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* util.jsonschema: Enable passing IEEE 754 equality testKim Alvefur2023-04-221-1/+0
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* util.jsonschema: Implement 'dependentSchemas'Kim Alvefur2023-03-261-1/+1
| | | | | If this object key exists then this schema must validate against the current object. Seems useful.
* util.jsonschema: Implement 'dependentRequired'Kim Alvefur2023-03-261-1/+0
| | | | If this field exists, then these fields must also exist.
* util.jsonschema: Disable some further new failing testsKim Alvefur2023-03-111-1/+4
| | | | Absolute references, weird fractions, unevaluatedProperties???
* util.jsonschema: Ignore some new tests in test suiteKim Alvefur2023-03-111-1/+4
| | | | These seem to be using absolute URI references, Not Yet Implemented
* util.jsonschema: Ignore test case for JavaScript specific detailKim Alvefur2022-10-091-0/+1
| | | | Also touching on how arrays are indistinguishable from tables in Lua
* util.jsonschema: Ignore some further test cases for URI referencesKim Alvefur2022-10-091-0/+5
| | | | Full-URI references are not implemented
* util.jsonschema: Sort test cases to skipKim Alvefur2022-10-091-7/+7
| | | | Piped trough `sort -g`
* util.jsonschema: Fix validation to not assume presence of "type" fieldKim Alvefur2022-07-081-0/+102
MattJ reported a curious issue where validation did not work as expected. Primarily that the "type" field was expected to be mandatory, and thus leaving it out would result in no checks being performed. This was likely caused by misreading during initial development. Spent some time testing against https://github.com/json-schema-org/JSON-Schema-Test-Suite.git and discovered a multitude of issues, far too many to bother splitting into separate commits. More than half of them fail. Many because of features not implemented, which have been marked NYI. For example, some require deep comparisons e.g. when objects or arrays are present in enums fields. Some because of quirks with how Lua differs from JavaScript, e.g. no distinct array or object types. Tests involving fractional floating point numbers. We're definitely not going to follow references to remote resources. Or deal with UTF-16 sillyness. One test asserted that 1.0 is an integer, where Lua 5.3+ will disagree.