iris/core/router/router_wrapper.go

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package router
import "net/http"
// WrapperFunc is used as an expected input parameter signature
// for the WrapRouter. It's a "low-level" signature which is compatible
// with the net/http.
// It's being used to run or no run the router based on a custom logic.
type WrapperFunc func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, router http.HandlerFunc)
func makeWrapperFunc(original WrapperFunc, wrapperFunc WrapperFunc) WrapperFunc {
if wrapperFunc == nil {
return original
}
if original != nil {
// wrap into one function, from bottom to top, end to begin.
nextWrapper := wrapperFunc
prevWrapper := original
wrapperFunc = func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, next http.HandlerFunc) {
if next != nil {
nexthttpFunc := http.HandlerFunc(func(_w http.ResponseWriter, _r *http.Request) {
prevWrapper(_w, _r, next)
})
nextWrapper(w, r, nexthttpFunc)
}
}
}
return wrapperFunc
}
type wrapper struct {
router http.HandlerFunc // http.HandlerFunc to catch the CURRENT state of its .ServeHTTP on case of future change.
wrapperFunc WrapperFunc
}
// newWrapper returns a new http.Handler wrapped by the 'wrapperFunc'
// the "next" is the final "wrapped" input parameter.
//
// Application is responsible to make it to work on more than one wrappers
// via composition or func clojure.
func newWrapper(wrapperFunc WrapperFunc, wrapped http.HandlerFunc) http.Handler {
return &wrapper{
wrapperFunc: wrapperFunc,
router: wrapped,
}
}
func (wr *wrapper) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
wr.wrapperFunc(w, r, wr.router)
}