Adrien Marquès caa57889b4 | ||
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api | ||
datatype | ||
internal | ||
.drone.yml | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
builder.go | ||
errors.go | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
server.go |
README.md
| aicra |
Aicra is a configuration-driven web framework written in Go that allows you to create a fully featured REST API.
The whole management is done for you from a configuration file describing your API, you're left with implementing :
- handlers
- optionnally middle-wares (e.g. authentication, csrf)
- and optionnally your custom type checkers to check input parameters
The aicra server fulfills the net/http
Server interface.
A example project is available here
Table of contents
I/ Installation
You need a recent machine with go
installed. This package has not been tested under the version 1.10.
go get -u git.xdrm.io/go/aicra/cmd/aicra
The library should now be available as git.xdrm.io/go/aicra
in your imports.
II/ Development
1) Main executable
Your main executable will declare and run the aicra server, it might look quite like the code below.
package main
import (
"log"
"net/http"
"git.xdrm.io/go/aicra"
"git.xdrm.io/go/aicra/datatype"
"git.xdrm.io/go/aicra/datatype/builtin"
)
func main() {
// 1. select your datatypes (builtin, custom)
var dtypes []datatype.T
dtypes = append(dtypes, builtin.AnyDataType{})
dtypes = append(dtypes, builtin.BoolDataType{})
dtypes = append(dtypes, builtin.UintDataType{})
dtypes = append(dtypes, builtin.StringDataType{})
// 2. create the server from the configuration file
server, err := aicra.New("path/to/your/api/definition.json", dtypes...)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cannot built aicra server: %s\n", err)
}
// 3. bind your implementations
server.HandleFunc(http.MethodGet, "/path", func(req api.Request, res *api.Response){
// ... process stuff ...
res.SetError(api.ErrorSuccess());
})
// 4. extract to http server
httpServer, err := server.ToHTTPServer()
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cannot get to http server: %s", err)
}
// 4. launch server
log.Fatal( http.ListenAndServe("localhost:8080", server) )
}
2) API Configuration
The whole project behavior is described inside a json file (e.g. usually api.json). For a better understanding of the format, take a look at this working template. This file defines :
- routes and their methods
- every input for each method (called argument)
- every output for each method
- scope permissions (list of permissions needed by clients)
- input policy :
- type of argument (i.e. for data types)
- required/optional
- variable renaming
Definition
The root of the json file must be an array containing your requests definitions.
For each, you will have to create fields described in the table above.
field path | description | example |
---|---|---|
info |
A short human-readable description of what the method does | create a new user |
scope |
A 2-dimensional array of permissions. The first dimension can be translated to a or operator, the second dimension as a and. It allows you to combine permissions in complex ways. | [["A", "B"], ["C", "D"]] can be translated to : this method needs users to have permissions (A and B) or (C and D) |
in |
The list of arguments that the clients will have to provide. See here for details. | |
out |
The list of output data that will be returned by your controllers. It has the same syntax as the in field but is only use for readability purpose and documentation. |
Input Arguments
1. Input types
Input arguments defines what data from the HTTP request the method needs. Aicra is able to extract 3 types of data :
- URI - Curly Braces enclosed strings inside the request path. For instance, if your controller is bound to the
/user/{id}
URI, you can set the input argument{id}
matching this uri part. - Query - data formatted at the end of the URL following the standard HTTP Query syntax.
- URL encoded - data send inside the body of the request but following the HTTP Query syntax.
- Multipart - data send inside the body of the request with a dedicated format. This format is not very lightweight but allows you to receive data as well as files.
- JSON - data send inside the body as a json object ; each key being a variable name, each value its content. Note that the HTTP header 'Content-Type' must be set to
application/json
for the API to use it.
2. Global Format
The in
field in each method contains as list of arguments where the key is the argument name, and the value defines how to manage the variable.
Variable names from URI or Query must be named accordingly :
- the URI variable
{id}
from your request route must be named{id}
.- the variable
somevar
in the Query has to be namesGET@somevar
.
Example
In this example we want 3 arguments :
- the 1^st^ one is send at the end of the URI and is a number compliant with the
int
type checker. It is renamedarticle_id
, this new name will be sent to the handler. - the 2^nd^ one is send in the query (e.g. http://host/uri?get-var=value). It must be a valid
string
or not given at all (the?
at the beginning of the type tells that the argument is optional) ; it will be namedtitle
. - the 3^rd^ can be send with a JSON body, in multipart or URL encoded it makes no difference and only give clients a choice over the technology to use. If not renamed, the variable will be given to the handler with the name
content
.
[
{
"method": "PUT",
"path": "/article/{id}",
"scope": [["author"]],
"info": "updates an article",
"in": {
"{id}": { "info": "article id", "type": "int", "name": "article_id" },
"GET@title": { "info": "new article title", "type": "?string", "name": "title" },
"content": { "info": "new article content", "type": "string" }
},
"out": {
"id": { "info": "updated article id", "type": "uint" },
"title": { "info": "updated article title", "type": "string" },
"content": { "info": "updated article content", "type": "string" }
}
}
]
III/ Change Log
- human-readable json configuration
- nested routes (i.e.
/user/:id:
and/user/post/:id:
) - nested URL arguments (i.e.
/user/:id:
and/user/:id:/post/:id:
) - useful http methods: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE
- manage URL, query and body arguments:
- multipart/form-data (variables and file uploads)
- application/x-www-form-urlencoded
- application/json
- required vs. optional parameters with a default value
- parameter renaming
- generic type check (i.e. implement custom types alongside built-in ones)
- built-in types
any
- wildcard matching all valuesint
- see go typesuint
- see go typesfloat
- see go typesstring
- any textstring(min, max)
- any string with a length betweenmin
andmax
[a]
- array containing only elements matchinga
type[a:b]
- map containing only keys of typea
and values of typeb
(a or b can be ommited)
- generic controllers implementation (shared objects)
- response interface
- log bound resources when building the aicra server
- fail on check for unimplemented resources at server boot.
- fail on check for unavailable types in api.json at server boot.