purescript-httpurple/docs/Routing.md
2018-07-08 16:28:59 -07:00

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Routing in HTTPure

Routing in HTTPure is designed on the simple principle of allowing PureScript to do what PureScript does best. When you create an HTTPure server, you pass it a router function:

main = HTTPure.serve 8080 router $ Console.log "Server up"

The router function is called for each inbound request to the HTTPure server. Its signature is:

HTTPure.Request -> HTTPure.ResponseM

So in HTTPure, routing is handled simply by the router being a pure function which is passed a value that contains all information about the current request, and which returns a response monad. There's no fancy path parsing and matching algorithm to learn, and everything is pure--you don't get anything or set anything, you simply define the return value given the input parameters, like any other pure function.

This is quite powerful, as all routing can be defined using the same PureScript pattern matching and guard syntax you use everywhere else. It allows you to break up your router to sub-routers easily, using whatever router grouping makes sense for your app. It also leads to some powerful patterns for defining and using middleware. For more details about defining and using middleware, see the Middleware guide.

For more details about the response monad, see the Responses guide.

The Request Record

The HTTPure.Request type is the input parameter for the router function. It is a Record type that contains the following fields:

  • method - A member of HTTPure.Method.
  • path - An Array of String path segments. A path segment is a nonempty string separated by a "/". Empty segments are stripped out when HTTPure creates the HTTPure.Request record.
  • query - An Object of String values. Note that if you have any query parameters without values (for instance, a URL like /foo?bar), then the value in the Object for that query parameter will be the empty String ("").
  • headers - A HTTPure.Headers object. The HTTPure.Headers newtype wraps the Object String type and provides some typeclass instances that make more sense when working with HTTP headers.
  • body - A String containing the contents of the request body, or an empty String if none was provided.

Following are some more details on working with specific fields, but remember, you can combine guards and pattern matching for any or all of these fields however it makes sense for your use case.

The Lookup Typeclass

You will find that much of HTTPure routing takes advantage of implementations of the HTTPure.Lookup typeclass. This typeclass defines the function HTTPure.lookup (or the infix version !!), along with a few auxiliary helpers, for looking up a field out of an object with some key. There are three instances defined in HTTPure:

  1. Lookup (Array t) Int t - In this instance, HTTPure.lookup is the same as Array.index. Because the path is represented as an Array of Strings, this can be used to retrieve the nth path segment by doing something like request.path !! n.
  2. Lookup (Object t) String t - In this instance, HTTPure.lookup is a flipped version of Object.lookup. Because the query is a Object String, this instance can be used to retrieve the value of a query parameter by name, by doing something like request.query !! "someparam".
  3. Lookup Headers String String - This is similar to the example in #2, except that it works with the HTTPure.Headers newtype, and the key is case-insensitive (so request.headers !! "X-Test" == request.headers !! "x-test").

There are three infix operators defined on the HTTPure.Lookup typeclass that are extremely useful for routing:

  1. !! - This is an alias to HTTPure.lookup itself, and returns a Maybe containing some type.
  2. !@ - This is the same as HTTPure.lookup, but it returns the actual value instead of a Maybe containing the value. It only operates on instances of HTTPure.Lookup where the return type is a Monoid, and returns mempty if HTTPure.lookup returns Nothing. It's especially useful when routing based on specific values in query parameters, path segments, or header fields.
  3. !? - This returns true if the key on the right hand side is in the data set on the left hand side. In other words, if HTTPure.lookup matches something, this is true, otherwise, this is false.

Matching HTTP Methods

You can use normal pattern matching to route based on the HTTP method:

router { method: HTTPure.Post } = HTTPure.ok "received a post"
router { method: HTTPure.Get } = HTTPure.ok "received a get"
router { method } = HTTPure.ok $ "received a " <> show method

To see the list of methods that HTTPure understands, see the Method module. To see an example server that routes based on the HTTP method, see the Post example.

Working With Path Segments

Generally, there are two use cases for working with path segments: routing on them, and using them as variables. When routing on path segments, you can route on exact path matches:

router { path: [ "exact" ] } = HTTPure.ok "matched /exact"

You can also route on partial path matches. It's cleanest to use PureScript guards for this. For instance:

router { path }
  | path !@ 0 == "foo" = HTTPure.ok "matched something starting with /foo"
  | path !@ 1 == "bar" = HTTPure.ok "matched something starting with /*/bar"

When using a path segment as a variable, simply extract the path segment using the HTTPure.Lookup typeclass:

router { path } = HTTPure.ok $ "Path segment 0: " <> path !@ 0

To see an example server that works with path segments, see the Path Segments example.

Working With Query Parameters

Working with query parameters is very similar to working with path segments. You can route based on the existence of a query parameter:

router { query }
  | query !? "foo" = HTTPure.ok "matched a request containing the 'foo' param"

Or you can route based on the value of a query parameter:

router { query }
  | query !@ "foo" == "bar" = HTTPure.ok "matched a request with 'foo=bar'"

You can of course also use the value of a query parameter to calculate your response:

router { query } = HTTPure.ok $ "The value of 'foo' is " <> query !@ "foo"

To see an example server that works with query parameters, see the Query Parameters example.

Working With Request Headers

Headers are again very similar to working with path segments or query parameters:

router { headers }
  | headers !? "X-Foo" = HTTPure.ok "There is an 'X-Foo' header"
  | headers !@ "X-Foo" == "bar" = HTTPure.ok "The header 'X-Foo' is 'bar'"
  | otherwise = HTTPure.ok $ "The value of 'X-Foo' is " <> headers !@ "x-foo"

Note that using the HTTPure.Lookup typeclass on headers is case-insensitive.

To see an example server that works with headers, see the Headers example.