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Cav
An experimental server framework for Deno.
NOTE: This project is currently being rebuilt from the ground up. See here for the latest release. All published versions are prototypes and should NOT be used in production.
Features:
- Declarative request routing
- Flexible body parsing
- Static file serving
- Custom context
- Signed cookies
- Web socket support
- Client fetch
- End-to-end type safety
- Runtime TypeScript bundling
The rest of this readme is a temporary home for the rough draft of the getting started guide.
Setup
Cav builds on standard Deno concepts. If you haven’t already, read through the manual to get acquainted.
Further, the Deno Deploy documentation is helpful for learning more about handling HTTP with Deno’s standard library.
Routing requests
Handlers
Deno’s http module exports the following handler type:
// https://deno.land/std/http/server.ts
export interface ConnInfo {
readonly localAddr: Deno.Addr;
readonly remoteAddr: Deno.Addr;
}
export type Handler = (
request: Request,
connInfo: ConnInfo,
) => Response | Promise<Response>;
Cav’s Router (described below) accepts handlers that implement this standard type while providing a few extra properties on the second argument:
// https://deno.land/x/cav/router.ts
// ConnInfo comes from Deno's http module
import type { ConnInfo } from "./deps.ts";
export interface Context extends ConnInfo {
readonly url: URL;
readonly path: string;
readonly param: { readonly [x: string]: string };
}
export type Handler = (
req: Request,
context: Context,
) => Response | Promise<Response>;
The url
property is a URL instance of the full request url. The path
property is the unrouted portion of the request path, and the param
property
is for path parameters captured during routing. The first Router to encounter a
request will set the path
equal to the full request path, and the param
object will be empty. As the request is routed through the handler tree, these
properties will be updated; newly captured path parameters will merge with
previously captured parameters, and the path will shrink from the left hand side
as path segments are “consumed.”
Note: Because of the way the Handler type is defined, Routers also accept standard Deno handlers, such as those in the Deno Deploy examples gallery.
Declaring routers
To create a standard Deno handler for routing requests between Cav Handlers
(using the request path), use the router
factory function:
// https://deno.land/x/cav/router.ts
import type { ConnInfo } from "./deps.ts";
export interface RouterShape {
// The keys are the route path
[x: string]: Handler | Handler[] | null;
}
export type Router<Shape extends RouterShape> = (
& Shape
& ((req: Request, connInfo: ConnInfo) => Promise<Response>)
);
export function router<Shape extends RouterShape>(shape: Shape): Router<Shape> {
// ...
}
Because the created routers are standard Deno handlers, they can be served using the standard library:
#!/usr/bin/env deno run --allow-net
import { serve, router } from "https://deno.land/x/cav/mod.ts";
const app = router({
"hello": (_req, _context) => new Response("hello world"),
"goodbye": (_req, _context) => new Response("goodbye world"),
});
serve(app, {
onError: err => {
if (err instanceof Deno.errors.NotFound) {
return new Response("404 not found", { status: 404 });
}
console.error(err);
return new Response("500 internal server error", { status: 500 });
},
});
// Listening on http://localhost:8000/
(The serve
function is a
re-export from the standard library’s HTTP module, for convenience.)
In the example above, a request to either localhost:8000/hello
or
localhost:8000/goodbye
will return the appropriate response and any other
request path will result in a 404 not found
error being returned to the
client.
Path matching
The router path syntax is inspired by the URLPattern syntax, but only basic path parameters are supported:
const app = router({
"": () => new Response("index"),
":example": (_, context) => new Response(`Example: ${context.param.example}`),
":a/b/:c": (_, context) => {
return new Response(`A: ${context.param.a}, C: ${context.param.c}`);
},
});
Paths are sorted during router construction based on path depth, with static
path segments taking precedence over parameter segments. Paths can end in a *
segment, which allows them to match partially with a request. The unmatched
portion of the path is forwarded to the next handler on the context
object:
const app = router({
"a/:b/*": (_, context) => {
return new Response(`B: ${context.param.b}, Path: ${context.path}`);
},
});
A request to the router above with the pathname /a/b/c/d/
will result in the
text B: b, Path: c/d/
being sent back.
Here’s some other router path rules:
- Paths can’t contain trailing, leading, or duplicate slashes
- The
..
and.
path segments can’t be used (they’d never match) - Wildcards can only show up at the end of a path as the last segment, and they
must appear alone, i.e.
*hello
is an invalid path segment - Path parameters can have any name, as long as their path segment starts with
a
:
- Paths don’t match against the whole URL, only the pathname is used during routing
404s
To tell the router to continue matching from inside a handler, throw an instance
of Deno.errors.NotFound
. In the example below, a request to /a
will return a
plaintext b
response:
const app = router({
"a": () => { throw new Deno.errors.NotFound() },
":b": () => new Response("b"),
});
Note: If the request has a body and the body is consumed before a NotFound error is thrown, path matching will not continue and the error will be rethrown inside the router.
Handler arrays
When multiple handlers need to be registered at the same path, use an array of handlers. Each handler is attempted until one of them returns a response instead of throwing a NotFound error:
// serveAssetOr404 defined elsewhere
const app = router({
"api/hello": () => new Response("hello world"),
"*": [
(_, context) => serveAssetOr404("assetsDir1", context.path),
(_, context) => serveAssetOr404("assetsDir2", context.path),
],
});
Router composition
Constructed router handlers have the same properties as the RouterShapes used to create them, allowing routers to build on one another as if they were regular JavaScript objects:
const helloApp = router({
"hello": () => new Response("hello world"),
});
const goodbyeApp = router({
"goodbye": () => new Response("goodbye world"),
});
const app = router({
...helloApp,
...goodbyeApp,
});
null
is allowed as a handler value, letting you turn off certain routes when
composing routers:
const v1 = router({
"foo": () => new Response("hello world"),
"bar": () => new Response("goodbye world"),
});
const v2 = router({
...v1,
"foo": null,
});
Further, router nesting is a natural consequence of them being Deno handlers.
Below, a request to /foo/bar
will return a plaintext baz
response:
const app = router({
"foo/*": router({
"bar": () => new Response("baz"),
}),
});
To be continued