// Package middleware provides some types and functions common among middleware. package middleware import ( "net/http" "path" "time" ) type ( // Middleware is the middle layer which represents the traditional // idea of middleware: it chains one Handler to the next by being // passed the next Handler in the chain. Middleware func(Handler) Handler // Handler is like http.Handler except ServeHTTP may return a status // code and/or error. // // If ServeHTTP writes to the response body, it should return a status // code of 0. This signals to other handlers above it that the response // body is already written, and that they should not write to it also. // // If ServeHTTP encounters an error, it should return the error value // so it can be logged by designated error-handling middleware. // // If writing a response after calling another ServeHTTP method, the // returned status code SHOULD be used when writing the response. // // If handling errors after calling another ServeHTTP method, the // returned error value SHOULD be logged or handled accordingly. // // Otherwise, return values should be propagated down the middleware // chain by returning them unchanged. Handler interface { ServeHTTP(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request) (int, error) } // HandlerFunc is a convenience type like http.HandlerFunc, except // ServeHTTP returns a status code and an error. See Handler // documentation for more information. HandlerFunc func(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request) (int, error) ) // ServeHTTP implements the Handler interface. func (f HandlerFunc) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) (int, error) { return f(w, r) } // IndexFile looks for a file in /root/fpath/indexFile for each string // in indexFiles. If an index file is found, it returns the root-relative // path to the file and true. If no index file is found, empty string // and false is returned. fpath must end in a forward slash '/' // otherwise no index files will be tried (directory paths must end // in a forward slash according to HTTP). // // All paths passed into and returned from this function use '/' as the // path separator, just like URLs. IndexFle handles path manipulation // internally for systems that use different path separators. func IndexFile(root http.FileSystem, fpath string, indexFiles []string) (string, bool) { if fpath[len(fpath)-1] != '/' || root == nil { return "", false } for _, indexFile := range indexFiles { // func (http.FileSystem).Open wants all paths separated by "/", // regardless of operating system convention, so use // path.Join instead of filepath.Join fp := path.Join(fpath, indexFile) f, err := root.Open(fp) if err == nil { f.Close() return fp, true } } return "", false } // SetLastModifiedHeader checks if the provided modTime is valid and if it is sets it // as a Last-Modified header to the ResponseWriter. If the modTime is in the future // the current time is used instead. func SetLastModifiedHeader(w http.ResponseWriter, modTime time.Time) { if modTime.IsZero() || modTime.Equal(time.Unix(0, 0)) { // the time does not appear to be valid. Don't put it in the response return } // RFC 2616 - Section 14.29 - Last-Modified: // An origin server MUST NOT send a Last-Modified date which is later than the // server's time of message origination. In such cases, where the resource's last // modification would indicate some time in the future, the server MUST replace // that date with the message origination date. now := currentTime() if modTime.After(now) { modTime = now } w.Header().Set("Last-Modified", modTime.UTC().Format(http.TimeFormat)) } // currentTime, as it is defined here, returns time.Now(). // It's defined as a variable for mocking time in tests. var currentTime = func() time.Time { return time.Now() }