caddy/modules/caddyhttp/routes.go
Matthew Holt c9980fd367
Refactor Caddyfile adapter and module registration
Use piles from which to draw config values.

Module values can return their name, so now we can do two-way mapping
from value to name and name to value; whereas before we could only map
name to value. This was problematic with the Caddyfile adapter since
it receives values and needs to know the name to put in the config.
2019-08-21 10:46:35 -06:00

184 lines
5.5 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Matthew Holt and The Caddy Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package caddyhttp
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"net/http"
"github.com/caddyserver/caddy/v2"
)
// Route represents a set of matching rules,
// middlewares, and a responder for handling HTTP
// requests.
type Route struct {
Group string `json:"group,omitempty"`
MatcherSetsRaw []map[string]json.RawMessage `json:"match,omitempty"`
HandlersRaw []json.RawMessage `json:"handle,omitempty"`
Terminal bool `json:"terminal,omitempty"`
// decoded values
MatcherSets []MatcherSet `json:"-"`
Handlers []MiddlewareHandler `json:"-"`
}
// Empty returns true if the route has all zero/default values.
func (r Route) Empty() bool {
return len(r.MatcherSetsRaw) == 0 &&
len(r.MatcherSets) == 0 &&
len(r.HandlersRaw) == 0 &&
len(r.Handlers) == 0 &&
!r.Terminal &&
r.Group == ""
}
func (r Route) anyMatcherSetMatches(req *http.Request) bool {
for _, ms := range r.MatcherSets {
if ms.Match(req) {
return true
}
}
// if no matchers, always match
return len(r.MatcherSets) == 0
}
// MatcherSet is a set of matchers which
// must all match in order for the request
// to be matched successfully.
type MatcherSet []RequestMatcher
// Match returns true if the request matches all
// matchers in mset.
func (mset MatcherSet) Match(r *http.Request) bool {
for _, m := range mset {
if !m.Match(r) {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// RouteList is a list of server routes that can
// create a middleware chain.
type RouteList []Route
// Provision sets up all the routes by loading the modules.
func (routes RouteList) Provision(ctx caddy.Context) error {
for i, route := range routes {
// matchers
for _, matcherSet := range route.MatcherSetsRaw {
var matchers MatcherSet
for modName, rawMsg := range matcherSet {
val, err := ctx.LoadModule("http.matchers."+modName, rawMsg)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("loading matcher module '%s': %v", modName, err)
}
matchers = append(matchers, val.(RequestMatcher))
}
routes[i].MatcherSets = append(routes[i].MatcherSets, matchers)
}
routes[i].MatcherSetsRaw = nil // allow GC to deallocate - TODO: Does this help?
// handlers
for j, rawMsg := range route.HandlersRaw {
mh, err := ctx.LoadModuleInline("handler", "http.handlers", rawMsg)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("loading handler module in position %d: %v", j, err)
}
routes[i].Handlers = append(routes[i].Handlers, mh.(MiddlewareHandler))
}
routes[i].HandlersRaw = nil // allow GC to deallocate - TODO: Does this help?
}
return nil
}
// BuildCompositeRoute creates a chain of handlers by
// applying all of the matching routes.
func (routes RouteList) BuildCompositeRoute(req *http.Request) Handler {
if len(routes) == 0 {
return emptyHandler
}
var mid []Middleware
groups := make(map[string]struct{})
for _, route := range routes {
// route must match at least one of the matcher sets
if !route.anyMatcherSetMatches(req) {
continue
}
// if route is part of a group, ensure only the
// first matching route in the group is applied
if route.Group != "" {
_, ok := groups[route.Group]
if ok {
// this group has already been satisfied
// by a matching route
continue
}
// this matching route satisfies the group
groups[route.Group] = struct{}{}
}
// apply the rest of the route
for _, mh := range route.Handlers {
// we have to be sure to wrap mh outside
// of our current stack frame so that the
// reference to this mh isn't overwritten
// on the next iteration, leaving the last
// middleware in the chain as the ONLY
// middleware in the chain!
mid = append(mid, wrapMiddleware(mh))
}
// if this route is supposed to be last, don't
// compile any more into the chain
if route.Terminal {
break
}
}
// build the middleware chain, with the responder at the end
stack := emptyHandler
for i := len(mid) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
stack = mid[i](stack)
}
return stack
}
// wrapMiddleware wraps m such that it can be correctly
// appended to a list of middleware. We can't do this
// directly in a loop because it relies on a reference
// to mh not changing until the execution of its handler,
// which is deferred by multiple func closures. In other
// words, we need to pull this particular MiddlewareHandler
// pointer into its own stack frame to preserve it so it
// won't be overwritten in future loop iterations.
func wrapMiddleware(mh MiddlewareHandler) Middleware {
return func(next HandlerFunc) HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) error {
// TODO: This is where request tracing could be implemented; also
// see below to trace the responder as well
// TODO: Trace a diff of the request, would be cool too! see what changed since the last middleware (host, headers, URI...)
// TODO: see what the std lib gives us in terms of stack tracing too
return mh.ServeHTTP(w, r, next)
}
}
}