purescript-httpurple/Readme.md

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# HTTPurple 🪁
[![License](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-blue.svg)](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sigma-andex/purescript-httpurple/main/License)
A 🎨 colourful fork of the amazing [HTTPure](https://github.com/citizennet/purescript-httpure) http server framework.
Coming from HTTPure? You might want to have a look at the [differences to HTTPure](#differences-to-httpure).
## ToC
1. [Installation](#installation)
1. [Quick start](#quick-start)
1. [Documenation](#documentation)
1. [Examples](#examples)
1. [Testing](#testing)
1. [Differences to HTTPure](#differences-to-httpure)
1. [License](#license)
## Installation
```bash
spago install httpurple
```
## Quick start
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```purescript
module Main where
import Prelude hiding ((/))
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import HTTPurple
data Route = Hello String
derive instance Generic Route _
route :: RouteDuplex' Route
route = mkRoute
{ "Hello": "hello" / segment
}
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main :: ServerM
main =
serve { port: 8080 } { route, router }
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where
router { route: Hello name } = ok $ "hello " <> name
```
then start the server
```bash
➜ spago run
Src Lib All
Warnings 0 0 0
Errors 0 0 0
[info] Build succeeded.
HTTPurple 🪁 up and running on http://0.0.0.0:8080
```
query your server, e.g. using [httpie](https://httpie.io/)
```bash
➜ http http://localhost:8080/hello/🗺
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 10
Date: Sun, 22 May 2022 16:50:52 GMT
Keep-Alive: timeout=5
hello 🗺
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```
## Documentation
See the [docs folder](./docs) for more in-depth guides.
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## Examples
HTTPurple ships with a number of [examples](./docs/Examples). To run an example,
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in the project root, run:
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```bash
spago -x test.dhall run --main Examples.<Example Name>.Main
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```
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Each example's startup banner will include information on routes available on
the example server.
## Testing
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To run the test suite, in the project root run:
```bash
spago -x test.dhall test
```
## Differences to HTTPure
HTTPurple 🪁 is a fork of [HTTPure](https://github.com/citizennet/purescript-httpure) that I started to freely experiment with some ideas I have on improving the usage experience. Currently I have no intentions on back-porting any of it to HTTPure, as I don't have the time for it and also don't want to restrict myself.
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If you have used HTTPure before, you'll probably want to go through the following changes to get started using HTTPurple 🪁:
* [routing-duplex](#routing-duplex)
* [startup options](#startup-options)
* [other improvements](#other-improvmenets)
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* [hot module reloading](#hot-module-reloading)
### Routing-duplex
The most notable difference to HTTPure is that HTTPurple 🪁 uses the amazing [`routing-duplex`](https://github.com/natefaubion/purescript-routing-duplex) library for routing. I found the previous lookup-based routing tedious to work with, especially when having more complex routes, and quite error-prone, especially if you need reverse-routing for redirects.
[`routing-duplex`](https://github.com/natefaubion/purescript-routing-duplex) offers an elegant bidirectional routing which was initially designed for SPAs. Have a look at the really extensive [`documentation`](https://github.com/natefaubion/purescript-routing-duplex). The benefits of using routing-duplex are
* Much simpler and less tedious definition of routes
* Roundtrip printing/parsing of routes, so no more invalid redirects
* Exhaustive pattern matching so you are sure to match all defined routes
* Option to separate routes into logical groups
Here is a bit more elaborated examples:
```purescript
module Main where
import Prelude hiding ((/))
import Data.Either (Either(..))
import Data.Generic.Rep (class Generic)
import Data.Maybe (Maybe(..))
import Data.Tuple (Tuple(..))
import HTTPurple
data Route
= Home
| Profile String
| Account String
| Search { q :: String, sorting :: Maybe Sort }
derive instance Generic Route _
data Sort = Asc | Desc
derive instance Generic Sort _
sortToString :: Sort -> String
sortToString = case _ of
Asc -> "asc"
Desc -> "desc"
sortFromString :: String -> Either String Sort
sortFromString = case _ of
"asc" -> Right Asc
"desc" -> Right Desc
val -> Left $ "Not a sort: " <> val
sort :: RouteDuplex' String -> RouteDuplex' Sort
sort = as sortToString sortFromString
api :: RouteDuplex' Route
api = root $ sum
{ "Home": noArgs
, "Profile": "profile" / string segment
, "Account": "account" / string segment
, "Search": "search" ? { q: string, sorting: optional <<< sort }
}
main :: ServerM
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main = serve { port: 8080 } { route: api, router: apiRouter }
where
apiRouter { route: Home } = ok "hello world!"
apiRouter { route: Profile profile } = ok $ "hello " <> profile <> "!"
apiRouter { route: Account account } = found' redirect ""
where
reverseRoute = print api $ Profile account
redirect = headers [ Tuple "Location" reverseRoute ]
apiRouter { route: Search { q, sorting } } = ok $ "searching for query " <> q <> " " <> case sorting of
Just Asc -> "ascending"
Just Desc -> "descending"
Nothing -> "defaulting to ascending"
```
### Startup options
HTTPurple 🪁 greatly simplifies the startup options and functions. The `serve`, `serve'`, `serveSecure` and `serveSecure'` have been merged into a single function `serve` that accepts listen options as the first parameter and uses sane defaults if you don't provide any.
The easiest way to start a server is to provide just the route and a router:
```purescript
main :: ServerM
main =
serve {} { route, router }
```
This will spin up the http server with sane defaults.
```bash
HTTPurple 🪁 up and running on http://0.0.0.0:8080
```
But you can overwrite any of the optional properties like this
```purescript
main :: ServerM
main =
serve {
hostname: "localhost"
, port: 9000
, certFile: "./Certificate.cer"
, keyFile: "./Key.key"
, notFoundHandler
, onStarted: log "Server started 🚀"
, closingHandler: NoClosingHandler
} { route, router }
where
notFoundHandler :: Request Unit -> ResponseM
notFoundHandler = const $ ok "Nothing to see here"
```
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### Other improvmenets
* Default closing handler - A default closing handler is provided so you can just stop your server using `ctrl+x` without having to worry about anything. You can deactivate it by setting `closingHandler: NoClosingHandler` in the listen options.
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### Hot module reloading
With HTTPurple 🪁 you can easily set up a hot module reloading workflow:
Create an `index.js` with the content:
```javascript
import * as Main from './output/Main/index.js'
Main.main()
```
Add to `package.json`:
```json
...
"scripts": {
"hot": "spago build -w & nodemon \"node index.js\""
},
"type": "module",
...
```
Spin up:
```bash
npm run hot
```
Develop:
```bash
HTTPurple 🪁 up and running on http://0.0.0.0:8080
[nodemon] restarting due to changes...
[nodemon] restarting due to changes...
[nodemon] starting `node "node index.js" index.js`
HTTPurple 🪁 up and running on http://0.0.0.0:8080
[nodemon] restarting due to changes...
[nodemon] restarting due to changes...
[nodemon] starting `node "node index.js" index.js`
HTTPurple 🪁 up and running on http://0.0.0.0:8080
```
## License
This is a fork of [HTTPure](https://github.com/citizennet/purescript-httpure), which is licensed under MIT. See the [original license](./LICENSES/httpure.LICENSE). This work is similarly licensed under [MIT](./License).