you do not need to clutter your controller with any validation logic:
/**
* Store a new blog post.
*/
public function store(StorePostRequest $request): RedirectResponse
{
// The incoming request is valid...
// Retrieve the validated input data...
$validated = $request->validated();
// Retrieve a portion of the validated input data...
$validated = $request->safe()->only(['name', 'email']);
$validated = $request->safe()->except(['name', 'email']);
// Store the blog post...
return redirect('/posts');
}
If validation fails, a redirect response will be generated to send the user back to their previous location. The errors will also be flashed to the session so they are available for display. If the request was an XHR request, an HTTP response with a 422 status code will be returned to the user including a JSON representation of the validation errors.
Note:
Need to add real-time form request validation to your Inertia powered Laravel frontend? Check out Laravel Precognition.
Performing Additional Validation
Sometimes you need to perform additional validation after
your initial validation is complete. You can accomplish
this using the form request's after
method.
The after
method should return an array of
callables or closures which will be invoked after
validation is complete. The given callables will receive
an Illuminate\Validation\Validator
instance, allowing you to raise additional error
messages if necessary:
use Illuminate\Validation\Validator;
/**
* Get the "after" validation callables for the request.
*/
public function after(): array
{
return [
function (Validator $validator) {
if ($this->somethingElseIsInvalid()) {
$validator->errors()->add(
'field',
'Something is wrong with this field!'
);
}
}
];
}
As noted, the array returned by the after
method may also contain invokable classes. The
__invoke
method of these classes will
receive an Illuminate\Validation\Validator
instance:
use App\Validation\ValidateShippingTime;
use App\Validation\ValidateUserStatus;
use Illuminate\Validation\Validator;
/**
* Get the "after" validation callables for the request.
*/
public function after(): array
{
return [
new ValidateUserStatus,
new ValidateShippingTime,
function (Validator $validator) {
//
}
];
}
Stopping on the First Validation Failure
By adding a stopOnFirstFailure
property to
your request class, you may inform the validator that it
should stop validating all attributes once a single
validation failure has occurred:
/**
* Indicates if the validator should stop on the first rule failure.
*
* @var bool
*/
protected $stopOnFirstFailure = true;
Customizing the Redirect Location
As previously discussed, a redirect response will be
generated to send the user back to their previous
location when form request validation fails. However,
you are free to customize this behavior. To do so,
define a $redirect
property on your form
request:
/**
* The URI that users should be redirected to if validation fails.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $redirect = '/dashboard';
Or, if you would like to redirect users to a named route,
you may define a $redirectRoute
property
instead:
/**
* The route that users should be redirected to if validation fails.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $redirectRoute = 'dashboard';
Authorizing Form Requests
The form request class also contains an
authorize
method. Within this method, you
may determine if the authenticated user actually has the
authority to update a given resource. For example, you
may determine if a user actually owns a blog comment
they are attempting to update. Most likely, you will
interact with your authorization gates and
policies within this method:
use App\Models\Comment;
/**
* Determine if the user is authorized to make this request.
*/
public function authorize(): bool
{
$comment = Comment::find($this->route('comment'));
return $comment && $this->user()->can('update', $comment);
}
Since all form requests extend the base Laravel request
class, we may use the user
method to access
the currently authenticated user. Also, note the call to
the route
method in the example above. This
method grants you access to the URI parameters defined
on the route being called, such as the
{comment}
parameter in the example
below:
Route::post('/comment/{comment}');
Therefore, if your application is taking advantage of route model binding, your code may be made even more succinct by accessing the resolved model as a property of the request:
return $this->user()->can('update', $this->comment);
If the authorize
method returns
false
, an HTTP response with a 403 status
code will automatically be returned and your controller
method will not execute.
If you plan to handle authorization logic for the request
in another part of your application, you may remove the
authorize
method completely, or simply
return true
:
/**
* Determine if the user is authorized to make this request.
*/
public function authorize(): bool
{
return true;
}
Note:
You may type-hint any dependencies you need within theauthorize
method's signature. They will automatically be resolved via the Laravel service container.
Customizing the Error Messages
You may customize the error messages used by the form
request by overriding the messages
method.
This method should return an array of attribute / rule
pairs and their corresponding error messages:
/**
* Get the error messages for the defined validation rules.
*
* @return array<string, string>
*/
public function messages(): array
{
return [
'title.required' => 'A title is required',
'body.required' => 'A message is required',
];
}
Customizing the Validation Attributes
Many of Laravel's built-in validation rule error messages
contain an :attribute
placeholder. If you
would like the :attribute
placeholder of
your validation message to be replaced with a custom
attribute name, you may specify the custom names by
overriding the attributes
method. This
method should return an array of attribute / name
pairs:
/**
* Get custom attributes for validator errors.
*
* @return array<string, string>
*/
public function attributes(): array
{
return [
'email' => 'email address',
];
}
Preparing Input for Validation
If you need to prepare or sanitize any data from the
request before you apply your validation rules, you may
use the prepareForValidation
method:
use Illuminate\Support\Str;
/**
* Prepare the data for validation.
*/
protected function prepareForValidation(): void
{
$this->merge([
'slug' => Str::slug($this->slug),
]);
}
Likewise, if you need to normalize any request data after
validation is complete, you may use the
passedValidation
method:
/**
* Handle a passed validation attempt.
*/
protected function passedValidation(): void
{
$this->replace(['name' => 'Taylor']);
}
Manually Creating Validators
If you do not want to use the validate
method on the request, you may create a validator
instance manually using the Validator
facade. The
make
method on the facade generates a new
validator instance:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\RedirectResponse;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
class PostController extends Controller
{
/**
* Store a new blog post.
*/
public function store(Request $request): RedirectResponse
{
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
]);
if ($validator->fails()) {
return redirect('post/create')
->withErrors($validator)
->withInput();
}
// Retrieve the validated input...
$validated = $validator->validated();
// Retrieve a portion of the validated input...
$validated = $validator->safe()->only(['name', 'email']);
$validated = $validator->safe()->except(['name', 'email']);
// Store the blog post...
return redirect('/posts');
}
}
The first argument passed to the make
method
is the data under validation. The second argument is an
array of the validation rules that should be applied to
the data.
After determining whether the request validation failed,
you may use the withErrors
method to flash
the error messages to the session. When using this
method, the $errors
variable will
automatically be shared with your views after
redirection, allowing you to easily display them back to
the user. The withErrors
method accepts a
validator, a MessageBag
, or a PHP
array
.
Stopping on First Validation Failure
The stopOnFirstFailure
method will inform
the validator that it should stop validating all
attributes once a single validation failure has
occurred:
if ($validator->stopOnFirstFailure()->fails()) {
// ...
}
Automatic Redirection
If you would like to create a validator instance manually
but still take advantage of the automatic redirection
offered by the HTTP request's validate
method, you may call the validate
method on
an existing validator instance. If validation fails, the
user will automatically be redirected or, in the case of
an XHR request, a JSON
response will be returned:
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
])->validate();
You may use the validateWithBag
method to
store the error messages in a named error bag if
validation fails:
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'title' => 'required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
])->validateWithBag('post');
Named Error Bags
If you have multiple forms on a single page, you may wish
to name the MessageBag
containing the
validation errors, allowing you to retrieve the error
messages for a specific form. To achieve this, pass a
name as the second argument to
withErrors
:
return redirect('register')->withErrors($validator, 'login');
You may then access the named MessageBag
instance from the $errors
variable:
{{ $errors->login->first('email') }}
Customizing the Error Messages
If needed, you may provide custom error messages that a
validator instance should use instead of the default
error messages provided by Laravel. There are several
ways to specify custom messages. First, you may pass the
custom messages as the third argument to the
Validator::make
method:
$validator = Validator::make($input, $rules, $messages = [
'required' => 'The :attribute field is required.',
]);
In this example, the :attribute
placeholder
will be replaced by the actual name of the field under
validation. You may also utilize other placeholders in
validation messages. For example:
$messages = [
'same' => 'The :attribute and :other must match.',
'size' => 'The :attribute must be exactly :size.',
'between' => 'The :attribute value :input is not between :min - :max.',
'in' => 'The :attribute must be one of the following types: :values',
];
Specifying a Custom Message for a Given Attribute
Sometimes you may wish to specify a custom error message only for a specific attribute. You may do so using "dot" notation. Specify the attribute's name first, followed by the rule:
$messages = [
'email.required' => 'We need to know your email address!',
];
Specifying Custom Attribute Values
Many of Laravel's built-in error messages include an
:attribute
placeholder that is replaced
with the name of the field or attribute under
validation. To customize the values used to replace
these placeholders for specific fields, you may pass an
array of custom attributes as the fourth argument to the
Validator::make
method:
$validator = Validator::make($input, $rules, $messages, [
'email' => 'email address',
]);
Performing Additional Validation
Sometimes you need to perform additional validation after
your initial validation is complete. You can accomplish
this using the validator's after
method.
The after
method accepts a closure or an
array of callables which will be invoked after
validation is complete. The given callables will receive
an Illuminate\Validation\Validator
instance, allowing you to raise additional error
messages if necessary:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$validator = Validator::make(/* ... */);
$validator->after(function ($validator) {
if ($this->somethingElseIsInvalid()) {
$validator->errors()->add(
'field', 'Something is wrong with this field!'
);
}
});
if ($validator->fails()) {
// ...
}
As noted, the after
method also accepts an
array of callables, which is particularly convenient if
your "after validation" logic is encapsulated
in invokable classes, which will receive an
Illuminate\Validation\Validator
instance
via their __invoke
method:
use App\Validation\ValidateShippingTime;
use App\Validation\ValidateUserStatus;
$validator->after([
new ValidateUserStatus,
new ValidateShippingTime,
function ($validator) {
// ...
},
]);
Working With Validated Input
After validating incoming request data using a form
request or a manually created validator instance, you
may wish to retrieve the incoming request data that
actually underwent validation. This can be accomplished
in several ways. First, you may call the
validated
method on a form request or
validator instance. This method returns an array of the
data that was validated:
$validated = $request->validated();
$validated = $validator->validated();
Alternatively, you may call the safe
method
on a form request or validator instance. This method
returns an instance of
Illuminate\Support\ValidatedInput
. This
object exposes only
, except
,
and all
methods to retrieve a subset of the
validated data or the entire array of validated
data:
$validated = $request->safe()->only(['name', 'email']);
$validated = $request->safe()->except(['name', 'email']);
$validated = $request->safe()->all();
In addition, the
Illuminate\Support\ValidatedInput
instance
may be iterated over and accessed like an array:
// Validated data may be iterated...
foreach ($request->safe() as $key => $value) {
// ...
}
// Validated data may be accessed as an array...
$validated = $request->safe();
$email = $validated['email'];
If you would like to add additional fields to the
validated data, you may call the merge
method:
$validated = $request->safe()->merge(['name' => 'Taylor Otwell']);
If you would like to retrieve the validated data as a collection instance, you
may call the collect
method:
$collection = $request->safe()->collect();
Working With Error Messages
After calling the errors
method on a
Validator
instance, you will receive an
Illuminate\Support\MessageBag
instance,
which has a variety of convenient methods for working
with error messages. The $errors
variable
that is automatically made available to all views is
also an instance of the MessageBag
class.
Retrieving the First Error Message for a Field
To retrieve the first error message for a given field,
use the first
method:
$errors = $validator->errors();
echo $errors->first('email');
Retrieving All Error Messages for a Field
If you need to retrieve an array of all the messages for
a given field, use the get
method:
foreach ($errors->get('email') as $message) {
// ...
}
If you are validating an array form field, you may
retrieve all of the messages for each of the array
elements using the *
character:
foreach ($errors->get('attachments.*') as $message) {
// ...
}
Retrieving All Error Messages for All Fields
To retrieve an array of all messages for all fields, use
the all
method:
foreach ($errors->all() as $message) {
// ...
}
Determining if Messages Exist for a Field
The has
method may be used to determine if
any error messages exist for a given field:
if ($errors->has('email')) {
// ...
}
Specifying Custom Messages in Language Files
Laravel's built-in validation rules each have an error
message that is located in your application's
lang/en/validation.php
file. If your
application does not have a lang
directory,
you may instruct Laravel to create it using the
lang:publish
Artisan command.
Within the lang/en/validation.php
file, you
will find a translation entry for each validation rule.
You are free to change or modify these messages based on
the needs of your application.
In addition, you may copy this file to another language directory to translate the messages for your application's language. To learn more about Laravel localization, check out the complete localization documentation.
Warning!
By default, the Laravel application skeleton does not include thelang
directory. If you would like to customize Laravel's language files, you may publish them via thelang:publish
Artisan command.
Custom Messages for Specific Attributes
You may customize the error messages used for specified
attribute and rule combinations within your
application's validation language files. To do so, add
your message customizations to the custom
array of your application's
lang/xx/validation.php
language file:
'custom' => [
'email' => [
'required' => 'We need to know your email address!',
'max' => 'Your email address is too long!'
],
],
Specifying Attributes in Language Files
Many of Laravel's built-in error messages include an
:attribute
placeholder that is replaced
with the name of the field or attribute under
validation. If you would like the
:attribute
portion of your validation
message to be replaced with a custom value, you may
specify the custom attribute name in the
attributes
array of your
lang/xx/validation.php
language file:
'attributes' => [
'email' => 'email address',
],
Warning!
By default, the Laravel application skeleton does not include thelang
directory. If you would like to customize Laravel's language files, you may publish them via thelang:publish
Artisan command.
Specifying Values in Language Files
Some of Laravel's built-in validation rule error messages
contain a :value
placeholder that is
replaced with the current value of the request
attribute. However, you may occasionally need the
:value
portion of your validation message
to be replaced with a custom representation of the
value. For example, consider the following rule that
specifies that a credit card number is required if the
payment_type
has a value of
cc
:
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'credit_card_number' => 'required_if:payment_type,cc'
]);
If this validation rule fails, it will produce the following error message:
The credit card number field is required when payment type is cc.
Instead of displaying cc
as the payment type
value, you may specify a more user-friendly value
representation in your
lang/xx/validation.php
language file by
defining a values
array:
'values' => [
'payment_type' => [
'cc' => 'credit card'
],
],
Warning!
By default, the Laravel application skeleton does not include thelang
directory. If you would like to customize Laravel's language files, you may publish them via thelang:publish
Artisan command.
After defining this value, the validation rule will produce the following error message:
The credit card number field is required when payment type is credit card.
Available Validation Rules
Below is a list of all available validation rules and their function:
Accepted Accepted If Active URL After (Date) After Or Equal (Date) Alpha Alpha Dash Alpha Numeric Array Ascii Bail Before (Date) Before Or Equal (Date) Between Boolean Confirmed Current Password Date Date Equals Date Format Decimal Declined Declined If Different Digits Digits Between Dimensions (Image Files) Distinct Doesnt Start With Doesnt End With Email Ends With Enum Exclude Exclude If Exclude Unless Exclude With Exclude Without Exists (Database) Extensions File Filled Greater Than Greater Than Or Equal Hex Color Image (File) In In Array Integer IP Address JSON Less Than Less Than Or Equal Lowercase MAC Address Max Max Digits MIME Types MIME Type By File Extension Min Min Digits Missing Missing If Missing Unless Missing With Missing With All Multiple Of Not In Not Regex Nullable Numeric Present Present If Present Unless Present With Present With All Prohibited Prohibited If Prohibited Unless Prohibits Regular Expression Required Required If Required If Accepted Required Unless Required With Required With All Required Without Required Without All Required Array Keys Same Size Sometimes Starts With String Timezone Unique (Database) Uppercase URL ULID UUID
accepted
The field under validation must be
"yes"
,
"on"
, 1
,
"1"
, true
, or
"true"
. This is useful for
validating "Terms of Service" acceptance or
similar fields.
accepted_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be
"yes"
,
"on"
, 1
,
"1"
, true
, or
"true"
if another field under
validation is equal to a specified value. This is useful
for validating "Terms of Service" acceptance
or similar fields.
active_url
The field under validation must have a valid A or AAAA
record according to the dns_get_record
PHP
function. The hostname of the provided URL is extracted
using the parse_url
PHP function before
being passed to dns_get_record
.
after:date
The field under validation must be a value after a given
date. The dates will be passed into the
strtotime
PHP function in order to be
converted to a valid DateTime
instance:
'start_date' => 'required|date|after:tomorrow'
Instead of passing a date string to be evaluated by
strtotime
, you may specify another field to
compare against the date:
'finish_date' => 'required|date|after:start_date'
after_or_equal:date
The field under validation must be a value after or equal to the given date. For more information, see the after rule.
alpha
The field under validation must be entirely Unicode
alphabetic characters contained in \p{L}
and \p{M}
.
To restrict this validation rule to characters in the
ASCII range (a-z
and A-Z
), you
may provide the ascii
option to the
validation rule:
'username' => 'alpha:ascii',
alpha_dash
The field under validation must be entirely Unicode
alpha-numeric characters contained in \p{L}
,
\p{M}
,
\p{N}
,
as well as ASCII dashes (-
) and ASCII
underscores (_
).
To restrict this validation rule to characters in the
ASCII range (a-z
and A-Z
), you
may provide the ascii
option to the
validation rule:
'username' => 'alpha_dash:ascii',
alpha_num
The field under validation must be entirely Unicode
alpha-numeric characters contained in \p{L}
,
\p{M}
,
and \p{N}
.
To restrict this validation rule to characters in the
ASCII range (a-z
and A-Z
), you
may provide the ascii
option to the
validation rule:
'username' => 'alpha_num:ascii',
array
The field under validation must be a PHP
array
.
When additional values are provided to the
array
rule, each key in the input array
must be present within the list of values provided to
the rule. In the following example, the
admin
key in the input array is invalid
since it is not contained in the list of values provided
to the array
rule:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$input = [
'user' => [
'name' => 'Taylor Otwell',
'username' => 'taylorotwell',
'admin' => true,
],
];
Validator::make($input, [
'user' => 'array:name,username',
]);
In general, you should always specify the array keys that are allowed to be present within your array.
ascii
The field under validation must be entirely 7-bit ASCII characters.
bail
Stop running validation rules for the field after the first validation failure.
While the bail
rule will only stop
validating a specific field when it encounters a
validation failure, the stopOnFirstFailure
method will inform the validator that it should stop
validating all attributes once a single validation
failure has occurred:
if ($validator->stopOnFirstFailure()->fails()) {
// ...
}
before:date
The field under validation must be a value preceding the
given date. The dates will be passed into the PHP
strtotime
function in order to be converted
into a valid DateTime
instance. In
addition, like the after
rule, the
name of another field under validation may be supplied
as the value of date
.
before_or_equal:date
The field under validation must be a value preceding or
equal to the given date. The dates will be passed into
the PHP strtotime
function in order to be
converted into a valid DateTime
instance.
In addition, like the after
rule, the
name of another field under validation may be supplied
as the value of date
.
between:min,max
The field under validation must have a size between the
given min and max (inclusive).
Strings, numerics, arrays, and files are evaluated in
the same fashion as the size
rule.
boolean
The field under validation must be able to be cast as a
boolean. Accepted input are true
,
false
, 1
, 0
,
"1"
, and
"0"
.
confirmed
The field under validation must have a matching field of
{field}_confirmation
. For example, if the
field under validation is password
, a
matching password_confirmation
field must
be present in the input.
current_password
The field under validation must match the authenticated user's password. You may specify an authentication guard using the rule's first parameter:
'password' => 'current_password:api'
date
The field under validation must be a valid, non-relative
date according to the strtotime
PHP
function.
date_equals:date
The field under validation must be equal to the given
date. The dates will be passed into the PHP
strtotime
function in order to be converted
into a valid DateTime
instance.
date_format:format,...
The field under validation must match one of the given
formats. You should use either
date
or date_format
when
validating a field, not both. This validation rule
supports all formats supported by PHP's DateTime
class.
decimal:min,max
The field under validation must be numeric and must contain the specified number of decimal places:
// Must have exactly two decimal places (9.99)...
'price' => 'decimal:2'
// Must have between 2 and 4 decimal places...
'price' => 'decimal:2,4'
declined
The field under validation must be
"no"
,
"off"
, 0
,
"0"
, false
, or
"false"
.
declined_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be
"no"
,
"off"
, 0
,
"0"
, false
, or
"false"
if another field under
validation is equal to a specified value.
different:field
The field under validation must have a different value than field.
digits:value
The integer under validation must have an exact length of value.
digits_between:min,max
The integer validation must have a length between the given min and max.
dimensions
The file under validation must be an image meeting the dimension constraints as specified by the rule's parameters:
'avatar' => 'dimensions:min_width=100,min_height=200'
Available constraints are: min_width, max_width, min_height, max_height, width, height, ratio.
A ratio constraint should be represented as
width divided by height. This can be specified either by
a fraction like 3/2
or a float like
1.5
:
'avatar' => 'dimensions:ratio=3/2'
Since this rule requires several arguments, you may use
the Rule::dimensions
method to fluently
construct the rule:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($data, [
'avatar' => [
'required',
Rule::dimensions()->maxWidth(1000)->maxHeight(500)->ratio(3 / 2),
],
]);
distinct
When validating arrays, the field under validation must not have any duplicate values:
'foo.*.id' => 'distinct'
Distinct uses loose variable comparisons by default. To
use strict comparisons, you may add the
strict
parameter to your validation rule
definition:
'foo.*.id' => 'distinct:strict'
You may add ignore_case
to the validation
rule's arguments to make the rule ignore capitalization
differences:
'foo.*.id' => 'distinct:ignore_case'
doesnt_start_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not start with one of the given values.
doesnt_end_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not end with one of the given values.
The field under validation must be formatted as an email
address. This validation rule utilizes the egulias/email-validator
package for validating the email address. By default,
the RFCValidation
validator is applied, but
you can apply other validation styles as well:
'email' => 'email:rfc,dns'
The example above will apply the
RFCValidation
and
DNSCheckValidation
validations. Here's a
full list of validation styles you can apply:
rfc
:RFCValidation
strict
:NoRFCWarningsValidation
dns
:DNSCheckValidation
spoof
:SpoofCheckValidation
filter
:FilterEmailValidation
filter_unicode
:FilterEmailValidation::unicode()
The filter
validator, which uses PHP's
filter_var
function, ships with Laravel and
was Laravel's default email validation behavior prior to
Laravel version 5.8.
Warning!
Thedns
andspoof
validators require the PHPintl
extension.
ends_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must end with one of the given values.
enum
The Enum
rule is a class based rule that
validates whether the field under validation contains a
valid enum value. The Enum
rule accepts the
name of the enum as its only constructor argument. When
validating primitive values, a backed Enum should be
provided to the Enum
rule:
use App\Enums\ServerStatus;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
$request->validate([
'status' => [Rule::enum(ServerStatus::class)],
]);
The Enum
rule's only
and
except
methods may be used to limit which
enum cases should be considered valid:
Rule::enum(ServerStatus::class)
->only([ServerStatus::Pending, ServerStatus::Active]);
Rule::enum(ServerStatus::class)
->except([ServerStatus::Pending, ServerStatus::Active]);
The when
method may be used to conditionally
modify the Enum
rule:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Rule::enum(ServerStatus::class)
->when(
Auth::user()->isAdmin(),
fn ($rule) => $rule->only(...),
fn ($rule) => $rule->only(...),
);
exclude
The field under validation will be excluded from the
request data returned by the validate
and
validated
methods.
exclude_if:anotherfield,value
The field under validation will be excluded from the
request data returned by the validate
and
validated
methods if the
anotherfield field is equal to
value.
If complex conditional exclusion logic is required, you
may utilize the Rule::excludeIf
method.
This method accepts a boolean or a closure. When given a
closure, the closure should return true
or
false
to indicate if the field under
validation should be excluded:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::excludeIf($request->user()->is_admin),
]);
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::excludeIf(fn () => $request->user()->is_admin),
]);
exclude_unless:anotherfield,value
The field under validation will be excluded from the
request data returned by the validate
and
validated
methods unless
anotherfield's field is equal to
value. If value is null
(exclude_unless:name,null
), the field under
validation will be excluded unless the comparison field
is null
or the comparison field is missing
from the request data.
exclude_with:anotherfield
The field under validation will be excluded from the
request data returned by the validate
and
validated
methods if the
anotherfield field is present.
exclude_without:anotherfield
The field under validation will be excluded from the
request data returned by the validate
and
validated
methods if the
anotherfield field is not present.
exists:table,column
The field under validation must exist in a given database table.
Basic Usage of Exists Rule
'state' => 'exists:states'
If the column
option is not specified, the
field name will be used. So, in this case, the rule will
validate that the states
database table
contains a record with a state
column value
matching the request's state
attribute
value.
Specifying a Custom Column Name
You may explicitly specify the database column name that should be used by the validation rule by placing it after the database table name:
'state' => 'exists:states,abbreviation'
Occasionally, you may need to specify a specific database
connection to be used for the exists
query.
You can accomplish this by prepending the connection
name to the table name:
'email' => 'exists:connection.staff,email'
Instead of specifying the table name directly, you may specify the Eloquent model which should be used to determine the table name:
'user_id' => 'exists:App\Models\User,id'
If you would like to customize the query executed by the
validation rule, you may use the Rule
class
to fluently define the rule. In this example, we'll also
specify the validation rules as an array instead of
using the |
character to delimit them:
use Illuminate\Database\Query\Builder;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($data, [
'email' => [
'required',
Rule::exists('staff')->where(function (Builder $query) {
return $query->where('account_id', 1);
}),
],
]);
You may explicitly specify the database column name that
should be used by the exists
rule generated
by the Rule::exists
method by providing the
column name as the second argument to the
exists
method:
'state' => Rule::exists('states', 'abbreviation'),
extensions:foo,bar,...
The file under validation must have a user-assigned extension corresponding to one of the listed extensions:
'photo' => ['required', 'extensions:jpg,png'],
Warning!
You should never rely on validating a file by its user-assigned extension alone. This rule should typically always be used in combination with themimes
ormimetypes
rules.
file
The field under validation must be a successfully uploaded file.
filled
The field under validation must not be empty when it is present.
gt:field
The field under validation must be greater than the given
field or value. The two fields must be
of the same type. Strings, numerics, arrays, and files
are evaluated using the same conventions as the size
rule.
gte:field
The field under validation must be greater than or equal
to the given field or value. The two
fields must be of the same type. Strings, numerics,
arrays, and files are evaluated using the same
conventions as the size
rule.
hex_color
The field under validation must contain a valid color value in hexadecimal format.
image
The file under validation must be an image (jpg, jpeg, png, bmp, gif, svg, or webp).
in:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be included in the given
list of values. Since this rule often requires you to
implode
an array, the Rule::in
method may be used to fluently construct the rule:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($data, [
'zones' => [
'required',
Rule::in(['first-zone', 'second-zone']),
],
]);
When the in
rule is combined with the
array
rule, each value in the input array
must be present within the list of values provided to
the in
rule. In the following example, the
LAS
airport code in the input array is
invalid since it is not contained in the list of
airports provided to the in
rule:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
$input = [
'airports' => ['NYC', 'LAS'],
];
Validator::make($input, [
'airports' => [
'required',
'array',
],
'airports.*' => Rule::in(['NYC', 'LIT']),
]);
in_array:anotherfield.*
The field under validation must exist in anotherfield's values.
integer
The field under validation must be an integer.
Warning!
This validation rule does not verify that the input is of the "integer" variable type, only that the input is of a type accepted by PHP'sFILTER_VALIDATE_INT
rule. If you need to validate the input as being a number please use this rule in combination with thenumeric
validation rule.
ip
The field under validation must be an IP address.
ipv4
The field under validation must be an IPv4 address.
ipv6
The field under validation must be an IPv6 address.
json
The field under validation must be a valid JSON string.
lt:field
The field under validation must be less than the given
field. The two fields must be of the same type.
Strings, numerics, arrays, and files are evaluated using
the same conventions as the size
rule.
lte:field
The field under validation must be less than or equal to
the given field. The two fields must be of the
same type. Strings, numerics, arrays, and files are
evaluated using the same conventions as the size
rule.
lowercase
The field under validation must be lowercase.
mac_address
The field under validation must be a MAC address.
max:value
The field under validation must be less than or equal to
a maximum value. Strings, numerics, arrays, and
files are evaluated in the same fashion as the size
rule.
max_digits:value
The integer under validation must have a maximum length of value.
mimetypes:text/plain,...
The file under validation must match one of the given MIME types:
'video' => 'mimetypes:video/avi,video/mpeg,video/quicktime'
To determine the MIME type of the uploaded file, the file's contents will be read and the framework will attempt to guess the MIME type, which may be different from the client's provided MIME type.
mimes:foo,bar,...
The file under validation must have a MIME type corresponding to one of the listed extensions:
'photo' => 'mimes:jpg,bmp,png'
Even though you only need to specify the extensions, this rule actually validates the MIME type of the file by reading the file's contents and guessing its MIME type. A full listing of MIME types and their corresponding extensions may be found at the following location:
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/conf/mime.types
MIME Types and Extensions
This validation rule does not verify agreement between
the MIME type and the extension the user assigned to the
file. For example, the mimes:png
validation
rule would consider a file containing valid PNG content
to be a valid PNG image, even if the file is named
photo.txt
. If you would like to validate
the user-assigned extension of the file, you may use the
extensions
rule.
min:value
The field under validation must have a minimum
value. Strings, numerics, arrays, and files are
evaluated in the same fashion as the size
rule.
min_digits:value
The integer under validation must have a minimum length of value.
multiple_of:value
The field under validation must be a multiple of value.
missing
The field under validation must not be present in the input data.
missing_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must not be present if the anotherfield field is equal to any value.
missing_unless:anotherfield,value
The field under validation must not be present unless the anotherfield field is equal to any value.
missing_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not be present only if any of the other specified fields are present.
missing_with_all:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not be present only if all of the other specified fields are present.
not_in:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not be included in the
given list of values. The Rule::notIn
method may be used to fluently construct the rule:
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($data, [
'toppings' => [
'required',
Rule::notIn(['sprinkles', 'cherries']),
],
]);
not_regex:pattern
The field under validation must not match the given regular expression.
Internally, this rule uses the PHP
preg_match
function. The pattern specified
should obey the same formatting required by
preg_match
and thus also include valid
delimiters. For example: 'email' =>
'not_regex:/^. $/i'
.
Warning!
When using theregex
/not_regex
patterns, it may be necessary to specify your validation rules using an array instead of using|
delimiters, especially if the regular expression contains a|
character.
nullable
The field under validation may be null
.
numeric
The field under validation must be numeric.
present
The field under validation must exist in the input data.
present_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be present if the anotherfield field is equal to any value.
present_unless:anotherfield,value
The field under validation must be present unless the anotherfield field is equal to any value.
present_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present only if any of the other specified fields are present.
present_with_all:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present only if all of the other specified fields are present.
prohibited
The field under validation must be missing or empty. A field is "empty" if it meets one of the following criteria:
- The value is
null
. - The value is an empty string.
- The value is an empty array or empty
Countable
object. - The value is an uploaded file with an empty path.
prohibited_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be missing or empty if the anotherfield field is equal to any value. A field is "empty" if it meets one of the following criteria:
- The value is
null
. - The value is an empty string.
- The value is an empty array or empty
Countable
object. - The value is an uploaded file with an empty path.
If complex conditional prohibition logic is required, you
may utilize the Rule::prohibitedIf
method.
This method accepts a boolean or a closure. When given a
closure, the closure should return true
or
false
to indicate if the field under
validation should be prohibited:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::prohibitedIf($request->user()->is_admin),
]);
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::prohibitedIf(fn () => $request->user()->is_admin),
]);
prohibited_unless:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be missing or empty unless the anotherfield field is equal to any value. A field is "empty" if it meets one of the following criteria:
- The value is
null
. - The value is an empty string.
- The value is an empty array or empty
Countable
object. - The value is an uploaded file with an empty path.
prohibits:anotherfield,...
If the field under validation is not missing or empty, all fields in anotherfield must be missing or empty. A field is "empty" if it meets one of the following criteria:
- The value is
null
. - The value is an empty string.
- The value is an empty array or empty
Countable
object. - The value is an uploaded file with an empty path.
regex:pattern
The field under validation must match the given regular expression.
Internally, this rule uses the PHP
preg_match
function. The pattern specified
should obey the same formatting required by
preg_match
and thus also include valid
delimiters. For example: 'email' =>
'regex:/^. @. $/i'
.
Warning!
When using theregex
/not_regex
patterns, it may be necessary to specify rules in an array instead of using|
delimiters, especially if the regular expression contains a|
character.
required
The field under validation must be present in the input data and not empty. A field is "empty" if it meets one of the following criteria:
- The value is
null
. - The value is an empty string.
- The value is an empty array or empty
Countable
object. - The value is an uploaded file with no path.
required_if:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty if the anotherfield field is equal to any value.
If you would like to construct a more complex condition
for the required_if
rule, you may use the
Rule::requiredIf
method. This method
accepts a boolean or a closure. When passed a closure,
the closure should return true
or
false
to indicate if the field under
validation is required:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::requiredIf($request->user()->is_admin),
]);
Validator::make($request->all(), [
'role_id' => Rule::requiredIf(fn () => $request->user()->is_admin),
]);
required_if_accepted:anotherfield,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty
if the anotherfield field is equal to
"yes"
,
"on"
, 1
,
"1"
, true
, or
"true"
.
required_unless:anotherfield,value,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty
unless the anotherfield field is equal to any
value. This also means anotherfield
must be present in the request data unless
value is null
. If value
is null
(required_unless:name,null
), the field
under validation will be required unless the comparison
field is null
or the comparison field is
missing from the request data.
required_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty only if any of the other specified fields are present and not empty.
required_with_all:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty only if all of the other specified fields are present and not empty.
required_without:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty only when any of the other specified fields are empty or not present.
required_without_all:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be present and not empty only when all of the other specified fields are empty or not present.
required_array_keys:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be an array and must contain at least the specified keys.
same:field
The given field must match the field under validation.
size:value
The field under validation must have a size matching the
given value. For string data, value
corresponds to the number of characters. For numeric
data, value corresponds to a given integer
value (the attribute must also have the
numeric
or integer
rule). For
an array, size corresponds to the
count
of the array. For files,
size corresponds to the file size in kilobytes.
Let's look at some examples:
// Validate that a string is exactly 12 characters long...
'title' => 'size:12';
// Validate that a provided integer equals 10...
'seats' => 'integer|size:10';
// Validate that an array has exactly 5 elements...
'tags' => 'array|size:5';
// Validate that an uploaded file is exactly 512 kilobytes...
'image' => 'file|size:512';
starts_with:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must start with one of the given values.
string
The field under validation must be a string. If you would
like to allow the field to also be null
,
you should assign the nullable
rule to the
field.
timezone
The field under validation must be a valid timezone
identifier according to the
DateTimeZone::listIdentifiers
method.
The arguments accepted
by the DateTimeZone::listIdentifiers
method may also be provided to this validation
rule:
'timezone' => 'required|timezone:all';
'timezone' => 'required|timezone:Africa';
'timezone' => 'required|timezone:per_country,US';
unique:table,column
The field under validation must not exist within the given database table.
Specifying a Custom Table / Column Name:
Instead of specifying the table name directly, you may specify the Eloquent model which should be used to determine the table name:
'email' => 'unique:App\Models\User,email_address'
The column
option may be used to specify the
field's corresponding database column. If the
column
option is not specified, the name of
the field under validation will be used.
'email' => 'unique:users,email_address'
Specifying a Custom Database Connection
Occasionally, you may need to set a custom connection for database queries made by the Validator. To accomplish this, you may prepend the connection name to the table name:
'email' => 'unique:connection.users,email_address'
Forcing a Unique Rule to Ignore a Given ID:
Sometimes, you may wish to ignore a given ID during unique validation. For example, consider an "update profile" screen that includes the user's name, email address, and location. You will probably want to verify that the email address is unique. However, if the user only changes the name field and not the email field, you do not want a validation error to be thrown because the user is already the owner of the email address in question.
To instruct the validator to ignore the user's ID, we'll
use the Rule
class to fluently define the
rule. In this example, we'll also specify the validation
rules as an array instead of using the |
character to delimit the rules:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
Validator::make($data, [
'email' => [
'required',
Rule::unique('users')->ignore($user->id),
],
]);
Warning!
You should never pass any user controlled request input into theignore
method. Instead, you should only pass a system generated unique ID such as an auto-incrementing ID or UUID from an Eloquent model instance. Otherwise, your application will be vulnerable to an SQL injection attack.
Instead of passing the model key's value to the
ignore
method, you may also pass the entire
model instance. Laravel will automatically extract the
key from the model:
Rule::unique('users')->ignore($user)
If your table uses a primary key column name other than
id
, you may specify the name of the column
when calling the ignore
method:
Rule::unique('users')->ignore($user->id, 'user_id')
By default, the unique
rule will check the
uniqueness of the column matching the name of the
attribute being validated. However, you may pass a
different column name as the second argument to the
unique
method:
Rule::unique('users', 'email_address')->ignore($user->id)
Adding Additional Where Clauses:
You may specify additional query conditions by
customizing the query using the where
method. For example, let's add a query condition that
scopes the query to only search records that have an
account_id
column value of
1
:
'email' => Rule::unique('users')->where(fn (Builder $query) => $query->where('account_id', 1))
uppercase
The field under validation must be uppercase.
url
The field under validation must be a valid URL.
If you would like to specify the URL protocols that should be considered valid, you may pass the protocols as validation rule parameters:
'url' => 'url:http,https',
'game' => 'url:minecraft,steam',
ulid
The field under validation must be a valid Universally Unique Lexicographically Sortable Identifier (ULID).
uuid
The field under validation must be a valid RFC 4122 (version 1, 3, 4, or 5) universally unique identifier (UUID).
Conditionally Adding Rules
Skipping Validation When Fields Have Certain Values
You may occasionally wish to not validate a given field
if another field has a given value. You may accomplish
this using the exclude_if
validation rule.
In this example, the appointment_date
and
doctor_name
fields will not be validated if
the has_appointment
field has a value of
false
:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$validator = Validator::make($data, [
'has_appointment' => 'required|boolean',
'appointment_date' => 'exclude_if:has_appointment,false|required|date',
'doctor_name' => 'exclude_if:has_appointment,false|required|string',
]);
Alternatively, you may use the
exclude_unless
rule to not validate a given
field unless another field has a given value:
$validator = Validator::make($data, [
'has_appointment' => 'required|boolean',
'appointment_date' => 'exclude_unless:has_appointment,true|required|date',
'doctor_name' => 'exclude_unless:has_appointment,true|required|string',
]);
Validating When Present
In some situations, you may wish to run validation checks
against a field only if that field is
present in the data being validated. To quickly
accomplish this, add the sometimes
rule to
your rule list:
$v = Validator::make($data, [
'email' => 'sometimes|required|email',
]);
In the example above, the email
field will
only be validated if it is present in the
$data
array.
Note:
If you are attempting to validate a field that should always be present but may be empty, check out this note on optional fields.
Complex Conditional Validation
Sometimes you may wish to add validation rules based on
more complex conditional logic. For example, you may
wish to require a given field only if another field has
a greater value than 100. Or, you may need two fields to
have a given value only when another field is present.
Adding these validation rules doesn't have to be a pain.
First, create a Validator
instance with
your static rules that never change:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'email' => 'required|email',
'games' => 'required|numeric',
]);
Let's assume our web application is for game collectors.
If a game collector registers with our application and
they own more than 100 games, we want them to explain
why they own so many games. For example, perhaps they
run a game resale shop, or maybe they just enjoy
collecting games. To conditionally add this requirement,
we can use the sometimes
method on the
Validator
instance.
use Illuminate\Support\Fluent;
$validator->sometimes('reason', 'required|max:500', function (Fluent $input) {
return $input->games >= 100;
});
The first argument passed to the sometimes
method is the name of the field we are conditionally
validating. The second argument is a list of the rules
we want to add. If the closure passed as the third
argument returns true
, the rules will be
added. This method makes it a breeze to build complex
conditional validations. You may even add conditional
validations for several fields at once:
$validator->sometimes(['reason', 'cost'], 'required', function (Fluent $input) {
return $input->games >= 100;
});
Note:
The$input
parameter passed to your closure will be an instance ofIlluminate\Support\Fluent
and may be used to access your input and files under validation.
Complex Conditional Array Validation
Sometimes you may want to validate a field based on another field in the same nested array whose index you do not know. In these situations, you may allow your closure to receive a second argument which will be the current individual item in the array being validated:
$input = [
'channels' => [
[
'type' => 'email',
'address' => 'abigail@example.com',
],
[
'type' => 'url',
'address' => 'https://example.com',
],
],
];
$validator->sometimes('channels.*.address', 'email', function (Fluent $input, Fluent $item) {
return $item->type === 'email';
});
$validator->sometimes('channels.*.address', 'url', function (Fluent $input, Fluent $item) {
return $item->type !== 'email';
});
Like the $input
parameter passed to the
closure, the $item
parameter is an instance
of Illuminate\Support\Fluent
when the
attribute data is an array; otherwise, it is a
string.
Validating Arrays
As discussed in the array
validation
rule documentation, the array
rule
accepts a list of allowed array keys. If any additional
keys are present within the array, validation will
fail:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$input = [
'user' => [
'name' => 'Taylor Otwell',
'username' => 'taylorotwell',
'admin' => true,
],
];
Validator::make($input, [
'user' => 'array:name,username',
]);
In general, you should always specify the array keys that
are allowed to be present within your array. Otherwise,
the validator's validate
and
validated
methods will return all of the
validated data, including the array and all of its keys,
even if those keys were not validated by other nested
array validation rules.
Validating Nested Array Input
Validating nested array based form input fields doesn't
have to be a pain. You may use "dot notation"
to validate attributes within an array. For example, if
the incoming HTTP request contains a
photos[profile]
field, you may validate it
like so:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'photos.profile' => 'required|image',
]);
You may also validate each element of an array. For example, to validate that each email in a given array input field is unique, you may do the following:
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'person.*.email' => 'email|unique:users',
'person.*.first_name' => 'required_with:person.*.last_name',
]);
Likewise, you may use the *
character when
specifying custom
validation messages in your language files,
making it a breeze to use a single validation message
for array based fields:
'custom' => [
'person.*.email' => [
'unique' => 'Each person must have a unique email address',
]
],
Accessing Nested Array Data
Sometimes you may need to access the value for a given
nested array element when assigning validation rules to
the attribute. You may accomplish this using the
Rule::forEach
method. The
forEach
method accepts a closure that will
be invoked for each iteration of the array attribute
under validation and will receive the attribute's value
and explicit, fully-expanded attribute name. The closure
should return an array of rules to assign to the array
element:
use App\Rules\HasPermission;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'companies.*.id' => Rule::forEach(function (string|null $value, string $attribute) {
return [
Rule::exists(Company::class, 'id'),
new HasPermission('manage-company', $value),
];
}),
]);
Error Message Indexes and Positions
When validating arrays, you may want to reference the
index or position of a particular item that failed
validation within the error message displayed by your
application. To accomplish this, you may include the
:index
(starts from 0
) and
:position
(starts from 1
)
placeholders within your custom
validation message:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$input = [
'photos' => [
[
'name' => 'BeachVacation.jpg',
'description' => 'A photo of my beach vacation!',
],
[
'name' => 'GrandCanyon.jpg',
'description' => '',
],
],
];
Validator::validate($input, [
'photos.*.description' => 'required',
], [
'photos.*.description.required' => 'Please describe photo #:position.',
]);
Given the example above, validation will fail and the user will be presented with the following error of "Please describe photo #2."
If necessary, you may reference more deeply nested
indexes and positions via second-index
,
second-position
, third-index
,
third-position
, etc.
'photos.*.attributes.*.string' => 'Invalid attribute for photo #:second-position.',
Validating Files
Laravel provides a variety of validation rules that may
be used to validate uploaded files, such as
mimes
, image
,
min
, and max
. While you are
free to specify these rules individually when validating
files, Laravel also offers a fluent file validation rule
builder that you may find convenient:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rules\File;
Validator::validate($input, [
'attachment' => [
'required',
File::types(['mp3', 'wav'])
->min(1024)
->max(12 * 1024),
],
]);
If your application accepts images uploaded by your
users, you may use the File
rule's
image
constructor method to indicate that
the uploaded file should be an image. In addition, the
dimensions
rule may be used to limit the
dimensions of the image:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rules\File;
Validator::validate($input, [
'photo' => [
'required',
File::image()
->min(1024)
->max(12 * 1024)
->dimensions(Rule::dimensions()->maxWidth(1000)->maxHeight(500)),
],
]);
Note:
More information regarding validating image dimensions may be found in the dimension rule documentation.
File Sizes
For convenience, minimum and maximum file sizes may be
specified as a string with a suffix indicating the file
size units. The kb
, mb
,
gb
, and tb
suffixes are
supported:
File::image()
->min('1kb')
->max('10mb')
File Types
Even though you only need to specify the extensions when
invoking the types
method, this method
actually validates the MIME type of the file by reading
the file's contents and guessing its MIME type. A full
listing of MIME types and their corresponding extensions
may be found at the following location:
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/conf/mime.types
Validating Passwords
To ensure that passwords have an adequate level of
complexity, you may use Laravel's Password
rule object:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rules\Password;
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'password' => ['required', 'confirmed', Password::min(8)],
]);
The Password
rule object allows you to
easily customize the password complexity requirements
for your application, such as specifying that passwords
require at least one letter, number, symbol, or
characters with mixed casing:
// Require at least 8 characters...
Password::min(8)
// Require at least one letter...
Password::min(8)->letters()
// Require at least one uppercase and one lowercase letter...
Password::min(8)->mixedCase()
// Require at least one number...
Password::min(8)->numbers()
// Require at least one symbol...
Password::min(8)->symbols()
In addition, you may ensure that a password has not been
compromised in a public password data breach leak using
the uncompromised
method:
Password::min(8)->uncompromised()
Internally, the Password
rule object uses
the k-Anonymity
model to determine if a password has been leaked via the
haveibeenpwned.com
service without sacrificing the user's privacy or
security.
By default, if a password appears at least once in a data
leak, it will be considered compromised. You can
customize this threshold using the first argument of the
uncompromised
method:
// Ensure the password appears less than 3 times in the same data leak...
Password::min(8)->uncompromised(3);
Of course, you may chain all the methods in the examples above:
Password::min(8)
->letters()
->mixedCase()
->numbers()
->symbols()
->uncompromised()
Defining Default Password Rules
You may find it convenient to specify the default
validation rules for passwords in a single location of
your application. You can easily accomplish this using
the Password::defaults
method, which
accepts a closure. The closure given to the
defaults
method should return the default
configuration of the Password rule. Typically, the
defaults
rule should be called within the
boot
method of one of your application's
service providers:
use Illuminate\Validation\Rules\Password;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Password::defaults(function () {
$rule = Password::min(8);
return $this->app->isProduction()
? $rule->mixedCase()->uncompromised()
: $rule;
});
}
Then, when you would like to apply the default rules to a
particular password undergoing validation, you may
invoke the defaults
method with no
arguments:
'password' => ['required', Password::defaults()],
Occasionally, you may want to attach additional
validation rules to your default password validation
rules. You may use the rules
method to
accomplish this:
use App\Rules\ZxcvbnRule;
Password::defaults(function () {
$rule = Password::min(8)->rules([new ZxcvbnRule]);
// ...
});
Custom Validation Rules
Using Rule Objects
Laravel provides a variety of helpful validation rules;
however, you may wish to specify some of your own. One
method of registering custom validation rules is using
rule objects. To generate a new rule object, you may use
the make:rule
Artisan command. Let's use
this command to generate a rule that verifies a string
is uppercase. Laravel will place the new rule in the
app/Rules
directory. If this directory does
not exist, Laravel will create it when you execute the
Artisan command to create your rule:
php artisan make:rule Uppercase
Once the rule has been created, we are ready to define
its behavior. A rule object contains a single method:
validate
. This method receives the
attribute name, its value, and a callback that should be
invoked on failure with the validation error
message:
<?php
namespace App\Rules;
use Closure;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\ValidationRule;
class Uppercase implements ValidationRule
{
/**
* Run the validation rule.
*/
public function validate(string $attribute, mixed $value, Closure $fail): void
{
if (strtoupper($value) !== $value) {
$fail('The :attribute must be uppercase.');
}
}
}
Once the rule has been defined, you may attach it to a validator by passing an instance of the rule object with your other validation rules:
use App\Rules\Uppercase;
$request->validate([
'name' => ['required', 'string', new Uppercase],
]);
Translating Validation Messages
Instead of providing a literal error message to the
$fail
closure, you may also provide a translation string key
and instruct Laravel to translate the error message:
if (strtoupper($value) !== $value) {
$fail('validation.uppercase')->translate();
}
If necessary, you may provide placeholder replacements
and the preferred language as the first and second
arguments to the translate
method:
$fail('validation.location')->translate([
'value' => $this->value,
], 'fr')
Accessing Additional Data
If your custom validation rule class needs to access all
of the other data undergoing validation, your rule class
may implement the
Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\DataAwareRule
interface. This interface requires your class to define
a setData
method. This method will
automatically be invoked by Laravel (before validation
proceeds) with all of the data under validation:
<?php
namespace App\Rules;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\DataAwareRule;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\ValidationRule;
class Uppercase implements DataAwareRule, ValidationRule
{
/**
* All of the data under validation.
*
* @var array<string, mixed>
*/
protected $data = [];
// ...
/**
* Set the data under validation.
*
* @param array<string, mixed> $data
*/
public function setData(array $data): static
{
$this->data = $data;
return $this;
}
}
Or, if your validation rule requires access to the
validator instance performing the validation, you may
implement the ValidatorAwareRule
interface:
<?php
namespace App\Rules;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\ValidationRule;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\ValidatorAwareRule;
use Illuminate\Validation\Validator;
class Uppercase implements ValidationRule, ValidatorAwareRule
{
/**
* The validator instance.
*
* @var \Illuminate\Validation\Validator
*/
protected $validator;
// ...
/**
* Set the current validator.
*/
public function setValidator(Validator $validator): static
{
$this->validator = $validator;
return $this;
}
}
Using Closures
If you only need the functionality of a custom rule once
throughout your application, you may use a closure
instead of a rule object. The closure receives the
attribute's name, the attribute's value, and a
$fail
callback that should be called if
validation fails:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
use Closure;
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'title' => [
'required',
'max:255',
function (string $attribute, mixed $value, Closure $fail) {
if ($value === 'foo') {
$fail("The {$attribute} is invalid.");
}
},
],
]);
Implicit Rules
By default, when an attribute being validated is not
present or contains an empty string, normal validation
rules, including custom rules, are not run. For example,
the unique
rule
will not be run against an empty string:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
$rules = ['name' => 'unique:users,name'];
$input = ['name' => ''];
Validator::make($input, $rules)->passes(); // true
For a custom rule to run even when an attribute is empty,
the rule must imply that the attribute is required. To
quickly generate a new implicit rule object, you may use
the make:rule
Artisan command with the
--implicit
option:
php artisan make:rule Uppercase --implicit
Warning!
An "implicit" rule only implies that the attribute is required. Whether it actually invalidates a missing or empty attribute is up to you.