ls 26f5a1391e httprouter | 6 years ago | |
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LICENSE | 6 years ago | |
README.md | 6 years ago | |
params_go17.go | 6 years ago | |
params_legacy.go | 6 years ago | |
path.go | 6 years ago | |
router.go | 6 years ago | |
tree.go | 6 years ago | |
vars.go | 6 years ago |
HttpRouter is a lightweight high performance HTTP request router (also called multiplexer or just mux for short) for Go.
In contrast to the default mux of Go's net/http
package, this router supports variables in the routing pattern and matches against the request method. It also scales better.
The router is optimized for high performance and a small memory footprint. It scales well even with very long paths and a large number of routes. A compressing dynamic trie (radix tree) structure is used for efficient matching.
Only explicit matches: With other routers, like http.ServeMux
, a requested URL path could match multiple patterns. Therefore they have some awkward pattern priority rules, like longest match or first registered, first matched. By design of this router, a request can only match exactly one or no route. As a result, there are also no unintended matches, which makes it great for SEO and improves the user experience.
Stop caring about trailing slashes: Choose the URL style you like, the router automatically redirects the client if a trailing slash is missing or if there is one extra. Of course it only does so, if the new path has a handler. If you don't like it, you can turn off this behavior.
Path auto-correction: Besides detecting the missing or additional trailing slash at no extra cost, the router can also fix wrong cases and remove superfluous path elements (like ../
or //
). Is CAPTAIN CAPS LOCK one of your users? HttpRouter can help him by making a case-insensitive look-up and redirecting him to the correct URL.
Parameters in your routing pattern: Stop parsing the requested URL path, just give the path segment a name and the router delivers the dynamic value to you. Because of the design of the router, path parameters are very cheap.
Zero Garbage: The matching and dispatching process generates zero bytes of garbage. The only heap allocations that are made are building the slice of the key-value pairs for path parameters, and building new context and request objects (the latter only in the standard Handler
/HandlerFunc
api). In the 3-argument API, if the request path contains no parameters not a single heap allocation is necessary.
Best Performance: Benchmarks speak for themselves. See below for technical details of the implementation.
No more server crashes: You can set a Panic handler to deal with panics occurring during handling a HTTP request. The router then recovers and lets the PanicHandler
log what happened and deliver a nice error page.
Perfect for APIs: The router design encourages to build sensible, hierarchical RESTful APIs. Moreover it has builtin native support for OPTIONS requests and 405 Method Not Allowed
replies.
Of course you can also set custom NotFound
and MethodNotAllowed
handlers and serve static files.
This is just a quick introduction, view the GoDoc for details.
Let's start with a trivial example:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter"
"net/http"
"log"
)
func Index(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
fmt.Fprint(w, "Welcome!\n")
}
func Hello(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
var name string
if vars := httprouter.Vars(); vars != nil {
name, _ = vars["name"]
}
fmt.Fprintf(w, "hello, %s!\n", name)
}
func main() {
router := httprouter.New()
router.GET("/", Index)
router.GET("/hello/:name", Hello)
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", router))
}
As you can see, :name
is a named parameter. The values are accessible via httprouter.Params
, which is just a slice of httprouter.Param
s. You can get the value of a parameter either by its index in the slice, or by using the ByName(name)
method: :name
can be retrived by ByName("name")
.
Named parameters only match a single path segment:
Pattern: /user/:user
/user/gordon match
/user/you match
/user/gordon/profile no match
/user/ no match
Note: Since this router has only explicit matches, you can not register static routes and parameters for the same path segment. For example you can not register the patterns /user/new
and /user/:user
for the same request method at the same time. The routing of different request methods is independent from each other.
The second type are catch-all parameters and have the form *name
. Like the name suggests, they match everything. Therefore they must always be at the end of the pattern:
Pattern: /src/*filepath
/src/ match
/src/somefile.go match
/src/subdir/somefile.go match
The router relies on a tree structure which makes heavy use of common prefixes, it is basically a compact prefix tree (or just Radix tree). Nodes with a common prefix also share a common parent. Here is a short example what the routing tree for the GET
request method could look like:
Priority Path Handle
9 \ *<1>
3 ├s nil
2 |├earch\ *<2>
1 |└upport\ *<3>
2 ├blog\ *<4>
1 | └:post nil
1 | └\ *<5>
2 ├about-us\ *<6>
1 | └team\ *<7>
1 └contact\ *<8>
Every *<num>
represents the memory address of a handler function (a pointer). If you follow a path trough the tree from the root to the leaf, you get the complete route path, e.g \blog\:post\
, where :post
is just a placeholder (parameter) for an actual post name. Unlike hash-maps, a tree structure also allows us to use dynamic parts like the :post
parameter, since we actually match against the routing patterns instead of just comparing hashes. As benchmarks show, this works very well and efficient.
Since URL paths have a hierarchical structure and make use only of a limited set of characters (byte values), it is very likely that there are a lot of common prefixes. This allows us to easily reduce the routing into ever smaller problems. Moreover the router manages a separate tree for every request method. For one thing it is more space efficient than holding a method->handle map in every single node, it also allows us to greatly reduce the routing problem before even starting the look-up in the prefix-tree.
For even better scalability, the child nodes on each tree level are ordered by priority, where the priority is just the number of handles registered in sub nodes (children, grandchildren, and so on..). This helps in two ways:
It is some sort of cost compensation. The longest reachable path (highest cost) can always be evaluated first. The following scheme visualizes the tree structure. Nodes are evaluated from top to bottom and from left to right.
├------------
├---------
├-----
├----
├--
├--
└-
http.Handler
?It does! The router itself implements the http.Handler
interface. Moreover the router provides convenient adapters for http.Handler
s and http.HandlerFunc
s which allows them to be used as a httprouter.Handle
when registering a route. The only disadvantage is, that no parameter values can be retrieved when a http.Handler
or http.HandlerFunc
is used, since there is no efficient way to pass the values with the existing function parameters. Therefore httprouter.Handle
has a third function parameter.
Just try it out for yourself, the usage of HttpRouter is very straightforward. The package is compact and minimalistic, but also probably one of the easiest routers to set up.
This package just provides a very efficient request router with a few extra features. The router is just a http.Handler
, you can chain any http.Handler compatible middleware before the router, for example the Gorilla handlers. Or you could just write your own, it's very easy!
Alternatively, you could try a web framework based on HttpRouter.
Here is a quick example: Does your server serve multiple domains / hosts? You want to use sub-domains? Define a router per host!
// We need an object that implements the http.Handler interface.
// Therefore we need a type for which we implement the ServeHTTP method.
// We just use a map here, in which we map host names (with port) to http.Handlers
type HostSwitch map[string]http.Handler
// Implement the ServeHTTP method on our new type
func (hs HostSwitch) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
// Check if a http.Handler is registered for the given host.
// If yes, use it to handle the request.
if handler := hs[r.Host]; handler != nil {
handler.ServeHTTP(w, r)
} else {
// Handle host names for which no handler is registered
http.Error(w, "Forbidden", 403) // Or Redirect?
}
}
func main() {
// Initialize a router as usual
router := httprouter.New()
router.GET("/", Index)
router.GET("/hello/:name", Hello)
// Make a new HostSwitch and insert the router (our http handler)
// for example.com and port 12345
hs := make(HostSwitch)
hs["example.com:12345"] = router
// Use the HostSwitch to listen and serve on port 12345
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":12345", hs))
}
Another quick example: Basic Authentication (RFC 2617) for handles:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/http"
"github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter"
)
func BasicAuth(h httprouter.Handle, requiredUser, requiredPassword string) httprouter.Handle {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, ps httprouter.Params) {
// Get the Basic Authentication credentials
user, password, hasAuth := r.BasicAuth()
if hasAuth && user == requiredUser && password == requiredPassword {
// Delegate request to the given handle
h(w, r, ps)
} else {
// Request Basic Authentication otherwise
w.Header().Set("WWW-Authenticate", "Basic realm=Restricted")
http.Error(w, http.StatusText(http.StatusUnauthorized), http.StatusUnauthorized)
}
}
}
func Index(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
fmt.Fprint(w, "Not protected!\n")
}
func Protected(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
fmt.Fprint(w, "Protected!\n")
}
func main() {
user := "gordon"
pass := "secret!"
router := httprouter.New()
router.GET("/", Index)
router.GET("/protected/", BasicAuth(Protected, user, pass))
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", router))
}
NOTE: It might be required to set Router.HandleMethodNotAllowed
to false
to avoid problems.
You can use another http.Handler
, for example another router, to handle requests which could not be matched by this router by using the Router.NotFound
handler. This allows chaining.
The NotFound
handler can for example be used to serve static files from the root path /
(like an index.html
file along with other assets):
// Serve static files from the ./public directory
router.NotFound = http.FileServer(http.Dir("public"))
But this approach sidesteps the strict core rules of this router to avoid routing problems. A cleaner approach is to use a distinct sub-path for serving files, like /static/*filepath
or /files/*filepath
.
If the HttpRouter is a bit too minimalistic for you, you might try one of the following more high-level 3rd-party web frameworks building upon the HttpRouter package: