Ring defines middleware as a function of type handler & args => request => response. It is relatively easy to understand and allows for good performance. A downside is that the middleware chain is just a opaque function, making things like debugging and composition hard. It is too easy to apply the middlewares in wrong order.
Reitit defines middleware as data:
All values in the :middleware vector of route data are expanded into reitit.middleware/Middleware Records by using the reitit.middleware/IntoMiddleware Protocol. By default, functions, maps and Middleware records are allowed.
Records can have arbitrary keys, but the following keys have special purpose:
| key | description | 
|---|---|
| :name | Name of the middleware as a qualified keyword | 
| :spec | clojure.specdefinition for the route data, see route data validation (optional) | 
| :wrap | The actual middleware function of handler & args => request => response | 
| :compile | Middleware compilation function, see compiling middleware. | 
Middleware Records are accessible in their raw form in the compiled route results, and thus are available for inventories, creating api-docs, etc.
For the actual request processing, the Records are unwrapped into normal functions and composed into a middleware function chain, yielding zero runtime penalty.
The following examples produce identical middleware runtime functions.
(defn wrap [handler id]
  (fn [request]
    (handler (update request ::acc (fnil conj []) id))))
(def wrap3
  {:name ::wrap3
   :description "Middleware that does things."
   :wrap wrap})
(require '[reitit.middleware :as middleware])
(def wrap2
  (middleware/map->Middleware
    {:name ::wrap2
     :description "Middleware that does things."
     :wrap wrap}))
:middleware is merged to endpoints by the router.
(require '[reitit.ring :as ring])
(defn handler [{::keys [acc]}]
  {:status 200, :body (conj acc :handler)})
(def app
  (ring/ring-handler
    (ring/router
      ["/api" {:middleware [[wrap 1] [wrap2 2]]}
       ["/ping" {:get {:middleware [[wrap3 3]]
                       :handler handler}}]])))
All the middlewares are applied correctly:
(app {:request-method :get, :uri "/api/ping"})
; {:status 200, :body [1 2 3 :handler]}
Middlewares can be optimized against an endpoint using middleware compilation.
:requires and :provides. Values are set of top-level keys of the request. e.g.
InjectUserIntoRequestMiddleware requires #{:session} and provides #{:user}AuthorizationMiddleware requires #{:user}Ideas welcome & see issues for details.
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Tommi Reiman, Phil Hofmann, Alexander Kiel, Greg Rynkowski & Marcus SpiegelEdit on GitHub
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