Define XDM fields in the Schema Registry API
All Experience Data Model (XDM) fields are defined using the standard constraints that apply to their field type, with additional constraints for field names that are enforced by ۶Ƶ Experience Platform. The Schema Registry API allows you to define custom fields in your schemas through the use of formats and optional constraints. XDM field types are exposed by the field-level attribute, meta:xdmType
.
meta:xdmType
is a system-generated value, and therefore you are not required to add this property to the JSON for your field when using the API (except when creating custom map types). Best practice is to use JSON Schema types (such as string
and integer
) with the appropriate min/max constraints as defined in the table below.This guide outlines the appropriate formatting to define different field types, including those with optional properties. More information regarding optional properties and type-specific keywords is available through the .
To begin, find the desired field type and use the sample code provided to build your API request for creating a field group or creating a data type.
String string
String fields are indicated by type: string
.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample String Field",
"description": "An example string field.",
"type": "string"
}
You can optionally constrain what kinds of values can be inputted for the string through the following additional properties:
pattern
: A regex pattern to constrain by.minLength
: A minimum length for the string.maxLength
: A maximum length for the string.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample String Field",
"description": "An example string field with added constraints.",
"type": "string",
"pattern": "^[A-Z]{2}$",
"maxLength": 2
}
URI uri
URI fields are indicated by type: string
with a format
property set to uri
. No other properties are accepted.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample URI Field",
"description": "An example URI field.",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
Enum enum
Enum fields must use type: string
, with the enum values themselves provided under an enum
array:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Enum Field",
"description": "An example enum field.",
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"value1",
"value2",
"value3"
]
}
You can optionally provide customer-facing labels for each value under a meta:enum
property, with each label keyed to a corresponding value under enum
.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Enum Field",
"description": "An example enum field with customer-facing labels.",
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"value1",
"value2",
"value3"
],
"meta:enum": {
"value1": "Value 1",
"value2": "Value 2",
"value3": "Value 3"
}
}
meta:enum
value does not declare an enumeration or drive any data validation on its own. In most cases, strings provided under meta:enum
are also provided under enum
to ensure that data is constrained. However, there are some use cases where meta:enum
is provided without a corresponding enum
array. See the tutorial on defining suggested values for more information.You can optionally provide a default
property to indicate the default enum
value that the field will use if no value is provided.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Enum Field",
"description": "An example enum field with customer-facing labels and a default value.",
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"value1",
"value2",
"value3"
],
"meta:enum": {
"value1": "Value 1",
"value2": "Value 2",
"value3": "Value 3"
},
"default": "value1"
}
default
value is provided and the enum field is set to required
, any record missing an accepted value for this field will fail validation upon ingestion.Number number
Number fields are indicated by type: number
and have no other required properties.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Number Field",
"description": "An example number field.",
"type": "number"
}
number
types are used for any numeric type, either integers or floating point numbers, whereas integer
types are used for integral numbers specifically. Refer to the for more information on the use cases for each type.Integer integer
Integer fields are indicated by type: integer
and have no other required fields.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Integer Field",
"description": "An example integer field.",
"type": "integer"
}
integer
types refer to integral numbers specifically, number
types are used for any numeric type, either integers or floating point numbers. Refer to the for more information on the use cases for each type.You can optionally constrain the range of the integer by adding minimum
and maximum
properties to the definition. Several other numerical types supported by the Schema Builder UI are just integer
types with specific minimum
and maximum
constraints, such as Long, Short, and Byte.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Integer Field",
"description": "An example integer field with added constraints.",
"type": "integer",
"minimum": 1,
"maximum": 100
}
Long long
The equivalent of a Long field created through the Schema Builder UI is an integer
type field with specific minimum
and maximum
values (-9007199254740992
and 9007199254740992
, respectively).
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Long Field",
"description": "An example long field.",
"type": "integer",
"minimum": -9007199254740992,
"maximum": 9007199254740992
}
Short short
The equivalent of a Short field created through the Schema Builder UI is an integer
type field with specific minimum
and maximum
values (-32768
and 32768
, respectively).
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Short Field",
"description": "An example short field.",
"type": "integer",
"minimum": -32768,
"maximum": 32768
}
Byte byte
The equivalent of a Byte field created through the Schema Builder UI is an integer
type field with specific minimum
and maximum
values (-128
and 128
, respectively).
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Byte Field",
"description": "An example byte field.",
"type": "integer",
"minimum": -128,
"maximum": 128
}
Boolean boolean
Boolean fields are indicated by type: boolean
.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Boolean Field",
"description": "An example boolean field.",
"type": "boolean"
}
You can optionally provide a default
value that the field will use when no explicit value is provided during ingestion.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Boolean Field",
"description": "An example boolean field with a default value.",
"type": "boolean",
"default": false
}
default
value is provided and the boolean field is set to required
, any record missing an accepted value for this field will fail validation upon ingestion.Date date
Date fields are indicated by type: string
and format: date
. You can also optionally provide an array of examples
to leverage in cases where you want to display a sample date string for users entering the data manually.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Date Field",
"description": "An example date field with an example array item.",
"type": "string",
"format": "date",
"examples": ["2004-10-23"]
}
DateTime date-time
DateTime fields are indicated by type: string
and format: date-time
. You can also optionally provide an array of examples
to leverage in cases where you want to display a sample datetime string for users entering the data manually.
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Datetime Field",
"description": "An example datetime field with an example array item.",
"type": "string",
"format": "date-time",
"examples": ["2004-10-23T12:00:00-06:00"]
}
Array array
Array fields are indicated by type: array
and an items
object that defines the schema of the items that the array will accept.
You can define array items using primitive types, such as an array of strings:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Array Field",
"description": "An example array field using a primitive type.",
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
}
}
You can also define the array items based on an existing data type by referring to the $id
of the data type through a $ref
property. The following is an array of Payment Item objects:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Array Field",
"description": "An example array field using a data type reference.",
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "https://ns.adobe.com/xdm/data/paymentitem"
}
}
Object object
Object fields are indicated by type: object
and a properties
object that defines sub-properties for the schema field.
The each sub-field defined under properties
can be defined using any primitive type
or by referencing an existing data type through a $ref
property pointing to the $id
of the data type in question:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Object Field",
"description": "An example object field.",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"field1": {
"type": "string"
},
"field2": {
"$ref": "https://ns.adobe.com/xdm/common/measure"
}
}
}
You can also define the entire object through by referring to a data type, provided the data type in question is itself defined as type: object
:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Object Field",
"description": "An example object field using a data type reference.",
"$ref": "https://ns.adobe.com/xdm/common/phoneinteraction"
}
Map map
A map field is essentially an object
-type field with an unconstrained set of keys. Like objects, maps have a type
value of object
, but their meta:xdmType
is explicitly set to map
.
A map must not define any properties. It must define a single additionalProperties
schema to describe the type of values contained within the map (each map can only contain a single data type). The type
value must be either string
or integer
.
For example, a map field with string-type values would be defined like so:
"sampleField": {
"title": "Sample Map Field",
"description": "An example map field.",
"type": "object",
"meta:xdmType": "map",
"additionalProperties": {
"type": "string"
}
}
See the section below for furthe details on creating custom map fields.
Creating custom map types custom-maps
In order to support “map-like” data efficiently in XDM, objects may be annotated with a meta:xdmType
set to map
to make it clear that an object should be managed as if the key set were unconstrained. Data that is ingested into map fields must use string keys, and only string or integer values (as determined by additionalProperties.type
).
XDM places the following restrictions on the use of this storage hint:
- Map types MUST be of type
object
. - Map types MUST NOT have properties defined (in other words, they define “empty” objects).
- Map types MUST include an
additionalProperties.type
field that describes the values that may be placed within the map, eitherstring
orinteger
.
Ensure that you are only using map-type fields when absolutely necessary, as they carry the following performance drawbacks:
- Response time from ۶Ƶ Experience Platform Query Service degrades from three seconds to ten seconds for 100 million records.
- Maps must have fewer than 16 keys or else risk further degradation.
The Platform user interface also has limitations in how it can extract the keys of map-type fields. Whereas object-type fields can be expanded, maps are displayed as a single field instead.
Next steps
This guide covered how to define different field types in the API. For more information how XDM field types are formatted, see the guide on XDM field type constraints.