iris/core/router/party.go
Gerasimos (Makis) Maropoulos 57dc64625d file-server: fix ShowList on root dir
Former-commit-id: 6795382235d76942bcfd31ecc0b4ab02ecb85a8a
2020-07-05 05:39:48 +03:00

258 lines
12 KiB
Go

package router
import (
"github.com/kataras/iris/v12/context"
"github.com/kataras/iris/v12/core/errgroup"
"github.com/kataras/iris/v12/macro"
)
// Party is just a group joiner of routes which have the same prefix and share same middleware(s) also.
// Party could also be named as 'Join' or 'Node' or 'Group' , Party chosen because it is fun.
//
// Look the `APIBuilder` structure for its implementation.
type Party interface {
// ConfigureContainer accepts one or more functions that can be used
// to configure dependency injection features of this Party
// such as register dependency and register handlers that will automatically inject any valid dependency.
// However, if the "builder" parameter is nil or not provided then it just returns the *APIContainer,
// which automatically initialized on Party allocation.
//
// It returns the same `APIBuilder` featured with Dependency Injection.
ConfigureContainer(builder ...func(*APIContainer)) *APIContainer
// GetRelPath returns the current party's relative path.
// i.e:
// if r := app.Party("/users"), then the `r.GetRelPath()` is the "/users".
// if r := app.Party("www.") or app.Subdomain("www") then the `r.GetRelPath()` is the "www.".
GetRelPath() string
// GetReporter returns the reporter for adding or receiving any errors caused when building the API.
GetReporter() *errgroup.Group
// Macros returns the macro collection that is responsible
// to register custom macros with their own parameter types and their macro functions for all routes.
//
// Learn more at: https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples/routing/dynamic-path
Macros() *macro.Macros
// OnErrorCode registers a handlers chain for this `Party` for a specific HTTP status code.
// Read more at: http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-status-codes/http-status-codes.xhtml
// Look `OnAnyErrorCode` too.
OnErrorCode(statusCode int, handlers ...context.Handler) []*Route
// OnAnyErrorCode registers a handlers chain for all error codes
// (4xxx and 5xxx, change the `ClientErrorCodes` and `ServerErrorCodes` variables to modify those)
// Look `OnErrorCode` too.
OnAnyErrorCode(handlers ...context.Handler) []*Route
// Party groups routes which may have the same prefix and share same handlers,
// returns that new rich subrouter.
//
// You can even declare a subdomain with relativePath as "mysub." or see `Subdomain`.
Party(relativePath string, middleware ...context.Handler) Party
// PartyFunc same as `Party`, groups routes that share a base path or/and same handlers.
// However this function accepts a function that receives this created Party instead.
// Returns the Party in order the caller to be able to use this created Party to continue the
// top-bottom routes "tree".
//
// Note: `iris#Party` and `core/router#Party` describes the exactly same interface.
//
// Usage:
// app.PartyFunc("/users", func(u iris.Party){
// u.Use(authMiddleware, logMiddleware)
// u.Get("/", getAllUsers)
// u.Post("/", createOrUpdateUser)
// u.Delete("/", deleteUser)
// })
//
// Look `Party` for more.
PartyFunc(relativePath string, partyBuilderFunc func(p Party)) Party
// Subdomain returns a new party which is responsible to register routes to
// this specific "subdomain".
//
// If called from a child party then the subdomain will be prepended to the path instead of appended.
// So if app.Subdomain("admin").Subdomain("panel") then the result is: "panel.admin.".
Subdomain(subdomain string, middleware ...context.Handler) Party
// Use appends Handler(s) to the current Party's routes and child routes.
// If the current Party is the root, then it registers the middleware to all child Parties' routes too.
Use(middleware ...context.Handler)
// Done appends to the very end, Handler(s) to the current Party's routes and child routes.
// The difference from .Use is that this/or these Handler(s) are being always running last.
Done(handlers ...context.Handler)
// Reset removes all the begin and done handlers that may derived from the parent party via `Use` & `Done`,
// and the execution rules.
// Note that the `Reset` will not reset the handlers that are registered via `UseGlobal` & `DoneGlobal`.
//
// Returns this Party.
Reset() Party
// AllowMethods will re-register the future routes that will be registered
// via `Handle`, `Get`, `Post`, ... to the given "methods" on that Party and its children "Parties",
// duplicates are not registered.
//
// Call of `AllowMethod` will override any previous allow methods.
AllowMethods(methods ...string) Party
// SetExecutionRules alters the execution flow of the route handlers outside of the handlers themselves.
//
// For example, if for some reason the desired result is the (done or all) handlers to be executed no matter what
// even if no `ctx.Next()` is called in the previous handlers, including the begin(`Use`),
// the main(`Handle`) and the done(`Done`) handlers themselves, then:
// Party#SetExecutionRules(iris.ExecutionRules {
// Begin: iris.ExecutionOptions{Force: true},
// Main: iris.ExecutionOptions{Force: true},
// Done: iris.ExecutionOptions{Force: true},
// })
//
// Note that if : true then the only remained way to "break" the handler chain is by `ctx.StopExecution()` now that `ctx.Next()` does not matter.
//
// These rules are per-party, so if a `Party` creates a child one then the same rules will be applied to that as well.
// Reset of these rules (before `Party#Handle`) can be done with `Party#SetExecutionRules(iris.ExecutionRules{})`.
//
// The most common scenario for its use can be found inside Iris MVC Applications;
// when we want the `Done` handlers of that specific mvc app's `Party`
// to be executed but we don't want to add `ctx.Next()` on the `OurController#EndRequest`.
//
// Returns this Party.
//
// Example: https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples/mvc/middleware/without-ctx-next
SetExecutionRules(executionRules ExecutionRules) Party
// SetRegisterRule sets a `RouteRegisterRule` for this Party and its children.
// Available values are:
// * RouteOverride (the default one)
// * RouteSkip
// * RouteError
// * RouteOverlap.
SetRegisterRule(rule RouteRegisterRule) Party
// Handle registers a route to the server's router.
// if empty method is passed then handler(s) are being registered to all methods, same as .Any.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Handle(method string, registeredPath string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// HandleMany works like `Handle` but can receive more than one
// paths separated by spaces and returns always a slice of *Route instead of a single instance of Route.
//
// It's useful only if the same handler can handle more than one request paths,
// otherwise use `Party` which can handle many paths with different handlers and middlewares.
//
// Usage:
// app.HandleMany(iris.MethodGet, "/user /user/{id:uint64} /user/me", userHandler)
// At the other side, with `Handle` we've had to write:
// app.Handle(iris.MethodGet, "/user", userHandler)
// app.Handle(iris.MethodGet, "/user/{id:uint64}", userHandler)
// app.Handle(iris.MethodGet, "/user/me", userHandler)
//
// This method is used behind the scenes at the `Controller` function
// in order to handle more than one paths for the same controller instance.
HandleMany(method string, relativePath string, handlers ...context.Handler) []*Route
// HandleDir registers a handler that serves HTTP requests
// with the contents of a file system (physical or embedded).
//
// first parameter : the route path
// second parameter : the system or the embedded directory that needs to be served
// third parameter : not required, the directory options, set fields is optional.
//
// Alternatively, to get just the handler for that look the FileServer function instead.
//
// api.HandleDir("/static", "./assets", DirOptions {ShowList: true, Gzip: true, IndexName: "index.html"})
//
// Returns all the registered routes, including GET index and path patterm and HEAD.
//
// Examples can be found at: https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples/file-server
HandleDir(requestPath, directory string, opts ...DirOptions) []*Route
// None registers an "offline" route
// see context.ExecRoute(routeName) and
// party.Routes().Online(handleResultregistry.*Route, "GET") and
// Offline(handleResultregistry.*Route)
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
None(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Get registers a route for the Get HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Get(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Post registers a route for the Post HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Post(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Put registers a route for the Put HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Put(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Delete registers a route for the Delete HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Delete(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Connect registers a route for the Connect HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Connect(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Head registers a route for the Head HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Head(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Options registers a route for the Options HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Options(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Patch registers a route for the Patch HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Patch(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Trace registers a route for the Trace HTTP Method.
//
// Returns the read-only route information.
Trace(path string, handlers ...context.Handler) *Route
// Any registers a route for ALL of the HTTP methods:
// Get
// Post
// Put
// Delete
// Head
// Patch
// Options
// Connect
// Trace
Any(registeredPath string, handlers ...context.Handler) []*Route
// CreateRoutes returns a list of Party-based Routes.
// It does NOT registers the route. Use `Handle, Get...` methods instead.
// This method can be used for third-parties Iris helpers packages and tools
// that want a more detailed view of Party-based Routes before take the decision to register them.
CreateRoutes(methods []string, relativePath string, handlers ...context.Handler) []*Route
// StaticContent registers a GET and HEAD method routes to the requestPath
// that are ready to serve raw static bytes, memory cached.
//
// Returns the GET *Route.
StaticContent(requestPath string, cType string, content []byte) *Route
// Favicon serves static favicon
// accepts 2 parameters, second is optional
// favPath (string), declare the system directory path of the __.ico
// requestPath (string), it's the route's path, by default this is the "/favicon.ico" because some browsers tries to get this by default first,
// you can declare your own path if you have more than one favicon (desktop, mobile and so on)
//
// this func will add a route for you which will static serve the /yuorpath/yourfile.ico to the /yourfile.ico
// (nothing special that you can't handle by yourself).
// Note that you have to call it on every favicon you have to serve automatically (desktop, mobile and so on).
//
// Returns the GET *Route.
Favicon(favPath string, requestPath ...string) *Route
// Layout overrides the parent template layout with a more specific layout for this Party.
// It returns the current Party.
//
// The "tmplLayoutFile" should be a relative path to the templates dir.
// Usage:
//
// app := iris.New()
// app.RegisterView(iris.$VIEW_ENGINE("./views", ".$extension"))
// my := app.Party("/my").Layout("layouts/mylayout.html")
// my.Get("/", func(ctx iris.Context) {
// ctx.View("page1.html")
// })
//
// Examples: https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples/view
Layout(tmplLayoutFile string) Party
}