You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

README.md 5.0KB

9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
9 vuotta sitten
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153
  1. <a href="#"><img alt="rex" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/go-rex/rex/assets/images/rex.png" width="160px" height="64px"></a>
  2. ===
  3. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/goanywhere/rex.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/goanywhere/rex)
  4. Rex is a library for modular web development in [Go](http://golang.org/), designed to work directly with net/http.
  5. <img alt="wrk" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/goanywhere/rex/assets/images/wrk.png">
  6. ## Intro
  7. Nah, not another **Web Framework**, we have that enough.The more we spend on [Go](http://golang.org/), the more clearly we realize that most lightweight, pure-stdlib conventions really do scale to large groups of developers and diverse project ecosystems. You absolutely don’t need a *Web Framework* like you normally do in other languages, simply because your code base has grown beyond a certain size. Or you believe it might grow beyond a certain size! You truly ain’t gonna need it. What we really need is just a suitable routing system, along with some common toolkits for web development, the standard idioms and practices will continue to function beautifully at scale.
  8. ## Getting Started
  9. Install the package, along with executable binary helper (**go 1.4** and greater is required):
  10. ```shell
  11. $ go get -v github.com/goanywhere/rex/...
  12. ```
  13. ## Features
  14. * Flexible Env-based configurations.
  15. * Awesome routing system provided by [Gorilla/Mux](//github.com/gorilla/mux).
  16. * Group routing system with middleware modules supports
  17. * Non-intrusive/Modular design, extremely easy to use.
  18. * Standard & modular system based on [http.Handler](http://godoc.org/net/http#Handler) interface.
  19. * Command line tools
  20. * Auto-compile/reload for .go & .html sources
  21. * Browser-based Live reload supports for HTML templates
  22. * **Fully compatible with the [http.Handler](http://godoc.org/net/http#Handler)/[http.HandlerFunc](http://godoc.org/net/http#HandlerFunc) interface.**
  23. After installing Go and setting up your [GOPATH](http://golang.org/doc/code.html#GOPATH), create your first server.
  24. ``` go
  25. package main
  26. import (
  27. "io"
  28. "net/http"
  29. "github.com/goanywhere/rex"
  30. )
  31. func main() {
  32. rex.Get("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  33. io.WriteString(w, "Hello World")
  34. })
  35. rex.Run()
  36. }
  37. ```
  38. Then start your server:
  39. ``` shell
  40. rex run
  41. ```
  42. You will now have a HTTP server running on `localhost:5000`.
  43. ## Settings
  44. All settings on Rex can be accessed via `env`, which essentially stored in `os.Environ`. By using this approach you can compile your own settings files into the binary package for deployment without exposing the sensitive settings, it also makes configuration extremly easy & flexible via both command line & application.
  45. ``` go
  46. package main
  47. import (
  48. "io"
  49. "github.com/goanywhere/rex"
  50. "github.com/goanywhere/x/env"
  51. )
  52. func index(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  53. io.WriteString("Hey you")
  54. }
  55. func main() {
  56. // Override default 5000 port here.
  57. env.Set("PORT", 9394)
  58. rex.Get("/", index)
  59. rex.Run()
  60. }
  61. ```
  62. You will now have the HTTP server running on `0.0.0.0:9394`.
  63. Hey, dude, why not just use those popular approaches, like file-based config? We know you'll be asking & we have the answer as well, [here](http://12factor.net/config).
  64. ## Modules
  65. Modules (aka. middleware) work between http requests and the router, they are no different than the standard http.Handler. Existing modules from other frameworks like logging, authorization, session, gzipping are very easy to integrate into Rex. As long as it complies the standard `func(http.Handler) http.Handler` signature, you can simply add one like this:
  66. ``` go
  67. app.Use(modules.XSRF)
  68. ```
  69. Since a module is just the standard http.Handler, writing a custom module is also pretty straightforward:
  70. ``` go
  71. app.Use(func(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
  72. return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  73. log.Printf("Custom Middleware Module Started")
  74. next.ServeHTTP(writer, request)
  75. log.Printf("Custom Middleware Module Ended")
  76. })
  77. })
  78. ```
  79. Using prefixed (aka. subrouter) router is exactly same as the main one:
  80. ```go
  81. app := rex.new()
  82. app.Get("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  83. io.WriteString(w, "index page")
  84. })
  85. user := app.Group("/users")
  86. user.Use(func(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
  87. return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
  88. log.Printf("this is a protected page")
  89. next.ServeHTTP(writer, request)
  90. })
  91. })
  92. ```
  93. ## Frameworks comes & dies, will this be supported?
  94. Positive! Rex is an internal/fundamental project at GoAnywhere. We developed it and we are going to continue using/improving it.
  95. ##Roadmap for v1.0
  96. - [X] Env-Based Configurations
  97. - [X] Test Suite
  98. - [X] New Project Template
  99. - [X] CLI Apps Integrations
  100. - [X] Performance Boost
  101. - [X] Hot-Compile Runner
  102. - [X] Live Reload Integration
  103. - [X] Common Modules
  104. - [ ] Full Test Converage
  105. - [ ] Improved Template Rendering
  106. - [ ] Project Wiki
  107. - [ ] Continuous Integration
  108. - [ ] Stable API