Name
cowboy_rest - REST handlers
Description
The module cowboy_rest
implements the HTTP state machine.
Implementing REST handlers is not enough to provide a REST interface; this interface must also follow the REST constraints including HATEOAS (hypermedia as the engine of application state).
Callbacks
REST handlers implement the following interface:
init(Req, State)
-> {cowboy_rest, Req, State}
Callback(Req, State)
-> {Result, Req, State}
| {stop, Req, State}
| {{switch_handler, Module}, Req, State}
| {{switch_handler, Module, Opts}, Req, State}
terminate(Reason, Req, State) -> ok %% optional
Req :: cowboy_req:req()
State :: any()
Module :: module()
Opts :: any()
Reason :: normal
| {crash, error | exit | throw, any()}
Callback - see below
Result - see below
Default - see below
The init/2
callback is common to all handlers. To switch to the REST handler behavior, it must return cowboy_rest
as the first element of the tuple.
The Callback/2
above represents all the REST-specific callbacks. They are described in the following section of this manual. REST-specific callbacks differ by their name, semantics, result and default values. The default value is the one used when the callback has not been implemented. They otherwise all follow the same interface.
The stop
tuple can be returned to stop REST processing. If no response was sent before then, Cowboy will send a 204 No Content. The stop
tuple can be returned from any callback, excluding expires
, generate_etag
, last_modified
and variances
.
A switch_handler
tuple can be returned from these same callbacks to stop REST processing and switch to a different handler type. This is very useful to, for example, to stream the response body.
The optional terminate/3
callback will ultimately be called with the reason for the termination of the handler. Cowboy will terminate the process right after this. There is no need to perform any cleanup in this callback.
The following terminate reasons are defined for loop handlers:
- normal
The handler terminated normally.
- {crash, Class, Reason}
A crash occurred in the handler. Class
and Reason
can be used to obtain more information about the crash. The function erlang:get_stacktrace/0
can also be called to obtain the stacktrace of the process when the crash occurred.
REST callbacks
AcceptCallback
AcceptCallback(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: true | {true, URI :: iodata()} | false}
Default - crash
Process the request body.
This function should create or update the resource using the request body.
For PUT requests, the body is a representation of the resource that is being created or replaced.
For POST requests, the body is typically application-specific instructions on how to process the request, but it may also be a representation of the resource. When creating a new resource with POST at a different location, return {true, URI}
with URI
the new location.
For PATCH requests, the body is a series of instructions on how to update the resource. Patch files or JSON Patch are examples of such media types.
A response body may be sent. The appropriate media type, charset and language for the response can be retrieved from the Req object using the media_type
, charset
and language
keys, respectively. The body can be set using cowboy_req:set_resp_body(3).
allowed_methods
allowed_methods(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [binary()] %% case sensitive
Default :: [<<"GET">>, <<"HEAD">>, <<"OPTIONS">>]
Return the list of allowed methods.
allow_missing_post
allow_missing_post(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether POST is allowed when the resource doesn't exist.
Returning true
here means that a new resource will be created. The URI for the newly created resource should be returned from the AcceptCallback
function.
charsets_provided
charsets_provided(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [binary()] %% lowercase; case insensitive
Default - skip this step
Return the list of charsets the resource provides in order of preference.
During content negotiation Cowboy will pick the most appropriate charset for the client. The client advertises charsets it prefers with the accept-charset header. When that header is missing, Cowboy picks the first charset from the resource.
Cowboy will add the negotiated charset
to the Req object after this step completes:
req() :: #{
charset => binary() %% lowercase; case insensitive
}
Note that Cowboy will only append the charset to the content-type header of the response if the media type is text.
content_types_accepted
content_types_accepted(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [{'*' | binary() | ParsedMime, AcceptCallback :: atom()}]
ParsedMime :: {Type :: binary(), SubType :: binary(), '*' | Params}
Params :: [{Key :: binary(), Value :: binary()}]
Default - crash
Return the list of media types the resource accepts in order of preference.
A media type is made of different parts. The media type text/html;charset=utf-8
is of type text
, subtype html
and has a single parameter charset
with value utf-8
.
The special value '*'
can be used to accept any media type.
Cowboy will match the content-type request header against the media types the server accepts and select the appropriate callback. When that header is missing, or when the server does not accept this media type, the request fails and an error response is returned. Cowboy will execute the callback immediately otherwise.
An empty parameters list []
means that no parameters will be accepted. When any parameter is acceptable, the tuple form should be used with parameters as the atom '*'
.
Cowboy treats all parameters as case sensitive, except for the charset
parameter, which is known to be case insensitive. You should therefore always provide the charset as a lowercase binary string.
content_types_provided
content_types_provided(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [{binary() | ParsedMime, ProvideCallback :: atom()}]
ParsedMime :: {Type :: binary(), SubType :: binary(), '*' | Params}
Params :: [{Key :: binary(), Value :: binary()}]
Default - [{{ <<"text">>, <<"html">>, '*'}, to_html}]
Return the list of media types the resource provides in order of preference.
A media type is made of different parts. The media type text/html;charset=utf-8
is of type text
, subtype html
and has a single parameter charset
with value utf-8
.
During content negotiation Cowboy will pick the most appropriate media type for the client. The client advertises media types it prefers with the accept header. When that header is missing, the content negotiation fails and an error response is returned.
The callback given for the selected media type will be called at the end of the execution of GET and HEAD requests when a representation must be sent to the client.
An empty parameters list []
means that no parameters will be accepted. When any parameter is acceptable, the tuple form should be used with parameters as the atom '*'
.
Cowboy treats all parameters as case sensitive, except for the charset
parameter, which is known to be case insensitive. You should therefore always provide the charset as a lowercase binary string.
When a charset is given in the media type parameters in the accept header, Cowboy will do some additional checks to confirm that it can use this charset. When the wildcard is used then Cowboy will immediately call charsets_provided
to confirm the charset is acceptable. If the callback is undefined Cowboy assumes any charset is acceptable. When the wildcard is not used and the charset given in the accept header matches one of the configured media types Cowboy will use that charset and skip the charsets_provided
step entirely.
Cowboy will add the negotiated media_type
to the Req object after this step completes:
req() :: #{
media_type => ParsedMime
}
Cowboy may also add the negotiated charset
to the Req object after this step completes:
req() :: #{
charset => binary() %% lowercase; case insensitive
}
delete_completed
delete_completed(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether the resource has been fully deleted from the system, including from any internal cache.
Returning false
will result in a 202 Accepted response being sent instead of a 200 OK or 204 No Content.
delete_resource
delete_resource(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Delete the resource.
Cowboy will send an error response when this function returns false
.
expires
expires(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: calendar:datetime() | binary() | undefined
Default :: undefined
Return the resource's expiration date.
forbidden
forbidden(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether access to the resource is forbidden.
A 403 Forbidden response will be sent if this function returns true
. This status code means that access is forbidden regardless of authentication, and that the request shouldn't be repeated.
generate_etag
generate_etag(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: binary() | {weak | strong, binary()}
Default - no etag value
Return the entity tag of the resource.
When a binary is returned, the value is automatically parsed to a tuple. The binary must be in the same format as the etag header, including quotes.
is_authorized
is_authorized(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: true | {false, AuthHeader :: iodata()}
Default - true
Return whether the user is authorized to perform the action.
This function should be used to perform any necessary authentication of the user before attempting to perform any action on the resource.
When authentication fails, the AuthHeader
value will be sent in the www-authenticate header for the 401 Unauthorized response.
is_conflict
is_conflict(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether the PUT request results in a conflict.
A 409 Conflict response is sent when true
.
known_methods
known_methods(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [binary()] %% case sensitive
Default :: [<<"GET">>, <<"HEAD">>, <<"POST">>, <<"PUT">>,
<<"PATCH">>, <<"DELETE">>, <<"OPTIONS">>]
Return the list of known methods.
The full list of methods known by the server should be returned, regardless of their use in the resource.
The default value lists the methods Cowboy knows and implement in cowboy_rest
.
languages_provided
languages_provided(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [binary()] %% lowercase; case insensitive
Default - skip this step
Return the list of languages the resource provides in order of preference.
During content negotiation Cowboy will pick the most appropriate language for the client. The client advertises languages it prefers with the accept-language header. When that header is missing, Cowboy picks the first language from the resource.
Cowboy will add the negotiated language
to the Req object after this step completes:
req() :: #{
language => binary() %% lowercase; case insensitive
}
last_modified
last_modified(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: calendar:datetime()
Default - no last modified value
Return the resource's last modification date.
This date will be used to test against the if-modified-since and if-unmodified-since headers, and sent as the last-modified header in the response to GET and HEAD requests.
malformed_request(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether the request is malformed.
A request is malformed when a component required by the resource is invalid. This may include the query string or individual headers. They should be parsed and validated in this function. The body should not be read at this point.
moved_permanently
moved_permanently(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: {true, URI :: iodata()} | false
Default :: false
Return whether the resource was permanently moved, and what its new location is.
moved_temporarily
moved_temporarily(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: {true, URI :: iodata()} | false
Default :: false
Return whether the resource was temporarily moved, and what its new location is.
multiple_choices
multiple_choices(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether the client should engage in reactive negotiation.
Return true
when the server has multiple representations of a resource, each with their specific identifier, but is unable to determine which is best for the client. For example an image might have different sizes and the server is unable to determine the capabilities of the client.
When returning true
the server should send a body with links to the different representations. If the server has a preferred representation it can send its link inside a location header.
Note that when replying manually in this callback you should either call cowboy_req:reply/4
or remove the response body that Cowboy sets to avoid surprises.
options
options(Req, State) -> {ok, Req, State}
Respond to an OPTIONS request.
The response should inform the client the communication options available for this resource. By default Cowboy will send a 200 OK response with the allow header set.
previously_existed
previously_existed(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether the resource existed previously.
ProvideCallback
ProvideCallback(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: cowboy_req:resp_body()
Default - crash
Return the response body.
The response body can be provided either as the actual data to be sent or a tuple indicating which file to send.
This function is called for both GET and HEAD requests. For the latter the body is not sent, however.
Note that there used to be a way to stream the response body. It was temporarily removed and will be added back in a later release.
rate_limited
rate_limited(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: false | {true, RetryAfter}
RetryAfter :: non_neg_integer() | calendar:datetime()
Default - false
Return whether the user is rate limited.
This function can be used to temporarily restrict access to a resource when the user has issued too many requests.
When the resource is rate limited the RetryAfter
value will be sent in the retry-after header for the 429 Too Many Requests response. It indicates when the resource will become available again and can be specified as a number of seconds in the future or a specific date/time.
resource_exists
resource_exists(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether the resource exists.
service_available
service_available(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether the service is available.
A 503 Service Unavailable response will be sent when this function returns false
.
uri_too_long
uri_too_long(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: false
Return whether the requested URI is too long.
This function can be used to further restrict the length of the URI for this specific resource.
valid_content_headers(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether the content headers are valid.
This callback can be used to reject requests that have invalid content header values, for example an unsupported content-encoding.
valid_entity_length
valid_entity_length(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: boolean()
Default :: true
Return whether the request body length is within acceptable boundaries.
A 413 Request Entity Too Large response will be sent if this function returns false
.
variances
variances(Req, State) -> {Result, Req, State}
Result :: [binary()] %% case insensitive
Default :: []
Return the list of request headers that affect the representation of the resource.
Cowboy automatically adds the accept, accept-charset and accept-language headers when necessary. It's also useful to note that some standard headers also do not need to be listed here, like the authorization header.
Changelog
- 2.7: The media type wildcard in
content_types_accepted
is now documented.
- 2.6: The callback
rate_limited
was added.
- 2.1: The
switch_handler
return value was added.
- 1.0: Behavior introduced.
See also
cowboy(7), cowboy_handler(3)