This chapter aims to provide you with a list of questions you must answer in order to write a good resource handler. It is meant to be usable as a step by step guide.
Can the service become unavailable, and when it does, can
we detect it? For example, database connectivity problems
may be detected early. We may also have planned outages
of all or parts of the system. Implement the
service_available
callback.
What HTTP methods does the service implement? Do we need
more than the standard OPTIONS, HEAD, GET, PUT, POST,
PATCH and DELETE? Are we not using one of those at all?
Implement the known_methods
callback.
Am I writing a handler for a collection of resources, or for a single resource?
The semantics for each of these are quite different. You should not mix collection and single resource in the same handler.
Skip this section if you are not doing a collection.
Is the collection hardcoded or dynamic? For example,
if you use the route /users
for the collection of
users then the collection is hardcoded; if you use
/forums/:category
for the collection of threads
then it isn’t. When the collection is hardcoded you
can safely assume the resource always exists.
What methods should I implement?
OPTIONS is used to get some information about the collection. It is recommended to allow it even if you do not implement it, as Cowboy has a default implementation built-in.
HEAD and GET are used to retrieve the collection. If you allow GET, also allow HEAD as there’s no extra work required to make it work.
POST is used to create a new resource inside the collection. Creating a resource by using POST on the collection is useful when resources may be created before knowing their URI, usually because parts of it are generated dynamically. A common case is some kind of auto incremented integer identifier.
The next methods are more rarely allowed.
PUT is used to create a new collection (when the collection isn’t hardcoded), or replace the entire collection.
DELETE is used to delete the entire collection.
PATCH is used to modify the collection using instructions given in the request body. A PATCH operation is atomic. The PATCH operation may be used for such things as reordering; adding, modifying or deleting parts of the collection.
Skip this section if you are doing a collection.
What methods should I implement?
OPTIONS is used to get some information about the resource. It is recommended to allow it even if you do not implement it, as Cowboy has a default implementation built-in.
HEAD and GET are used to retrieve the resource. If you allow GET, also allow HEAD as there’s no extra work required to make it work.
POST is used to update the resource.
PUT is used to create a new resource (when it doesn’t already exist) or replace the resource.
DELETE is used to delete the resource.
PATCH is used to modify the resource using instructions given in the request body. A PATCH operation is atomic. The PATCH operation may be used for adding, removing or modifying specific values in the resource.
Following the above discussion, implement the
allowed_methods
callback.
Does the resource always exist? If it may not, implement
the resource_exists
callback.
Do I need to authenticate the client before they can
access the resource? What authentication mechanisms
should I provide? This may include form-based, token-based
(in the URL or a cookie), HTTP basic, HTTP digest,
SSL certificate or any other form of authentication.
Implement the is_authorized
callback.
Do I need fine-grained access control? How do I determine
that they are authorized access? Handle that in your
is_authorized
callback.
Can access to a resource be forbidden regardless of access
being authorized? A simple example of that is censorship
of a resource. Implement the forbidden
callback.
Are there any constraints on the length of the resource URI?
For example, the URI may be used as a key in storage and may
have a limit in length. Implement uri_too_long
.
What media types do I provide? If text based, what charsets are provided? What languages do I provide?
Implement the mandatory content_types_provided
. Prefix
the callbacks with to_
for clarity. For example, to_html
or to_text
.
Implement the languages_provided
or charsets_provided
callbacks if applicable.
Is there any other header that may make the representation
of the resource vary? Implement the variances
callback.
Depending on your choices for caching content, you may
want to implement one or more of the generate_etag
,
last_modified
and expires
callbacks.
Do I want the user or user agent to actively choose a
representation available? Send a list of available
representations in the response body and implement
the multiple_choices
callback.
Do I need to keep track of what resources were deleted?
For example, you may have a mechanism where moving a
resource leaves a redirect link to its new location.
Implement the previously_existed
callback.
Was the resource moved, and is the move temporary? If
it is explicitly temporary, for example due to maintenance,
implement the moved_temporarily
callback. Otherwise,
implement the moved_permanently
callback.
Do you need to read the query string? Individual headers?
Implement malformed_request
and do all the parsing and
validation in this function. Note that the body should not
be read at this point.
May there be a request body? Will I know its size?
What’s the maximum size of the request body I’m willing
to accept? Implement valid_entity_length
.
Finally, take a look at the sections corresponding to the methods you are implementing.
Cowboy by default will send back a list of allowed methods.
Do I need to add more information to the response? Implement
the options
method.
If you implement the methods GET and/or HEAD, you must
implement one ProvideResource
callback for each
content-type returned by the content_types_provided
callback.
If you implement the methods PUT, POST and/or PATCH,
you must implement the content_types_accepted
callback,
and one AcceptCallback
callback for each content-type
it returns. Prefix the AcceptCallback
callback names
with from_
for clarity. For example, from_html
or
from_json
.
Do we want to allow the POST method to create individual
resources directly through their URI (like PUT)? Implement
the allow_missing_post
callback. It is recommended to
explicitly use PUT in these cases instead.
May there be conflicts when using PUT to create or replace
a resource? Do we want to make sure that two updates around
the same time are not cancelling one another? Implement the
is_conflict
callback.
If you implement the method DELETE, you must implement
the delete_resource
callback.
When delete_resource
returns, is the resource completely
removed from the server, including from any caching service?
If not, and/or if the deletion is asynchronous and we have
no way of knowing it has been completed yet, implement the
delete_completed
callback.