From 078d686a0ac0aed212db97d73bd1e4a9387a4956 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Lo=C3=AFc=20Hoguin?= Date: Sun, 6 Jul 2014 13:10:35 +0200 Subject: Provide installable man pages make docs: generate Markdown and man pages in doc/ make install-docs: install man pages to be usable directly Docs are generated from the ezdoc files in doc/src/. --- guide/req.md | 312 ----------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 312 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 guide/req.md (limited to 'guide/req.md') diff --git a/guide/req.md b/guide/req.md deleted file mode 100644 index 074f325..0000000 --- a/guide/req.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,312 +0,0 @@ -The Req object -============== - -The Req object is this variable that you will use to obtain -information about a request, read the body of the request -and send a response. - -A special variable ------------------- - -While we call it an "object", it is not an object in the -OOP sense of the term. In fact it is completely opaque -to you and the only way you can perform operations using -it is by calling the functions from the `cowboy_req` -module. - -Almost all the calls to the `cowboy_req` module will -return an updated request object. Just like you would -keep the updated `State` variable in a gen_server, -you MUST keep the updated `Req` variable in a Cowboy -handler. Cowboy will use this object to know whether -a response has been sent when the handler has finished -executing. - -The Req object allows accessing both immutable and -mutable state. This means that calling some of the -functions twice will not produce the same result. -For example, when streaming the request body, the -function will return the body by chunks, one at a -time, until there is none left. - -It also caches the result of operations performed -on the immutable state. That means that some calls -will give a result much faster when called many times. - -Overview of the cowboy_req interface ------------------------------------- - -The `cowboy_req` interface is divided in four groups -of functions, each having a well defined return type -signature common to the entire group. - -The first group, access functions, will always return -`{Value, Req}`. The group includes all the following -functions: `binding/{2,3}`, `bindings/1`, `body_length/1`, -`cookie/{2,3}`, `cookies/1`, `header/{2,3}`, `headers/1`, -`host/1`, `host_info/1`, `host_url/1`, `meta/{2,3}`, -`method/1`, `path/1`, `path_info/1`, `peer/1`, `port/1`, -`qs/1`, `qs_val/{2,3}`, `qs_vals/1`, `url/1`, `version/1`. - -The second group, question functions, will always return -a `boolean()`. The group includes the following three -functions: `has_body/1`, `has_resp_body/1`, `has_resp_header/2`. - -The third group contains the functions that manipulate -the socket or perform operations that may legitimately fail. -They may return `{Result, Req}`, `{Result, Value, Req}` -or `{error, atom()}`. This includes the following functions: -`body/{1,2}`, `body_qs/{1,2}`, `chunked_reply/{2,3}`, -`parse_header/{2,3}`, `part/{1,2}`, `part_body/{1,2}` -and `reply/{2,3,4}`. Finally, the group also includes the -`chunk/2` and `continue/1` functions which always return `ok`. - -The final group modifies the Req object state without -performing any immediate operations. As these functions -can't fail, they always return a new `Req` directly. -This includes the following functions: `compact/1`, -`delete_resp_header/2`, `set_meta/3`, `set_resp_body/2`, -`set_resp_body_fun/{2,3}`, `set_resp_cookie/4`, `set_resp_header/3`. - -This chapter covers most of the first group, plus a few other -functions. The next few chapters cover cookies handling, reading -the request body and sending a response. - -Request -------- - -When a client performs a request, it first sends a few required -values. They are sent differently depending on the protocol -being used, but the intent is the same. They indicate to the -server the type of action it wants to do and how to locate -the resource to perform it on. - -The method identifies the action. Standard methods include -GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH, POST, PUT, DELETE. Method names -are case sensitive. - -``` erlang -{Method, Req2} = cowboy_req:method(Req). -``` - -The host, port and path parts of the URL identify the resource -being accessed. The host and port information may not be -available if the client uses HTTP/1.0. - -``` erlang -{Host, Req2} = cowboy_req:host(Req), -{Port, Req3} = cowboy_req:port(Req2), -{Path, Req4} = cowboy_req:path(Req3). -``` - -The version used by the client can of course also be obtained. - -``` erlang -{Version, Req2} = cowboy_req:version(Req). -``` - -Do note however that clients claiming to implement one version -of the protocol does not mean they implement it fully, or even -properly. - -Bindings --------- - -After routing the request, bindings are available. Bindings -are these parts of the host or path that you chose to extract -when defining the routes of your application. - -You can fetch a single binding. The value will be `undefined` -if the binding doesn't exist. - -``` erlang -{Binding, Req2} = cowboy_req:binding(my_binding, Req). -``` - -If you need a different value when the binding doesn't exist, -you can change the default. - -``` erlang -{Binding, Req2} = cowboy_req:binding(my_binding, Req, 42). -``` - -You can also obtain all bindings in one call. They will be -returned as a list of key/value tuples. - -``` erlang -{AllBindings, Req2} = cowboy_req:bindings(Req). -``` - -If you used `...` at the beginning of the route's pattern -for the host, you can retrieve the matched part of the host. -The value will be `undefined` otherwise. - -``` erlang -{HostInfo, Req2} = cowboy_req:host_info(Req). -``` - -Similarly, if you used `...` at the end of the route's -pattern for the path, you can retrieve the matched part, -or get `undefined` otherwise. - -``` erlang -{PathInfo, Req2} = cowboy_req:path_info(Req). -``` - -Query string ------------- - -The query string can be obtained directly. - -``` erlang -{Qs, Req2} = cowboy_req:qs(Req). -``` - -You can also requests only one value. - -``` erlang -{QsVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:qs_val(<<"lang">>, Req). -``` - -If that value is optional, you can define a default to simplify -your task. - -``` erlang -{QsVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:qs_val(<<"lang">>, Req, <<"en">>). -``` - -Finally, you can obtain all query string values. - -``` erlang -{AllValues, Req2} = cowboy_req:qs_vals(Req). -``` - -Request URL ------------ - -You can reconstruct the full URL of the resource. - -``` erlang -{URL, Req2} = cowboy_req:url(Req). -``` - -You can also obtain only the base of the URL, excluding the -path and query string. - -``` erlang -{BaseURL, Req2} = cowboy_req:host_url(Req). -``` - -Headers -------- - -Cowboy allows you to obtain the header values as string, -or parsed into a more meaningful representation. - -This will get the string value of a header. - -``` erlang -{HeaderVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:header(<<"content-type">>, Req). -``` - -You can of course set a default in case the header is missing. - -``` erlang -{HeaderVal, Req2} - = cowboy_req:header(<<"content-type">>, Req, <<"text/plain">>). -``` - -And also obtain all headers. - -``` erlang -{AllHeaders, Req2} = cowboy_req:headers(Req). -``` - -To parse the previous header, simply call `parse_header/{2,3}` -where you would call `header/{2,3}` otherwise. Note that the -return value changes and includes the result of the operation -as the first element of the returned tuple. A successful parse -returns `ok`. - -``` erlang -{ok, ParsedVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:parse_header(<<"content-type">>, Req). -``` - -When Cowboy doesn't know how to parse the given header, the -result of the operation will be `undefined` and the string value -will be returned instead. - -``` erlang -{undefined, HeaderVal, Req2} - = cowboy_req:parse_header(<<"unicorn-header">>, Req). -``` - -When parsing fails, `{error, Reason}` is returned instead. - -You can of course define a default value. Note that the default -value you specify here is the parsed value you'd like to get -by default. - -``` erlang -{ok, ParsedVal, Req2} - = cowboy_req:parse_header(<<"content-type">>, Req, - {<<"text">>, <<"plain">>, []}). -``` - -The list of known headers and default values is defined in the -manual. Also note that the result of parsing is cached, so -calling this function multiple times for the same values will -not have a significant performance impact. - -Meta ----- - -Cowboy will sometimes associate some meta information with -the request. Built-in meta values are listed in the manual -for their respective modules. - -This will get a meta value. The returned value will be `undefined` -if it isn't defined. - -``` erlang -{MetaVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:meta(websocket_version, Req). -``` - -You can change the default value if needed. - -``` erlang -{MetaVal, Req2} = cowboy_req:meta(websocket_version, Req, 13). -``` - -You can also define your own meta values. The name must be -an `atom()`. - -``` erlang -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_meta(the_answer, 42, Req). -``` - -Peer ----- - -You can obtain the peer address and port number. This is -not necessarily the actual IP and port of the client, but -rather the one of the machine that connected to the server. - -``` erlang -{{IP, Port}, Req2} = cowboy_req:peer(Req). -``` - -Reducing the memory footprint ------------------------------ - -When you are done reading information from the request object -and know you are not going to access it anymore, for example -when using long-polling or Websocket, you can use the `compact/1` -function to remove most of the data from the request object and -free memory. - -``` erlang -Req2 = cowboy_req:compact(Req). -``` - -You will still be able to send a reply if needed. -- cgit v1.2.3