A Ring middleware that augments :params by parsing a request body as Extensible Data Notation (EDN).
In your :dependencies
section add the following:
[fogus/ring-edn "0.3.0"]
the examples directory of the ring-edn project contains the source for the following
To use this middleware using Ring and Compojure, create a new Leiningen project with a project.clj
file of the form:
(defproject awesomeness "0.0.1"
:description "true power awesomeness"
:dependencies [[org.clojure/clojure "1.6.0"]
[ring "1.0.2"]
[compojure "1.0.1"]
[fogus/ring-edn "0.3.0"]]
:main awesome-app)
Next, create a file in src
called my_awesome_service.clj
with the following:
(ns my-awesome-service
(:use compojure.core)
(:use ring.middleware.edn))
(defn generate-response [data & [status]]
{:status (or status 200)
:headers {"Content-Type" "application/edn"}
:body (pr-str data)})
(defroutes handler
(GET "/" []
(generate-response {:hello :cleveland}))
(PUT "/" [name]
(generate-response {:hello name})))
(def app
(-> handler
wrap-edn-params))
And finally, create another file in src
named awesome_app.clj
with the following:
(ns awesome-app
(:use ring.adapter.jetty)
(:require [my-awesome-service :as awe]))
(defn -main
[& args]
(run-jetty #'awe/app {:port 8080}))
EDN offers extensible types through
tagged literals
and ring-edn
can read those types from the incoming requests.
As an example, let's add uri
to EDN. In our Clojure program
it will be represented by java.net.URI
but in other platforms it
might be represented differently, i.e goog.Uri
in ClojureScript. To
use a new type, we need to define a reader (takes a string and returns
our representation) and a printer (takes our representation and writes
it as a string). The printer determines the tagged literal and it is
implemented as a multimethod of clojure.core/print-method
. We might
be tempted to use #uri
for the tagged literal but it needs to be
namespaced in case an application needs to deal with multiple uri
representations. Therefore we will use #my-app/uri
:
(ns my-app.uri
(:import (java.net URI)))
(defn read-uri [s]
(URI. s))
(defmethod print-method java.net.URI [this w]
(.write w "#my-app/uri \"")
(.write w (.toString this))
(.write w "\""))
Now we indicate wrap-edn-params
that whenever it finds #my-app/uri
it should read the expression that follows with read-uri
:
(def app
(-> handler
(wrap-edn-params {:readers {'my-app/uri #'my-app.uri/read-uri}})))
Other options besides :readers
can be passed to wrap-edn-params
which are forwarded to clojure.edn/read-string
as defined
here.
Run this app in your console with lein run
and test with curl
using the following:
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080/
#=> {:hello :cleveland}
$ curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/edn" \
-d '{:name :barnabas}' \
http://localhost:8080/
#=> {:hello :barnabas}%
You can also run the test suite with lein test
.
Thanks to Mark McGranaghan for his work on Ring and ring-json-params on which this project was based. An additional thanks to Sebastian Bensusan for his high-quality patches.
Copyright (C) 2012-2015 Fogus
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
fogus, Fogus & Sebastian BensusanEdit on GitHub
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