@arrirpc/schema
TypeScript icon, indicating that this package has built-in type declarations

0.80.3 • Public • Published

Arri Schema

A Typescript validator and schema builder that can be compiled to other languages. A lot of inspiration was taken from both Typebox and Zod when designing this library. This library also supports standard-schema meaning it can be used with any third-party library that accepts standard schema.

Under the hood this library constructs Arri Type Definitions (ATD). These definitions can be passed to the Arri CLI to generate code for any of the client languages that Arri supports. Lastly, this library also comes with a JIT compiler which produces precompiled validators that are more than 100x faster than Zod.

Project Philosophy

The goals of this project are as follows:

  • Portable type definitions
  • High performance validation, parsing, and serialization
  • Consistent error reporting for parsing and serialization errors

I am not looking to support every feature of Typescript's type system or even every possible representation of JSON. The goal is that the data models defined through this library can be used as a source of truth across multiple programming languages. Both JSON and Typescript have to be limited to accomplish this.

Adherence to RFC 8927

Originally this library was created as a way for building schemas for Json Type Definition. However over time parts of the internal schema were modified to better suite the goals of Arri RPC. Some of these modifications include:

  • Adding support for 64-bit integers
  • Replacing the additionalProperties field with strict to allow for additional properties by default.
  • Restrict ref to only be used for recursive references.

Table of Contents

Installation

# npm
npm install @arrirpc/schema

# pnpm
pnpm install @arrirpc/schema

Basic Example

import { a } from '@arrirpc/schema';

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});

type User = a.infer<typeof User>;

// returns ResultSuccess<User>
a.parse(User, `{"id": "1", "name": "John Doe"}`);
// returns ResultFailure
a.parse(User, `{"id": "1", "name": null}`);

// returns true
a.validate(User, { id: '1', name: 'John Doe' });
// returns false
a.validate(User, { id: '1', name: null });

// outputs valid json
a.serialize(User, { id: '1', name: 'John Doe' });

// JIT compiled validator (faster but server-side only)
const $$User = a.compile(User);
$$User.validate({ id: '1', name: 'John Doe' });
$$User.parse(`{"id": "1", "name": "John Doe"}`);
$$User.serialize({ id: '1', name: 'John Doe' });

Usage With @arrirpc/server

See here for full details.

import { a } from '@arrirpc/schema';
import { defineRpc } from '@arrirpc/server';

export default defineRpc({
    params: a.object({
        name: a.string(),
    }),
    response: a.object({
        message: a.string(),
    }),
    handler({ params }) {
        // can now access params.name here
        return {
            message: `Hello ${params.name}`,
        };
    },
});

Compiling To Other Languages

All schemas defined with this library can be compiled to other languages using the Arri CLI.

Install the Arri ClI

# npm
npm i --save-dev arri

# pnpm
pnpm i --save-dev arri

Create Your Arri Config

import { defineConfig, generators } from 'arri';

export default defineConfig({
    generators: [
        // add your generators here
        generators.rustClient({
            // options
        }),
        generators.dartClient({
            // options
        }),
    ],
});

Create And Export Your Schemas

Use the createAppDefinition helper to export your schemas for the Arri CLI.

// definitions.ts
import { createAppDefinition } from 'arri';
import { a } from '@arrirpc/schema';

const User = a.object('User', {
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.optional(string()),
    email: a.nullable(a.string()),
    createdAt: a.timestamp({ description: 'When the user was created' }),
    updatedAt: a.timestamp(),
});

export default createAppDefinition({
    definitions: {
        User,
    },
});

Run the Code Generator

# npm
npx arri codegen ./definitions.ts

# pnpm
pnpm arri codegen ./definitions.ts

And your done. Now you can rerun this command whenever any of your schemas get updated.

Example Output

// dart output

class User {
  final String id;
  final String? name;
  final String? email;
  /// when the user was created
  final DateTime createdAt;
  final DateTime updatedAt;
  const User({
     required this.id,
     this.name,
     required this.email,
     required this.createdAt,
     required this.updatedAt,
  });

  // implementation details
}
// rust output

pub struct User {
  id: String,
  name: String,
  name: Option<String>,
  email: Option<String>,
  // when the user was created
  created_at: DateTime<FixedOffset>,
  updated_at: DateTime<FixedOffset>,
}

impl ArriModel for User {
  // implementation details
}
// kotlin output

data class User(
  val id: String,
  val name: String?,
  val email: String? = null,
  /**
   * When the user was created
   */
  val createdAt: Instant,
  val updatedAt: Instance,
) {
  // implementation details
}

See here for a list of all officially supported language generators.

Tree-Shakeable Imports

For those that are concerned about bundle sizes you can use Arri's optional modular import syntax. This makes it so that bundlers can remove unused Arri functions from JS bundles at build time. You can also enforce this in your codebase using the arri/prefer-modular-imports lint rule.

Using the modular import syntax Arri's bundle size can be as small as 4kb depending on how many functions you import.

// tree-shakeable (no `a` prefix)
import { string, boolean, object } from '@arrirpc/schema';
const User = object({
    id: string(),
    name: string(),
    isAdmin: boolean(),
});

// tree-shakeable (with `a` prefix)
import * as a from '@arrirpc/schema';
const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
    isAdmin: a.boolean(),
});

// NOT tree-shakeable
import { a } from '@arrirpc/schema';
const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
    isAdmin: a.boolean(),
});

Click here to see how Arri Schema's bundle sizes compares to the rest of the ecosystem.

Why isn't this the default?

Just personal preference. I find manually importing individual functions to be a bad developer experience.

// not a fan
import { foo, bar, baz } from 'foo';

Additionally, having an explicitly exported a namespace means that when I type a.{something} that the TS language server will autocomplete the available functions even if I haven't imported @arrirpc/schema yet. If we didn't have that explicit export, then you would not get autocomplete for a.{something} until you added the import * as a line to your file.

// this has to be added before you get autocomplete for `a.{whatever}`
import * as a from '@arrirpc/schema';

However I understand that keeping small bundle sizes can be important which is why I've allowed both options:

// if you care about bundle size use one of these two
import * as a from '@arrirpc/schema';
import { string, object, etc } from '@arrirpc/schema';

// if you aren't as particular about bundle sizes then use this
import { a } from '@arrirpc/schema';

Supported Types

Primitives

Arri Schema Typescript Arri Type Definition
a.any() any {}
a.string() string {"type": "string" }
a.boolean() boolean {"type": "boolean"}
a.timestamp() Date {"type": "timestamp"}
a.float32() number {"type": "float32"}
a.float64() number {"type": "float64"}
a.int8() number {"type": "int8"}
a.int16() number {"type": "int16"}
a.int32() number {"type": "int32"}
a.int64() BigInt {"type": "int64"}
a.uint8() number {"type": "uint8"}
a.uint16() number {"type": "uint16"}
a.uint32() number {"type": "uint32"}
a.uint64() BigInt {"type": "uint64"}

Enums

Enum schemas allow you to specify a predefine list of accepted strings

Usage

const Status = a.enumerator(['ACTIVE', 'INACTIVE', 'UNKNOWN']);
type Status = a.infer<typeof Status>; // "ACTIVE" | "INACTIVE" | "UNKNOWN";

a.validate(Status, 'BLAH'); // false
a.validate(Status, 'ACTIVE'); // true

Outputted ATD

{
    "enum": ["ACTIVE", "INACTIVE", "UNKNOWN"]
}

Arrays / Lists

Usage

const MyList = a.array(a.string());
type MyList = a.infer<typeof MyList>; // string[];

a.validate(MyList, [1, 2]); // false
a.validate(MyList, ['hello', 'world']); // true

Outputted ATD

{
    "elements": {
        "type": "string"
    }
}

Objects

Usage

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    email: a.string(),
    created: a.timestamp(),
});
type User = a.infer<typeof User>; // { id: string; email: string; created: Date; }

a.validate(User, {
    id: '1',
    email: 'johndoe@example.com',
    created: new Date(),
}); // true
a.validate(User, {
    id: '1',
    email: null,
    created: new Date(),
}); // false

Outputted ATD

{
    "properties": {
        "id": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "email": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "created": {
            "type": "timestamp"
        }
    }
}

Strict Mode

By default @arrirpc/schema will ignore and strip out any additional properties when validating objects. If you want validation to fail when additional properties are present then modify the strict option.

const UserStrict = a.object(
    {
        id: a.string(),
        name: a.string(),
        created: a.timestamp(),
    },
    {
        strict: true,
    },
);

a.parse(UserStrict, {
    id: '1',
    name: 'johndoe',
    created: new Date(),
    bio: 'my name is joe',
}); // fails parsing because of the additional field "bio"

Outputted ATD

{
    "properties": {
        "id": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "email": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "created": {
            "type": "timestamp"
        }
    },
    "strict": true
}

Records / Maps

Usage

const R = a.record(a.boolean());
type R = a.infer<typeof R>; // Record<string, boolean>

a.validate(R, {
    hello: true,
    world: false,
}); // true;
a.validate(R, {
    hello: 'world',
}); // false;

Outputted ATD

{
    "values": {
        "type": "boolean"
    }
}

Discriminated Unions

Usage

const Shape = a.discriminator('type', {
    RECTANGLE: a.object({
        width: a.float32(),
        height: a.float32(),
    }),
    CIRCLE: a.object({
        radius: a.float32(),
    }),
});
type Shape = a.infer<typeof Shape>; // { type: "RECTANGLE"; width: number; height: number; } | { type: "CIRCLE"; radius: number; }

// Infer specific sub types of the union
type ShapeTypeRectangle = a.inferSubType<Shape, 'type', 'RECTANGLE'>; // { type "RECTANGLE"; width: number; height: number; };
type ShapeTypeCircle = a.inferSubType<Shape, 'type', 'CIRCLE'>; // { type "CIRCLE"; radius: number; }

a.validate(Shape, {
    type: 'RECTANGLE',
    width: 1,
    height: 1.5,
}); // true
a.validate(Shape, {
    type: 'CIRCLE',
    radius: 5,
}); // true
a.validate(Shape, {
    type: 'CIRCLE',
    width: 1,
    height: 1.5,
}); // false

Outputted ATD

{
    "discriminator": "type",
    "mapping": {
        "RECTANGLE": {
            "properties": {
                "width": {
                    "type": "float32"
                },
                "height": {
                    "type": "float32"
                }
            }
        },
        "CIRCLE": {
            "properties": {
                "radius": {
                    "type": "float32"
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Recursive Types

You can define recursive schemas by using the a.recursive helper. This function accepts another function that outputs an object schema or a discriminator schema.

An important thing to note is that type inference doesn't work correctly for Recursive schemas. In order to satisfy Typescript you will need to define the type and then pass it to the function as a generic.

Additionally it is recommended to define an ID for any recursive schemas. If one is not specified arri will auto generate one.


If some TS wizard knows how to get type inference to work automatically for these recursive schemas, feel free to open a PR although I fear it will require a major refactor the existing type system.

Usage

// the recursive type must be defined first
type BinaryTree = {
    left: BinaryTree | null;
    right: BinaryTree | null;
};

// pass the type to the helper
const BinaryTree = a.recursive<BinaryTree>(
    (self) =>
        // the resulting schema must be an object or discriminator
        // it also must match the type you pass into the generic parameter
        // or TS will yell at you
        a.object({
            left: a.nullable(self),
            right: a.nullable(self),
        }),
    {
        id: 'BinaryTree',
    },
);

a.validate(BinaryTree, {
    left: {
        left: null,
        right: {
            left: null,
            right: null,
        },
    },
    right: null,
}); // true
a.validate(BinaryTree, {
    left: {
        left: null,
        right: {
            left: true,
            right: null,
        },
    },
    right: null,
}); // false

Outputted ATD

{
    "properties": {
        "left": {
            "ref": "BinaryTree",
            "nullable": true
        },
        "right": {
            "ref": "BinaryTree",
            "nullable": true
        }
    },
    "metadata": {
        "id": "BinaryTree"
    }
}

Modifiers

Optional

Use a.optional() to make an object field optional.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    email: a.optional(a.string()),
    date: a.timestamp();
})

/**
 * Resulting type
 * {
 *   id: string;
 *   email?: string | undefined;
 *   date: Date;
 * }
 */

Outputted ATD

{
    "properties": {
        "id": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "date": {
            "type": "timestamp"
        }
    },
    "optionalProperties": {
        "email": {
            "type": "string"
        }
    }
}

Nullable

Use a.nullable() to make a particular type nullable

const name = a.nullable(a.string());

/**
 * Resulting type
 * string | null
 */

Outputted ATD

{
    "type": "string",
    "nullable": true
}

Undefinable

This is similar to a.optional() except that when initializing the object the key will still be required.

const Foo = a.object({
    foo: a.undefinable(a.string()),
});
type Foo = a.infer<typeof Foo>;

const fooInstance: Foo = {
    // this field must still be present
    // while with a.optional() we could omit the key
    foo: undefined,
};

As far as parsing and validating goes this functions exactly the same as a.optional().

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    email: a.undefinable(a.string()),
    date: a.timestamp();
})

/**
 * Resulting type (Notice how the email key is still required)
 * {
 *   id: string;
 *   email: string | undefined;
 *   date: Date;
 * }
 */

Outputted ATD

{
    "properties": {
        "id": {
            "type": "string"
        },
        "date": {
            "type": "timestamp"
        }
    },
    "optionalProperties": {
        "email": {
            "type": "string"
        }
    }
}

Clone

Copy another schema without copying it's metadata using the a.clone() helper

const A = a.object(
    {
        a: a.string(),
        b: a.float32(),
    },
    { id: 'A' },
);
console.log(A.metadata.id); // "A"

const B = a.clone(A);
console.log(B.metadata.id); // undefined

Extend

Extend an object schema with the a.extend() helper.

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.float32(),
});
// { a: string; b: number; }

const B = a.object({
    c: a.timestamp(),
});
// { c: Date }

const C = a.extend(A, B);
// { a: string; b: number; c: Date }

Omit

Use a.omit() to create a new object schema with certain properties removed

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.float32(),
});
// { a: string; b: number; }

const B = a.omit(A, ['a']);
// { b: number; }

Pick

Use a.pick() to create a new object schema with the a subset of properties from the parent object

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.float32(),
    c: a.timestamp(),
});
// { a: string; b: number; c: Date; }

const B = a.pick(A, ['a', 'c']);
// { a: string; c: Date; }

Partial

Use a.partial() to create a new object schema that makes all of the properties of the parent schema optional.

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.float32(),
    c: a.timestamp(),
});
// { a: string; b: number; c: Date; }

const B = a.partial(A);
// { a: string | undefined; b: number | undefined; c: Date | undefined; }

Utilities

Validate

Call a.validate() to validate an input against an arri schema. This method also acts as a type guard, so any any or unknown types that pass validation will automatically gain autocomplete for the validated fields

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});
a.validate(User, true); // false
a.validate(User, { id: '1', name: 'john doe' }); // true

if (a.validate(User, someInput)) {
    console.log(someInput.id); // intellisense works here
}

Parse

Call a.parse() to parse a JSON string against an arri schema. It will also handle parsing normal objects as well.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});

// returns Result<User>
const result = a.parse(User, jsonString);
if (result.success) {
    // something when wrong with parsing
    console.log(result.errors);
} else {
    // parsing was successful
    console.log(result.value);
}

Parse Unsafe

Alternate version to parse() that will throw a ValidationException if parsing fails.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});

// can throw an error
const result = a.parseUnsafe(User, jsonString);
console.log(result);

Coerce

a.coerce() will attempt to convert inputs to the correct type. Returns a Result<T>

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.boolean(),
    c: a.float32(),
});

a.coerce(A, {
    a: '1',
    b: 'true',
    c: '500.24',
});
// { success: true, value: { a: '1', b: true, c: 500.24 } };

Coerce Unsafe

a.coerceUnsafe() is an alternative to a.coerce() that will throw an error if coercion fails

const A = a.object({
    a: a.string(),
    b: a.boolean(),
    c: a.float32(),
});

a.coerceUnsafe(A, someInput); // returns T but can throw an error

Serialize

a.serialize() will take an input and serialize it to a valid JSON string. This returns Result<string>

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});

const result = a.serialize(User, { id: '1', name: 'john doe' });
if (result.success) {
    console.log(result.value);
    // '{"id":"1","name":"john doe"}''
}

Be aware that this function does not validate the input. So if you are passing in an any or unknown type into this function it is recommended that you validate it first.

Serialize Unsafe

a.serializeUnsafe() is an alternative to a.serialize() that returns a JSON string, but can throw an error.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    name: a.string(),
});

const result = a.serialize(User, { id: '1', name: 'john doe' }); // might throw an error
// '{"id":"1","name":"john doe"}''

Be aware that this function does not validate the input. So if you are passing in an any or unknown type into this function it is recommended that you validate it first.

Errors

Use a.errors() to get all of the validation errors of a given input.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    date: a.timestamp(),
});

a.errors(User, { id: 1, date: 'hello world' });
/**
 * [
 *   {
 *     instancePath: "/id",
 *     schemaPath: "/properties/id/type",
 *     message: "Expected string",
 *   },
 *   {
 *     instancePath: "/date",
 *     schemaPath: "/properties/id/type",
 *     message: "Expected instanceof Date",
 *   }
 * ]
 *
 */

Metadata

Metadata is used during cross-language code generation. Arri schemas allow you to specify the following metadata fields:

  • id - Will be used as the type name in any arri client generators
  • description - Will be added as a description comment above any generated types
  • isDeprecated - Will mark any generated code with the deprecation annotation of target language

Examples

A schema with this metadata:

// metadata object
const BookSchema = a.object(
    {
        title: a.string(),
        author: a.string(),
        publishDate: a.timestamp(),
    },
    {
        id: 'Book',
        description: 'This is a book',
    },
);

will produce types that look something like this during codegen.

Typescript

/**
 * This is a book
 */
interface Book {
    title: string;
    author: string;
    publishDate: Date;
}

Rust

/// This is a book
struct Book {
    title: String,
    author: String,
    publish_date: DateTime<FixedOffset>
}

Dart

/// This is a book
class Book {
    final String title;
    final String author;
    final DateTime publishDate;
    const Book({
        required this.title,
        required this.author,
        required this.publishDate,
    });
}

Kotlin

/**
 * This is a book
 */
data class Book(
    val title: String,
    val author: String,
    val publishDate: Instant,
)

ID Shorthand

Because IDs are really important for producing concise type names. Arri validate also provides shorthand for defining IDs of objects, discriminators, and recursive types.

// ID will be set to "Book"
const BookSchema = a.object('Book', {
    title: a.string(),
    author: a.string(),
    publishDate: a.timestamp(),
});

// ID will be set to "Message"
const MessageSchema = a.discriminator('Message', 'type', {
    TEXT: a.object({
        userId: a.string(),
        content: a.string(),
    }),
    IMAGE: a.object({
        userId: a.string(),
        imageUrl: a.string(),
    }),
});

// ID will be set to "BTree"
const BinaryTreeSchema = a.recursive('BTree', (self) =>
    a.object({
        left: a.nullable(self),
        right: a.nullable(self),
    }),
);

Compiled Validators

@arrirpc/schema comes with a high performance JIT compiler that transforms Arri Schemas into highly optimized validation, parsing, coercion, and serialization functions. The result of the compilation also implements the standard-schema interface, meaning it can be passed into any library that accepts standard-schema.

const User = a.object({
    id: a.string(),
    email: a.nullable(a.string()),
    created: a.timestamp(),
});

const $$User = a.compile(User);

$$User.validate(someInput);
$$User.parse(someJson);
$$User.parseUnsafe(someJson);
$$User.coerce(someObject);
$$User.coerceUnsafe(someObject);
$$User.serialize({ id: '1', email: null, created: new Date() });
$$User.serializeUnsafe({ id: '1', email: null, created: new Date() });

In most cases, the compiled validators will be much faster than the standard utilities. However there is some overhead with compiling the schemas so ideally each validator would be compiled once. Additionally the resulting methods are created using new Function() so they can only be used in an environment that you control such as a backend server. They WILL NOT work in a browser environment.

You can also use a.compile for code generation. Passing true as the second parameter will ensure that the compile result gives you access to the generated function bodies. This is disabled by default as of v0.76.0 in order to reduce unwanted memory usage. (No need to carry around these large strings if they aren't going to be used.)

// pass true to the second parameter to get access to the generated function bodies
const $$User = a.compile(User, true);

$$User.compiledCode.validate; // the generated validation code
$$User.compiledCode.parse; // the generated parsing code
$$User.compiledCode.coerce; // the generated coercion code
$$User.compiledCode.serialize; // the generated serialization code

Benchmarks

Last Updated: 2025-06-09T18:41:32.823Z

All benchmarks were run on my personal desktop. You can view the methodology used in ./benchmarks/src.

OS - Pop!_OS 22.04 LTS
CPU - AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core Processor
RAM - 32GB
Graphics - AMD® Radeon rx 6900 xt

Objects

The following type was used in these benchmarks. Equivalent schemas were created in each of the mentioned libraries.

interface TestUser {
    id: number; // integer,
    role: 'standard' | 'admin' | 'moderator';
    name: string;
    email: string | null;
    createdAt: number; // integer
    updatedAt: number; // integer
    settings:
        | {
              preferredTheme: 'light' | 'dark' | 'system';
              allowNotifications: boolean;
          }
        | undefined;
    recentNotifications: Array<
        | {
              type: 'POST_LIKE';
              userId: string;
              postId: string;
          }
        | {
              type: 'POST_COMMENT';
              userId: string;
              postId: string;
              commentText: string;
          }
    >;
}

Object Validation - Good Input

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 54,207,983
TypeBox (Compiled) 42,991,276
Arktype 28,628,730
Typia 28,500,181
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 19,420,723
Ajv - JSON Schema (Compiled) 11,612,359
Ajv - JSON Schema 11,337,540
Zod/v4 3,080,359
Arri 2,719,630
Arri - Standard Schema 760,346
TypeBox 720,807
Valibot 594,403
Zod 463,499

Object Validation - Bad Input

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 60,871,312
TypeBox (Compiled) 47,747,764
Typia 31,195,589
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 8,314,141
Ajv - JSON Schema (Compiled) 4,523,107
Ajv - JSON Schema 4,315,160
Arri 3,992,012
TypeBox 891,805
Arri - Standard-Schema 757,845
Valibot 496,579
Zod 352,986
Arktype 149,079
Zod/v4 100,355

Object Parsing - Good Input

Library op/s
JSON.parse 801,513
JSON.parse + Typebox (Compiled) 754,820
Arri (Compiled) 753,155
JSON.parse + Arktype 748,862
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 745,964
Typia (json.createValidateParse) 726,365
JSON.parse + Zod/v4 555,511
Arri 365,992
Arri - Standard Schema 365,640
JSON.parse + Valibot 319,333
JSON.parse + Zod 285,161
JSON.parse + Typebox 215,169

Object Parsing - Bad Input

Library op/s
JSON.parse 846,547
Arri (Compiled) 779,979
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 718,259
Typia (json.createValidateParse) 552,892
Arri 414,169
Arri (StandardSchema) 391,092
JSON.parse + Valibot 289,960
JSON.parse + Zod 220,650
JSON.parse + Arktype 120,295
JSON.parse + Typebox (Compiled) 99,136
JSON.parse + Zod/v4 80,506
JSON.parse + Typebox 77,380

Object Serialization

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 3,984,935
Arri (Compiled) - Validate and Serialize 3,583,501
Typia 1,793,677
JSON.stringify 1,645,335
Typia - Validate and Serialize 1,540,510
Arri 450,120

Object Coercion

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 19,370,221
Zod/v4 2,267,229
Arri 738,461
Zod 450,168
TypeBox 403,602

Integers

The following benchmarks measure how quickly each library operates on a single integer value.

Int Validation

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 188,029,099
TypeBox (Compiled) 186,595,706
Ajv - JSON Schema (Compiled) 182,332,718
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 108,964,372
Arri - Standard Schema 108,193,957
Arri 84,093,924
Typia 58,164,521
Arktype 57,782,710
Ajv - JSON Schema 50,350,825
TypeBox 46,450,527
Valibot 22,202,298
Zod/v4 18,948,463
Zod 1,269,812

Int Validation (Bad Input)

Library op/s
TypeBox (Compiled) 188,306,861
Arri (Compiled) 186,071,486
Ajv - JSON Schema (Compiled) 69,251,304
Typia 60,060,635
TypeBox 44,860,799
Arri 39,998,319
Ajv - JSON Schema 25,013,168
Arri (Compiled) - Standard Schema 15,998,638
Arri - Standard Schema 11,765,466
Valibot 9,831,763
Zod 766,604
Arktype 439,401
Zod/v4 100,168

Int Parsing (Good Input)

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 136,350,248
Arri 49,111,714
JSON.parse() 21,047,855

Int Parsing (Bad Input)

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) 60,790,411
JSON.parse() 12,746,512
Arri 9,824,069

Int Serialization

Library op/s
Arri (Compiled) - Validate and Serialize 194,120,420
Arri (Compiled) 186,143,375
Typia 107,523,528
Arri 59,302,746
Typia - Validate and Serialize 47,194,163
JSON.stringify 17,049,686

Int Coercion (Good Input)

Library op/s
Arri 50,428,605
TypeBox 34,878,937
Ajv - JSON Schema 32,125,175
Zod/v4 14,351,655
Zod 1,197,013

Int Coercion (Bad Input)

Library op/s
Arri 10,088,606
TypeBox 8,117,032
Ajv - JSON Schema 6,979,847
Zod 762,348
Zod/v4 99,086

Development

Building

Run nx build @arrirpc/schema to build the library.

Running unit tests

Run nx test @arrirpc/schema to execute the unit tests via Vitest

Benchmarking

Run nx benchmark @arrirpc/schema to execute benchmarks

Readme

Keywords

none

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i @arrirpc/schema

Weekly Downloads

207

Version

0.80.3

License

MIT

Unpacked Size

402 kB

Total Files

18

Last publish

Collaborators

  • joshmossas