Schema validation and TS types for LIP-2 Lens Protocol Metadata Standards.
- Features
- Installation
- Documentation
- Types
- Legacy metadata formats
- JSON schemas
- Versioning
- Contributing
- Releasing
- License
- Support
- Zod schema definitions
- JSON Schema definitions
- TypeScript type definitions
# npm:
npm install @lens-protocol/metadata zod
# yarn:
yarn add @lens-protocol/metadata zod
# pnpm:
pnpm add @lens-protocol/metadata zod
Note
zod
is marked as optional peer dependency, so if you all you need is the JSON Schema definitions, you can install @lens-protocol/metadata
without zod
.
See https://lens-protocol.github.io/metadata/.
You can create compliant PostMetadata
objects via the following builder functions:
import {
article,
audio,
checkingIn,
embed,
event,
image,
link,
livestream,
mint,
space,
story,
textOnly,
threeD,
transaction,
video,
} from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const json = article({
content: 'The content of the article',
});
Note
Use the type definitions to explore the available properties and their types. The builders will throw a ValidationError
with instructions on how to fix the error if the object is not compliant with the schema.
We also provided a set of builder function for specific metadata sub-types (list to be expanded):
import { geoUri } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const uri = geoUri({
lat: 51.5074,
lng: 0.1278,
});
You can create compliant AccountMetadata
objects via the following builder function:
import { account } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const json = account({
name: 'Bob',
bio: 'I am a Lens user',
});
Note
Use the type definitions to explore the available properties and their types. The builder will throw a ValidationError
with instructions on how to fix the error if the object is not compliant with the schema.
Assuming we have 2 JS objects:
const valid = {
/** example of valid metadata **/
};
const invalid = {
/** example of invalid metadata **/
};
Post metadata schema is a union of all content schemas (e.g. ArticleMetadata
, AudioMetadata
, etc.
Use it to parse the metadata referenced by contentURI
of Lens Post.
import { PostMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
PostMetadataSchema.parse(valid); // => PostMetadata
PostMetadataSchema.parse(invalid); // => throws ZodError
// OR
PostMetadataSchema.safeParse(valid);
// => { success: true, data: PostMetadata }
PostMetadataSchema.safeParse(invalid);
// => { success: false, error: ZodError }
import { AccountMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
AccountMetadataSchema.parse(valid); // => AccountMetadata
AccountMetadataSchema.parse(invalid); // => throws ZodError
// OR
AccountMetadataSchema.safeParse(valid);
// => { success: true, data: AccountMetadata }
AccountMetadataSchema.safeParse(invalid);
// => { success: false, error: ZodError }
A convenience extractVersion
function is available to extract the version from a parsed PublicationMetadata
or ProfileMetadata
.
import { extractVersion, PostMetadataSchema, AccountMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const postMetadata = PostMetadataSchema.parse(valid);
extractVersion(postMetadata); // => '3.0.0'
const accountMetadata = AccountMetadataSchema.parse(valid);
extractVersion(accountMetadata); // => '1.0.0'
ZodError
contains all the information needed to inform you about the validation error, but it's not very user friendly. You can use formatZodError
to get a more readable error message.
import { PostMetadataSchema, formatZodError } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const result = PostMetadataSchema.safeParse(invalid);
if (!result.success) {
console.log(formatZodError(result.error));
}
Every time you have a discriminated union, you can use the discriminant to narrow the type. See few examples below.
import { PostMetadata, PostMetadataSchema, PostSchemaId } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const metadata = PostMetadataSchema.parse(valid);
switch (metadata.$schema) {
case PostSchemaId.ARTICLE_LATEST:
// metadata is ArticleMetadata
break;
case PostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST:
// metadata is AudioMetadata
break;
case PostSchemaId.IMAGE_LATEST:
// metadata is ImageMetadata
break;
case PostSchemaId.TEXT_ONLY_LATEST:
// metadata is TextOnlyMetadata
break;
// ...
}
import { AccessCondition, ConditionType, PostMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
const metadata = PostMetadataSchema.parse(valid);
switch (metadata.encryptedWith?.accessCondition.type) {
case ConditionType.AND:
// accessCondition is AndCondition
break;
case ConditionType.OR:
// accessCondition is OrCondition
break;
case ConditionType.NFT_OWNERSHIP:
// accessCondition is NftOwnershipCondition
break;
case ConditionType.EOA_OWNERSHIP:
// accessCondition is EoaOwnershipCondition
break;
// ...
}
import { MetadataAttribute, MetadataAttributeType } from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
switch (attribute.type) {
case MetadataAttributeType.BOOLEAN:
// attribute is BooleanAttribute
// value is a string "true" or "false"
break;
case MetadataAttributeType.DATE:
// attribute is DateAttribute
// value is a string in ISO 8601 format
break;
case MetadataAttributeType.NUMBER:
// attribute is NumberAttribute
// value is a string containing a valid JS number
break;
case MetadataAttributeType.STRING:
// attribute is StringAttribute
// value is a string
break;
case MetadataAttributeType.JSON:
// attribute is JSONAttribute
// value is a string allegedly containing a valid JSON, consumers should validate it
break;
}
The package also exports all enums and types that you might need to work with the metadata.
Use your IDE's autocomplete to explore the available types.
Some examples:
import {
// enums
MediaAudioKind,
MediaAudioMimeType,
MediaImageMimeType,
MediaVideoMimeType,
MetadataAttributeType,
PostMainFocus,
ThreeDFormat,
// main types
ArticleMetadata,
AudioMetadata,
CheckingInMetadata,
EmbedMetadata,
EventMetadata,
ImageMetadata,
LinkMetadata,
LivestreamMetadata,
MintMetadata,
ProfileMetadata,
PublicationMetadata,
SpaceMetadata,
StoryMetadata,
TextOnlyMetadata,
ThreeDMetadata,
TransactionMetadata,
VideoMetadata,
// others
MetadataAttribute,
MediaAudio,
MediaImage,
MediaVideo,
AnyMedia,
GeoLocation,
BooleanAttribute,
DateAttribute,
NumberAttribute,
StringAttribute,
JSONAttribute,
// branded aliases
Locale,
Markdown,
Signature,
URI,
AppId,
Datetime,
} from '@lens-protocol/metadata';
The package also exports parsers for legacy metadata formats via the @lens-protocol/metadata/legacy
entrypoint.
Warning
DO NOT mix and match legacy and new metadata TS types and enums. Although they share some similarities they are not meant to be interoperable.
For example if you are checking mainContentFocus
of PublicationMetadataV2
use the PublicationMainFocus
exported from @lens-protocol/metadata/legacy
and NOT the one from the main @lens-protocol/metadata
entrypoint.
You can parse legacy Publication Metadata v1 and v2 via:
import { PublicationMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata/legacy';
PublicationMetadataSchema.parse(valid); // => PublicationMetadata
PublicationMetadataSchema.parse(invalid); // => throws ZodError
// OR
PublicationMetadataSchema.safeParse(valid);
// => { success: true, data: PublicationMetadata }
PublicationMetadataSchema.safeParse(invalid);
// => { success: false, error: ZodError }
Legacy PublicationMetadata
is a discriminated union of PublicationMetadataV1
and PublicationMetadataV2
where the version
property is the discriminant.
In turn legacy.PublicationMetadataV2
is a discriminated union of:
PublicationMetadataV2Article
PublicationMetadataV2Audio
PublicationMetadataV2Embed
PublicationMetadataV2Image
PublicationMetadataV2Link
PublicationMetadataV2TextOnly
PublicationMetadataV2Video
where the mainContentFocus
property is the discriminant.
import {
PublicationMetadataSchema,
PublicationMetadataVersion,
PublicationMainFocus,
} from '@lens-protocol/metadata/legacy';
const publicationMetadata = PublicationMetadataSchema.parse(valid);
switch (publicationMetadata.version) {
case PublicationMetadataVersion.V1:
// publicationMetadata is PublicationMetadataV1
break;
case PublicationMetadataVersion.V2:
// publicationMetadata is PublicationMetadataV2
switch (publicationMetadata.mainContentFocus) {
case PublicationMainFocus.ARTICLE:
// publicationMetadata is PublicationMetadataV2Article
break;
case PublicationMainFocus.VIDEO:
// publicationMetadata is PublicationMetadataV2Video
break;
// ...
}
break;
}
You can also parse legacy Profile Metadata (aka v1) via:
import { ProfileMetadataSchema } from '@lens-protocol/metadata/legacy';
ProfileMetadataSchema.parse(valid); // => ProfileMetadata
ProfileMetadataSchema.parse(invalid); // => throws ZodError
// OR
ProfileMetadataSchema.safeParse(valid);
// => { success: true, data: ProfileMetadata }
ProfileMetadataSchema.safeParse(invalid);
// => { success: false, error: ZodError }
Similarly to the main entrypoint the @lens-protocol/metadata/legacy
entrypoint also exports all the types and enums that you might need to work with the legacy metadata (some examples below).
import {
// enums
AudioMimeType,
ImageMimeType,
PublicationMainFocus,
PublicationMetadataVersion,
VideoMimeType,
// main types
ProfileMetadata,
PublicationMetadata,
PublicationMetadataV1,
PublicationMetadataV2,
PublicationMetadataV2Article,
PublicationMetadataV2Audio,
PublicationMetadataV2Embed,
PublicationMetadataV2Image,
PublicationMetadataV2Link,
PublicationMetadataV2TextOnly,
PublicationMetadataV2Video,
// others
AccessCondition,
AndCondition,
CollectCondition,
EncryptedFields,
EncryptedMedia,
EoaOwnership,
Erc20Ownership,
FollowCondition,
MarketplaceMetadata,
MarketplaceMetadataAttribute,
Media,
NftOwnership,
OrCondition,
ProfileMetadataAttribute,
ProfileOwnership,
// branded aliases
Locale,
Markdown,
Signature,
URI,
AppId,
Datetime,
} from '@lens-protocol/metadata/legacy';
Note
If you find yourself in a position of importing from both @lens-protocol/metadata
and @lens-protocol/metadata/legacy
entrypoints in the same module. You can you can use ESModule aliasing to avoid conflicts: import * as legacy from '@lens-protocol/metadata/legacy'
and then use the legacy types, enums, and parsers under legacy.*
.
Importing JSON schema in TypeScript is a simple as:
import audio from '@lens-protocol/metadata/jsonschemas/post/audio/3.0.0.json' assert { type: 'json' };
import audio from '@lens-protocol/metadata/jsonschemas/post/article/3.0.0.json' assert { type: 'json' };
import mirror from '@lens-protocol/metadata/jsonschemas/post/mirror/1.0.0.json' assert { type: 'json' };
import profile from '@lens-protocol/metadata/jsonschemas/account/1.0.0.json' assert { type: 'json' };
You can the use them in your JSON Schema validator of choice, for example ajv.
The Lens Protocol Metadata Standards use a self-describing JSON format. All metadata files that adopt this standard MUST have a $schema
property that identifies the schema the file conforms to.
{
"$schema": "https://json-schemas.lens.dev/post/article/3.0.0.json",
"lens": {
"id": "b3d7f1a0-1f75-11ec-9621-0242ac130002",
"content": "The content of the article",
"locale": "en"
}
}
The $schema
property is a URI that identify the schema type and its version.
Schemas are versioned using Semantic Versioning.
Note
Even though schemas are identified by URIs, those identifiers are not necessarily network-addressable. They are just identifiers.
Generally, JSON schema validators don’t make HTTP requests (https://
) to fetch schemas. Instead, they provide a way to load schemas into an internal schema database. When a schema is referenced by its URI identifier, the schema is retrieved from the internal schema database.
Future changes should aim to be backwards compatible as much as possible.
When adding a new version of a schema, the previous version should be kept for a reasonable amount of time to allow consumers to migrate and to support the new specification.
In this example we will add a new version of the AudioSchema
schema, but the same process applies to all the other schemas.
- create a new
PostSchemaId
enum entry with value ofPostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST
. Name it after the current schema version (e.g.AUDIO_V1_0_0
). - rename the existing
AudioSchema
intoAudioV1_0_0Schema
and update the$schema
value toPostSchemaId.AUDIO_V1_0_0
- increase the version number of the
PostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST
based on the nature of your changes. Remember to follow semver rules. - create a new
AudioSchema
with the new schema definition and use thePostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST
as$schema
value - update the
scripts/build.ts
script to include the new schema and old schema files under the correct version file name in thejsonschemas/post/audio
folder - release a new version of this package according to the nature of the changes (new major version of a schema = new major version of the package, etc.)
In case the changes are backwards compatible, you could create a single AudioMetadataDetailsSchema
definition and just declare 2 schemas out of it, one for the old version and one for the new version. For example:
export const AudioMetadataDetailsSchema = metadataDetailsWith({
mainContentFocus: mainContentFocus(PostMainFocus.AUDIO),
audio: MediaAudioSchema,
attachments: AnyMediaSchema.array()
.min(1)
.optional()
.describe('The other attachments you want to include with it.'),
/** e.g. new optional fields */
});
export type AudioMetadataDetails = z.infer<typeof AudioMetadataDetailsSchema>;
export const AudioSchema = postWith({
$schema: z.literal(PostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST),
lens: AudioMetadataDetailsSchema,
});
export type AudioMetadata = z.infer<typeof AudioSchema>;
export const AudioV1Schema = postWith({
$schema: z.literal(PostSchemaId.AUDIO_V1_0_0),
lens: AudioMetadataDetailsSchema,
});
export type AudioV1Metadata = z.infer<typeof AudioV1Schema>;
In this case consumers of this package can take advantage of the structural likeness and just do the following:
switch (metadata.$schema) {
case PostSchemaId.AUDIO_V1_0_0:
case PostSchemaId.AUDIO_LATEST:
// metadata.lens is AudioMetadataDetails
break;
// ...
}
To contribute to the Lens Protocol Metadata Standards, please fork this repository and submit a pull request with your changes.
To run the unit tests, run:
pnpm test
Pro-tip: you can run pnpm test --watch
to run the tests in watch mode.
To build the project, run:
pnpm build
Generate and include up to date documentation with:
pnpm typedoc:docs
Add changeset with:
pnpm changeset add
Use keepachangelog format for the changeset message.
Release flow is managed by changesets.
To release a new version follow the steps below:
- Create a new branch from
main
with the namerelease/<version>
- Build the project
pnpm install && pnpm build && pnpm typedoc:docs
- Update relevant
package.json
's versions and updateCHANGELOG.md
with:
pnpm changeset version
- Review, commit and push the changes
- Create a PR from
release/<version>
tomain
- Once approved, publish with (you need to be logged in to npm authorized to publish under
@lens-protocol
):
pnpm changeset publish
- Push the tags
git push origin release/<version> --follow-tags
- Merge the PR with a merge commit
Lens Protocol Metadata Standards is MIT licensed
See the Lens API and SDK channel on our Discord