Developping with Kwiscale¶
Behind the scene¶
kwiscale is a web framework that uses GorillaToolkit. The main purpose is to allow developers to create handlers that serve reponses.
There are two Handlers types:
- RequestHandler to respond to HTTP requests (Get, Post, Put, Delete, Patch, Trace, Head)
- WebSocketHandler to serve websocket connection to client
Kwiscale proposes addon system to be able to plug template engines and session engines. By default you may be able to use the standard html/template package provided by Go and session by encrypted cookies provided by GorillaToolkit.
Project Structure¶
Recommandation is not obligation¶
The common structure we give here is not mandatory. You can prefer other file structure and project managment.
The standard Kwiscale structure¶
In a common usage, the following file structure is recommanded:
[projectpath]/
main.go
handlers/
index.go
[other name].go
...
templates/
index.html
- common/
footer.html
header.html
menu.html
- home/
main.go
statics/
- js/
...
- css/
...
Note that “handlers” directory may contains subpackages. The goal is to classify HTTP handlers in the same directory. An example:
handlers/
index.go
user/
auth.go
register.go
profile-edition.go
cms/
page.go
edit.go
blog/
index.go
ticket.go
Handler story¶
When a user calls a route, Kwiscale will find the corresponding handler in a stack. When a route matches, kwiscale app detect handler type and call a serie of methods (see Handler story diagram)
Serve static files¶
Important The static handler provided by kwiscale is provided for development and not for the production. It’s not recommanded to let Kwiscale serve directoy web application, you’d rather use HTTP Server as nginx or Apache as reverse proxy. That way, the HTTP server will serve static files instead of using static handler provided by Kwiscale.
To serve static files (css, js, images, and so on) you may configure Kwiscale.App like this:
cfg := kwiscale.Config{
StaticDir: "./statics",
}
app := kwiscale.NewApp(&cfg)
Kwiscale uses the directory name to serve files that resides inside. You can now hit URL http://127.0.0.1:8000/statics/...
Note that static handler doesn’t make directory index. Hitting the static route without any filename will result on 404 Error.
URL Routing¶
Kwiscale make use of GorillaToolkit route system. This routing implementation allows you to set url parameters and to reverse an url from a handler name.
Example:
type MyHandler struct { kwiscale.RequestHandler }
func (h *UserHandler) Get(){
userid := h.Vars["userid"]
}
func main(){
//...
// Add a route that need an user id named "userid".
// Route parameters are regular expression.
app.AddRoute("/user/{userid:\d+}", UserHandler{})
//...
}
The corresponding route could be “/user/123456”, then in Get()
,
userid
contains a string value: “123456”.
To reverse an url, you need the name of the handler. The “kwiscale.App”
can provide the named route and you may use URL
to return the
corresponding URL. Here is an example:
// Route /user/{userid:\d+}
url := myhandler.GetApp().GetRoute("main.UserHandler").URL("userid", "123456")
// If myhandler is the wanted handler
url := myhandler.GetURL("userid", "123456")
Named route¶
If you want to not use handler name based on reflected value, you may
use AddNamedRoute()
instead:
app.AddNamedRoute("/user/{userid:\d+}", UserHandler{}, "users")
So, to reverse URL:
// Route /user/{userid:\d+}
url := myhandler.GetApp().GetRoute("users").URL("userid", "123456")