caddy/middleware/middleware.go
Matthew Holt c7af6725ca Removed Host() and Port() functions from Controller
I don't think they'll be necessary; can get same info from request Host header
2015-04-15 23:17:28 -06:00

133 lines
5.3 KiB
Go

// Package middleware provides some types and functions common among middleware.
package middleware
import "net/http"
type (
// Generator represents the outer layer of a middleware that
// parses tokens to configure the middleware instance.
//
// Note: This type will be moved into a different package in the future.
Generator func(Controller) (Middleware, error)
// 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.
//
// Note: This type will be moved into a different package in the future.
Middleware func(Handler) Handler
// Handler is like http.Handler except ServeHTTP returns a status code
// and an error. The status code is for the client's benefit; the error
// value is for the server's benefit. The status code will be sent to
// the client while the error value will be logged privately. Sometimes,
// an error status code (4xx or 5xx) may be returned with a nil error
// when there is no reason to log the error on the server.
//
// If a HandlerFunc returns an error (status >= 400), it should NOT
// write to the response. This philosophy makes middleware.Handler
// different from http.Handler: error handling should happen at the
// application layer or in dedicated error-handling middleware only
// rather than with an "every middleware for itself" paradigm.
//
// The application or error-handling middleware should incorporate logic
// to ensure that the client always gets a proper response according to
// the status code. For security reasons, it should probably not reveal
// the actual error message. (Instead it should be logged, for example.)
//
// Handlers which do write to the response should return a status value
// < 400 as a signal that a response has been written. In other words,
// only error-handling middleware or the application will write to the
// response for a status code >= 400. When ANY handler writes to the
// response, it should return a status code < 400 to signal others to
// NOT write to the response again, which would be erroneous.
Handler interface {
ServeHTTP(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request) (int, error)
}
// A Controller provides access to properties of the server. Middleware
// generators use a Controller to construct their instances.
Controller interface {
Dispenser
// Startup registers a function to execute when the server starts.
Startup(func() error)
// Shutdown registers a function to execute when the server exits.
Shutdown(func() error)
// Root returns the file path from which the server is serving.
Root() string
// Context returns the path scope that the Controller is in.
// Note: This is not currently used, but may be in the future.
Context() Path
}
// A Dispenser provides structured access to tokens from a configuration
// file. It dispenses tokens to middleware for parsing so that middleware
// can configure themselves.
Dispenser interface {
// Next loads the next token. Returns true if a token
// was loaded; false otherwise. If false, all tokens
// have already been consumed.
Next() bool
// NextArg loads the next token if it is on the same
// line. Returns true if a token was loaded; false
// otherwise. If false, all tokens on the line have
// been consumed.
NextArg() bool
// NextLine loads the next token only if it is NOT on the same
// line as the current token, and returns true if a token was
// loaded; false otherwise. If false, there is not another token
// or it is on the same line.
NextLine() bool
// NextBlock can be used as the condition of a for loop
// to load the next token as long as it opens a block or
// is already in a block. It returns true if a token was
// loaded, or false when the block's closing curly brace
// was loaded and thus the block ended. Nested blocks are
// not (currently) supported.
NextBlock() bool
// Val gets the text of the current token.
Val() string
// Args is a convenience function that loads the next arguments
// (tokens on the same line) into an arbitrary number of strings
// pointed to in arguments. If there are fewer tokens available
// than string pointers, the remaining strings will not be changed
// and false will be returned. If there were enough tokens available
// to fill the arguments, then true will be returned.
Args(...*string) bool
// RemainingArgs loads any more arguments (tokens on the same line)
// into a slice and returns them. Open curly brace tokens also indicate
// the end of arguments, and the curly brace is not included in
// the return value nor is it loaded.
RemainingArgs() []string
// ArgErr returns an argument error, meaning that another
// argument was expected but not found. In other words,
// a line break, EOF, or open curly brace was encountered instead of
// an argument.
ArgErr() error
// Err generates a custom parse error with a message of msg.
Err(string) error
}
)
// HandlerFunc is a convenience type like http.HandlerFunc, except
// ServeHTTP returns a status code and an error. See Handler
// documentation for more information.
type 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)
}