reitit/doc/ring/data_driven_middleware.md
Alexander Kiel a19849fe58 Make Map Destructuring of Namespaced Keys more Beautiful
It's possible to put the :keys keyword in the namespace of the keys one likes to
destructure. With that one can use symbols in the vector again. One advantage of
having symbols is, that Cursive grays them out if not used. I found two
occurrences of unused destructured keys.
2019-07-13 17:02:41 +03:00

3.4 KiB

Data-driven Middleware

Ring defines middleware as a function of type handler & args => request => response. It's relatively easy to understand and enables good performance. Downside is that the middleware-chain is just a opaque function, making things like debugging and composition hard. It's too easy to apply the middleware in wrong order.

Reitit defines middleware as data:

  1. Middleware can be defined as first-class data entries
  2. Middleware can be mounted as a duct-style vector (of middleware)
  3. Middleware can be optimized & compiled against an endpoint
  4. Middleware chain can be transformed by the router

Middleware as data

All values in the :middleware vector in the route data are expanded into reitit.middleware/Middleware Records with using the reitit.middleware/IntoMiddleware Protocol. By default, functions, maps and Middleware records are allowed.

Records can have arbitrary keys, but the following keys have a special purpose:

key description
:name Name of the middleware as a qualified keyword
:spec clojure.spec definition for the route data, see route data validation (optional)
:wrap The actual middleware function of handler & args => request => response
:compile Middleware compilation function, see compiling middleware.

Middleware Records are accessible in their raw form in the compiled route results, thus available for inventories, creating api-docs etc.

For the actual request processing, the Records are unwrapped into normal functions and composed into a middleware function chain, yielding zero runtime penalty.

Creating Middleware

The following produce identical middleware runtime function.

Function

(defn wrap [handler id]
  (fn [request]
    (handler (update request ::acc (fnil conj []) id))))

Map

(def wrap3
  {:name ::wrap3
   :description "Middleware that does things."
   :wrap wrap})

Record

(require '[reitit.middleware :as middleware])

(def wrap2
  (middleware/map->Middleware
    {:name ::wrap2
     :description "Middleware that does things."
     :wrap wrap}))

Using Middleware

:middleware is merged to endpoints by the router.

(require '[reitit.ring :as ring])

(defn handler [{::keys [acc]}]
  {:status 200, :body (conj acc :handler)})

(def app
  (ring/ring-handler
    (ring/router
      ["/api" {:middleware [[wrap 1] [wrap2 2]]}
       ["/ping" {:get {:middleware [[wrap3 3]]
                       :handler handler}}]])))

All the middleware are applied correctly:

(app {:request-method :get, :uri "/api/ping"})
; {:status 200, :body [1 2 3 :handler]}

Compiling middleware

Middleware can be optimized against an endpoint using middleware compilation.

Ideas for the future

  • Support Middleware dependency resolution with new keys :requires and :provides. Values are set of top-level keys of the request. e.g.
    • InjectUserIntoRequestMiddleware requires #{:session} and provides #{:user}
    • AuthorizationMiddleware requires #{:user}

Ideas welcome & see issues for details.