257f1318c9
Former-commit-id: e2ed23e7c4f52237cf87148d9a85d01e89d479be |
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bind.go | ||
controller_handle_test.go | ||
controller_method_parser.go | ||
controller_test.go | ||
controller.go | ||
engine_handler_test.go | ||
engine.go | ||
func_result_test.go | ||
func_result.go | ||
handler_test.go | ||
handler.go | ||
path_param_binder_test.go | ||
path_param_binder.go | ||
README.md | ||
reflect.go | ||
session_controller.go |
MVC Internals
MakeHandler
- accepts a function which accepts any input and outputs any result, and any optional values that will be used as binders, if needed they will be converted in order to be faster at serve-time. Returns acontext/iris#Handler
and a non-nil error if passed function cannot be wrapped to a rawcontext/iris#Handler
Engine
- The "manager" of the controllers and handlers, can be grouped and anEngine
can have any number of children.Engine#Bind
Binds values to be used inside on one or more handlers and controllersEngine#Handler
- Creates and returns a new mvc handler, which accept any input parameters (calculated by the binders) and output any result which will be sent as a response to the HTTP Client. Calls theMakeHandler
with the Engine'sInput
values as the bindersEngine#Controller
- Creates and activates a controller based on a struct which has theC
as an embedded , anonymous, field and defines methods to be used as routes. Can accept any optional activator listeners in order to bind any custom routes or change the bindings, called once at startup
C
- Struct fields with
Struct Binding
- Methods with
Dynamic Binding
- Struct fields with
Examples can be found at: https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples/mvc.
Binding
First of all, they can be binded to func input arguments
(custom handlers) or struct fields
(controllers). We will use the term Input
for both of them.
// consume the user here as func input argument.
func myHandler(user User) {}
type myController struct {
C
// consume the user here, as struct field.
user User
}
If the input is an interface then it will check if the binding is completed this interface and it will be binded as expected.
Two types of binders are supported:
Dynamic Binding
ReturnValue
, should return a single value, no pointer to, if the consumer Input (struct field
or func input argument
) expects User
then it will be binded on each request, this is a dynamic binding based on the Context
.
type User struct {
Username string
}
myBinder := func(ctx iris.Context) User {
return User {
Username: ctx.Params().Get("username"),
}
}
myHandler := func(user User) {
// ...
}
Static Binding
Value (Service)
, this is used to bind a value instance, like a service or a database connection.
// optional but we declare interface most of the times to
// be easier to switch from production to testing or local and visa versa.
// If input is an interface then it will check if the binding is completed this interface
// and it will be binded as expected.
type Service interface {
Do() string
}
type myProductionService struct {
text string
}
func (s *myProductionService) Do() string {
return s.text
}
myService := &myProductionService{text: "something"}
myHandler := func(service Service) {
// ...
}
Bind
For Handlers
MakeHandler is used to create a handler based on a function which can accept any input arguments and export any output arguments, the input arguments can be dynamic path parameters or custom binders.
h, err := MakeHandler(myHandler, reflect.ValueOf(myBinder))
Values passed in Bind
are binded to all handlers and controllers that are expected a type of the returned value, in this case the myBinder indicates a dynamic/serve-time function which returns a User, as shown above.
m := New().Bind(myBinder)
h := m.Handler(myHandler)
For Controllers
app := iris.New()
New().Bind(myBinder).Controller(app, new(myController))
// ...
sub := app.Party("/sub")
New().Controller(sub, &myController{service: myService})
New().Controller(sub.Party("/subsub"), new(myController), func(ca *ControllerActivator) {
ca.Bind(myService)
})