選択できるのは25トピックまでです。 トピックは、先頭が英数字で、英数字とダッシュ('-')を使用した35文字以内のものにしてください。
Jim Zhan d8bf5fe878 fixed typo 7年前
cmd/rex stay simple: remove default rex HTTP server along with Env 9年前
example unify the http method conventions 9年前
form hide form parsing for now 9年前
internal stay simple: remove default rex HTTP server along with Env 9年前
livereload fix livereload middleware (livereload.js, env issue) 9年前
middleware unify the http method conventions 9年前
.gitignore add build tasks 9年前
.travis.yml upgrade to v1.8 7年前
LICENSE init imports (fully compatible stdlib branch) 9年前
README.md fixed typo 7年前
Rakefile replace GNU.make with Ruby.rake 9年前
middleware.go remove APL head + add test cases for router 9年前
middleware_test.go remove APL head + add test cases for router 9年前
rex.go feature(render): Add json rending supports. 9年前
server.go - expose Host for (sub)domains. 8年前
server_test.go - expose Host for (sub)domains. 8年前
utils.go add vars into router 9年前
utils_test.go remove APL head + add test cases for router 9年前

README.md

rex

Build Status GoDoc

Rex is a library for modular web development in Go, designed to work directly with net/http.

Golang

  • [X] v1.4
  • [X] v1.5
  • [X] v1.6
  • [X] v1.7
  • [X] v1.8

Intro

Nah, not another Web Framework, we have that enough.The more we spend on Go, 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.

Getting Started

Install the package, along with executable binary helper (go 1.4 and greater is required):

$ go get -v github.com/goanywhere/rex/...

Features

  • Flexible Env-based configurations.
  • Awesome routing system provided by Gorilla/Mux.
  • Group routing system with middleware modules supports
  • Non-intrusive/Modular design, extremely easy to use.
  • Standard & modular system based on http.Handler interface.
  • Command line tools
    • Auto-compile/reload for .go & .html sources
    • Browser-based Live reload supports for HTML templates
  • Fully compatible with the http.Handler/http.HandlerFunc interface.

After installing Go and setting up your GOPATH, create your first server.

package main

import (
    "io"
    "net/http"

    "github.com/goanywhere/rex"
)

func main() {
    app := rex.New()
    app.Get("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
        io.WriteString(w, "Hello World")
    })
    app.Run()
}

Then start your server:

rex run

You will now have a HTTP server running on localhost:5000.

Settings

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.

package main

import (
    "io"

    "github.com/goanywhere/env"
    "github.com/goanywhere/rex"
)

func index(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
    io.WriteString("Hey you")
}

func main() {
    // Override default 5000 port here.
    env.Set("PORT", 9394)

    app := rex.New()
    app.Get("/", index)
    app.Run()
}

You will now have the HTTP server running on 0.0.0.0:9394.

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.

Middleware

Middlware modules work between http requests and the router, they are no different than the standard http.Handler. Existing middleware 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:

app.Use(middleware.XSRF)

Since a middleware module is just the standard http.Handler, writing custom middleware is also pretty straightforward:

app.Use(func(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
    return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
        log.Printf("Custom Middleware Module Started")
        next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
        log.Printf("Custom Middleware Module Ended")
    })
})

Using prefixed (aka. subrouter) router is exactly same as the main one:

app := rex.New()
app.Get("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
    io.WriteString(w, "index page")
})

user := app.Group("/users")
user.Use(func(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
    return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
        log.Printf("this is a protected page")
        next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
    })
})

Benchmark?

Rex is built upon Gorilla/Mux, designed to work with standard net/http directly, which means it can run as fast as stdlib can without compromise. Here is a simple wrk HTTP benchmark on a RMBP (2.8 GHz Intel Core i5 with 16GB memory) machine.

wrk

Frameworks come & die, will this be supported?

Positive! Rex is an internal/fundamental project at GoAnywhere. We developed it and we are going to continue using/improving it.

Roadmap for v1.0

  • [X] Env-Based Configurations
  • [X] CLI Apps Integrations
  • [X] Performance Boost
  • [X] Hot-Compile Runner
  • [X] Live Reload Integration
  • [X] Common Middleware Modules
  • [X] Continuous Integration
  • [X] Full Test Converage
  • Context Supports
  • http.Handler interface based rendering
  • Project Wiki
  • Stable API