3.5 KiB
Ring Router
Ring-router adds support for handlers, middleware and routing based on :request-method. Ring-router is created with reitit.ring/router function. It runs a custom route compiler, creating a optimized stucture for handling route matches, with compiled middleware chain & handlers for all request methods. It also ensures that all routes have a :handler defined.
Simple Ring app:
(require '[reitit.ring :as ring])
(defn handler [_]
{:status 200, :body "ok"})
(def app
(ring/ring-handler
(ring/router
["/ping" handler])))
Applying the handler:
(app {:request-method :get, :uri "/favicon.ico"})
; nil
(app {:request-method :get, :uri "/ping"})
; {:status 200, :body "ok"}
The expanded routes shows the compilation results:
(-> app (ring/get-router) (reitit/routes))
; [["/ping"
; {:handler #object[...]}
; #Methods{:any #Endpoint{:data {:handler #object[...]},
; :handler #object[...],
; :middleware []}}]]
Note that the compiled resuts as third element in the route vector.
Request-method based routing
Handler are also looked under request-method keys: :get, :head, :patch, :delete, :options, :post or :put. Top-level handler is used if request-method based handler is not found.
(def app
(ring/ring-handler
(ring/router
["/ping" {:name ::ping
:get handler
:post handler}])))
(app {:request-method :get, :uri "/ping"})
; {:status 200, :body "ok"}
(app {:request-method :put, :uri "/ping"})
; nil
Name-based reverse routing:
(-> app
(ring/get-router)
(reitit/match-by-name ::ping)
:path)
; "/ping"
Middleware
Middleware can be added with a :middleware key, either to top-level or under :request-method submap. It's value should be a vector value of the following:
- normal ring middleware function
handler -> request -> response - vector of middleware function
handler ?args -> request -> responseand optinally it's args.
A middleware and a handler:
(defn wrap [handler id]
(fn [request]
(handler (update request ::acc (fnil conj []) id))))
(defn handler [{:keys [::acc]}]
{:status 200, :body (conj acc :handler)})
App with nested middleware:
(def app
(ring/ring-handler
(ring/router
["/api" {:middleware [#(wrap % :api)]}
["/ping" handler]
["/admin" {:middleware [[wrap :admin]]}
["/db" {:middleware [[wrap :db]]
:delete {:middleware [[wrap :delete]]
:handler handler}}]]])))
Middleware is applied correctly:
(app {:request-method :delete, :uri "/api/ping"})
; {:status 200, :body [:api :handler]}
(app {:request-method :delete, :uri "/api/admin/db"})
; {:status 200, :body [:api :admin :db :delete :handler]}
Not found
If no routes match, nil is returned, which is not understood by Ring.
Enabling custom error messages:
(def app
(some-fn
(ring/ring-handler
(ring/router
["/ping" handler]))
(constantly {:status 404})))
(app {:uri "/invalid"})
; {:status 404}
Async Ring
All built-in middleware provide both 2 and 3-arity and are compiled for both Clojure & ClojureScript, so they work with Async Ring and Node.js too.