NOTE: tjackiw/obscenity is no longer maintened.
This is a fork that restores the gem with some updated language and newer dependencies.
Obscenity is a profanity filter gem for Ruby/Rubinius, Rails (through ActiveModel), and Rack middleware.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'obscenity'
And then execute:
bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
gem install obscenity
Obscenity is compatible with Ruby 1.9.X, Ruby 2.0.X, Rubinius 1.9, Rails 3.X, and Rack as a middleware. Starting with Rails 3, the profanity validation works with any ORM supported by ActiveModel, e.g: ActiveRecord, MongoMapper, Mongoid, etc.
The following methods are available to use with Obscenity:
Obscenity.configure(&block)
allows you to set custom global configuration options. Available options are:
config.blocklist
accepts the following values:
- An array with words
- A string representing a path to a yml file
- A Pathname object with a path to a yml file
config.allowlist
accepts the following values:
- An array with words
- A string representing a path to a yml file
- A Pathname object with a path to a yml file
config.replacement
accepts the following values:
- :default : Uses the :garbled method
- :garbled : Replaces profane words with $@!#%
- :stars : Replaces profane words with '*' up to the word's length
- :vowels : Replaces the vowels in the profane word with '*'
- :nonconsonants : Replaces non consonants with '*'
- "custom string" : Replaces the profane word with the custom string
Example:
Obscenity.configure do |config|
config.blocklist = "path/to/blocklist/file.yml"
config.allowlist = ["safe", "word"]
config.replacement = :stars
end
Obscenity.profane?(text)
analyses the content and returns true
or false
based on its profanity:
Obscenity.profane?("simple text")
=> false
Obscenity.profane?("text with shit")
=> true
Obscenity.sanitize(text)
sanities the content and returns a new sanitized content (if profane) or the original content (if not profane):
Obscenity.sanitize("simple text")
=> "simple text"
Obscenity.sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with $@!#%"
Obscenity.replacement(style).sanitize(text)
allows you to pass the replacement method to be used when sanitizing the given content. Available replacement values are :default
, :garbled
, :stars
, :vowels
, and a custom string.
Obscenity.replacement(:default).sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with $@!#%"
Obscenity.replacement(:garbled).sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with $@!#%"
Obscenity.replacement(:stars).sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with ****"
Obscenity.replacement(:vowels).sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with sh*t"
Obscenity.replacement(:nonconsonants).sanitize('Oh 5hit')
=> "Oh *h*t"
Obscenity.replacement("[censored]").sanitize("text with shit")
=> "text with [censored]"
Obscenity.offensive(text)
returns an array of profane words in the given content:
Obscenity.offensive("simple text")
=> []
Obscenity.offensive("text with shit and another biatch")
=> ["shit", "biatch"]
The ActiveModel component provides easy profanity validation for your models.
First, you need to explicitly require the ActiveModel component:
require 'obscenity/active_model'
Then you can use it in your models as such:
# ActiveRecord example
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :title, obscenity: true
validates :body, obscenity: { sanitize: true, replacement: "[censored]" }
end
# MongoMapper example
class Book
include MongoMapper::Document
key :title, String
key :body, String
validates :title, obscenity: true
validates :body, obscenity: { sanitize: true, replacement: :vowels }
end
# Mongoid example
class Page
include Mongoid::Document
field :title, type: String
field :body, type: String
validates :title, obscenity: true
validates :body, obscenity: { sanitize: true, replacement: :garbled }
end
The following usage is available:
obscenity: true
: Does a profanity validation in the field using .profane?
and returns true/false
. If true, ActiveModel's Validation will return a default error message.
obscenity: { message: 'Custom message' }
: Does a profanity validation in the field using .profane?
and returns true/false
. If true, ActiveModel's Validation will return your custom error message.
obscenity: { sanitize: true }
: Silently sanitizes the field and replaces its content with the sanitized version. If the :replacement
key is included, it will use that style when replacing the content.
You can use Obscenity as a Rack middleware to automatically reject requests that include profane parameter values or sanitize those values before they reach your Application.
First you need to explicitly require the Rack middleware:
require 'obscenity/rack'
And to use the middleware, the basic syntax is:
use Rack::Obscenity, {} # options Hash
You need to use the options below inside the options Hash (above)
Any of the following options can be used to reject a request.
reject: true
: will reject a request if any parameter value contains profanity.
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: true
reject: { params: [] }
: will analyze the selected parameters and reject the request if their values contain profanity.
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { params: [:foo, :bar] }
reject: { message: 'Custom message' }
: will reject a request and display the custom message if any parameter value contains profanity
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { message: "We don't allow profanity!" }
reject: { path: 'path/to/file' }
: will reject a request and render the custom file if any parameter value contains profanity
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { path: 'public/no_profanity.html' }
More usage example:
# Rejects the request for all params and renders a file
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { params: :all, path: 'public/no_profanity.html' }
# Rejects the request based on the selected params and renders a file
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { params: [:foo, :bar], path: 'public/no_profanity.html' }
# Rejects the request based on the selected params and displays a message
use Rack::Obscenity, reject: { params: [:foo, :bar], message: "Profanity is not allowed!" }
Any of the following options can be used to sanitize a request.
sanitize: true
: will sanitize all parameter values if they contain profanity.
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: true
sanitize: { params: [] }
: will analyze the selected parameters and sanitize them if their values contain profanity.
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: { params: [:foo, :bar] }
sanitize: { replacement: (:default | :garbled | :stars | :vowels | 'custom') }
: will use this replacement method when sanitizing parameter values
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: { replacement: :vowels }
More usage example:
# Sanitizes all params and replaces their values using :stars
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: { params: :all, replacement: :stars }
# Sanitizes the given params and replaces their values using a custom word
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: { params: [:foo, :bar], replacement: "[censored]" }
# Sanitizes all params and replaces their values using :garbled
use Rack::Obscenity, sanitize: { replacement: :garbled }
Obscenity currently provides test helpers for RSpec only, but we have plans to add helpers to Shoulda as well.
A be_profane
matcher is available for RSpec. Its usage is very simple:
user.username.should_not be_profane
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet.
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it.
- Fork the project.
- Start a feature/bugfix branch.
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution.
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history.
- Thiago Jackiw: @tjackiw
Copyright (c) 2012 Thiago Jackiw. See LICENSE.txt for further details.