问题
I've been looking around and I think my solution is just fine but somehow the ModelState.IsValid
property is always true
.
Consider the following code snippets:
[Route("address")]
[HttpPut]
[ResponseType(typeof(UserViewModel))]
public IHttpActionResult UpdateAddress([FromBody] UpdateAdressValidationModel model)
{
if (!ModelState.IsValid)
{
return BadRequest(ModelState);
}
// irrelevant code omitted
}
[TestMethod]
public void UpdateAddress_WithoutStreet_ReturnsHttpCode400()
{
var userController = new UserController(new UserRepository(_context));
var addressInfo = new UpdateAdressValidationModel
{
City = "Ghent",
};
var response = userController.UpdateAddress(addressInfo) as BadRequestResult;
Assert.IsNotNull(response);
}
public class UpdateAdressValidationModel
{
[Required]
public string Street { get; set; }
[Required]
public int? Number { get; set; }
[Required]
public string Bus { get; set; }
[Required]
public int? PostalCode { get; set; }
[Required]
public string City { get; set; }
}
Still gives me a valid modelstate, even though it clearly shows that the required properties are null
.
What am I overlooking?
Note that manually adding
Validator.ValidateObject(model, new ValidationContext(model));
at the top of the UpdateAddress
method throws a ValidationException
on the Street
field so it can in fact validate the model. Question remains: why doesn't it automatically?
Furthermore, this isn't applicable because my model
isn't null
.
回答1:
Turns out that this answer had the right idea but the solution didn't quite fit.
Validation happens when the posted data is bound to the view model. The view model is then passed into the controller. You are skipping part 1 and passing a view model straight into a controller.
Which is correct, but the proposed solution throws a ValidationException instead of simply setting the IsValid
property to false
.
Luckily, there is a specific method that can do this: ApiController.Validate(). By adding these lines to my Unit Test it sets the ModelState
to invalid and does not throw an exception.
userController.Configuration = new HttpConfiguration();
userController.Validate(addressInfo);
回答2:
Nothing in your execution path causes validation to occur. That's done as part of the model binding, which you aren't doing as you're manually creating your model instance.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26762128/modelstate-is-always-considered-valid-regardless-of-null-values-in-required-fie