Cro
The Cro project is being transferred to the Raku community. Find out more.

Writing HTTP middleware

What is HTTP middleware?§

Cro services are formed by composing components to form asynchronous message processing pipelines. A minimal HTTP/1.1 pipeline, built per connection, would consist of the following components:

Writing HTTP middleware means writing extra components to place into this pipeline. There are numerous uses of middleware; some examples include:

  • Adding extra security-related headers to responses

  • Logging requests/responses

  • Authentication

  • Response caching

  • Enforcing request rate limits

Middleware is the way the Cro processing pipeline can be customized to the needs of a particular application.

While middleware is just a Cro::Transform (or a pair of them when both a request and a response are involved), the Cro::HTTP::Middleware module contains a number of convenience roles to factor out some of the boilerplate from the most common middleware patterns.

Choosing how to apply middleware§

Middleware can be applied either:

  • At Cro::HTTP::Server level, in which case it applies to all requests and responses processed by the service. There is a slight performance benefit to applying middleware at this level: the processing pipeline with server-level middleware is built per connection, and re-used for multiple requests with HTTP/1.1 persistent connections as well as with HTTP/2.0 where there is typically a single longer-lived connection per client.

  • At the level of a route block (using Cro::HTTP::Router). When composing a larger application out of many route blocks, using include or delegate, this allows for more localized application of middleware (for example, authentication-related middleware need only be included in the processing of routes that need authentication).

  • When assembling custom processing pipelines, by passing the middleware to Cro.compose. For example, supposing a GraphQL handler was used with delegate in a route block, and some middleware should apply just to it, then delegate Cro.compose(TheMiddleware, GraphQLThing.new(...)); or some such would be used to build a pipeline to delegate to, containing both the piece of middleware and the GraphQL handler.

Note that the third case could also be done using an include of a nested route block too:

include 'endpoint' => route {
    before-matched TheMiddleware;
    delegate GraphQLThing.new(...);
}

And there's no particularly strong reason to pick one over the other, if already using Cro::HTTP::Router.

That leaves the main choice as being whether to put middleware at the server or route-block level. As a rough guideline:

  • If it is service-level infrastructure (such as logging or applying HSTS), then apply it at the server level.

  • If it should only apply to some routes, then use the include and delegate features of Cro::HTTP::Router to segregate the routes where it applies, and apply the middleware at route-block level where needed.

  • If it feels more like part of the application than infrastructure, lean towards putting it at the route block level.

Implementing middleware§

There are two options for implementing middleware:

  • Implement it in a class. This allows the middleware to be applied at either server or route-block level, or composed into a custom pipeline. It is certainly the way to go if publishing the middleware as a module, and any configuration can be provided as constructor arguments. Since working this way involves writing a supply block to do the processing, it is easy to incorporate other asynchronous work (for example, querying a key/value store to get session data) without blocking other requests being processed on the same connection (this is of interest under HTTP/2.0, where many requests are multiplexed onto a single connection).

  • Write it directly inside of a Cro::HTTP::Router route block, using the block forms of before and after. This is very convenient for one-off and simple middleware that is specific to that route block, and that isn't for re-use elsewhere.

For the first case, while one could implement a Cro::Transform, there are a number of convenience roles that eliminate some pieces of boilerplate for the most common cases.

Simple request manipulation middleware§

The Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Request role provides a convenient way to implement simple HTTP request middleware. It does the Cro::Transform role and implements all of its methods, leaving just the process method requiring implementation.

The process method is passed a Supply of incoming requests, and should return a Supply that the requests will be emitted into after processing. One could write the processing using a supply block:

class UserAgentLog does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Request {
    method process(Supply $requests) {
        supply whenever $requests -> $req {
            with $req.header('user-agent') -> $ua {
                log-the-user-agent($ua);
            }
            emit $req;
        }
    }
}

Take care to remember to emit the request after processing, or the pipeline will hang. Alternatively, this case could be written using the do method on a Supply, which does a side-effect and doesn't require emitting the request:

class UserAgentLog does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Request {
    method process(Supply $requests) {
        $requests.do: -> $req {
            with $req.header('user-agent') -> $ua {
                log-the-user-agent($ua);
            }
        }
    }
}

Simple response manipulation middleware§

The Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Response role provides a convenient way to implement response processing middleware. It does the Cro::Transform role and implements all of its methods, and requires only that the process method be implemented.

The process method is passed a Supply of responses, and should return a Supply that the responses will be emitted into after processing. One could write the processing using a supply block:

class HSTS does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Response {
    has Int $.max-age = 31536000;

    method process(Supply $responses) {
        supply whenever $responses -> $rep {
            $rep.append-header: 'Strict-transport-security',
                "max-age=$!max-age"
            emit $rep;
        }
    }
}

Take care to emit the response after processing. Alternatively, simple cases like this can be implemented using the do method on Supply, which does a side-effect and then emits the response afterwards:

class HSTS does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Response {
    has Int $.max-age = 31536000;

    method process(Supply $responses) {
        $responses.do: -> $rep {
            $rep.append-header: 'Strict-transport-security',
                "max-age=$!max-age"
        }
    }
}

Request middleware that may produce a response§

Often, it is desirable to write middleware that looks at an incoming request and conditionally emits it for "normal" processing, or alternatively emits an early response.

This requires two insertions into the pipeline: one to process the request, and another to inject the early response, skipping over other pieces of the pipeline. Implementing the Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Conditional role requires writing a single method, process; the request and response parts of the middleware are then constructed automatically.

The process method is passed a Supply of incoming requests. It should return a Supply that, for each request received, will emit either:

  • That request object, perhaps after some tweaks. The request object will continue onwards through the pipeline "as normal".

  • A Cro::HTTP::Response object, which represents an early response. This will be forwarded to a later point in the pipeline, skipping over the usual request processing.

For example, to respond to incoming requests that are not from the loopback interface with a 403 Forbidden response, one could write this:

class LocalOnly does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Conditional {
    method process(Supply $requests) {
        supply whenever $requests -> $request {
            if $request.connection.peer-host eq '127.0.0.1' | '::1' {
                # It's local, so continue processing.
                emit $req;
            }
            else {
                # It's not, so emit a 403 forbidden response.
                emit Cro::HTTP::Response.new(:$request, :403status);
            }
        }
    }
}

This role does not implement Cro::Transform, since it actually is a way of declaring a pair of transforms that work together with connection state. It instead does the Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Pair role, described below.

Middleware involving both requests and responses§

The Cro::HTTP::Middleware::RequestResponse role is for middleware that needs to take action for both the request and the response. This is both the most flexible kind of middleware but also the trickest to write, since it will most often involve some state that exists between requests and responses either on the same or over many connections. Note that even on a single connection, requests may be processed concurrently (particularly under HTTP/2.0). It is therefore important to protect any state, perhaps by keeping it in a monitor (use OO::Monitors for this).

A typical use for Cro::HTTP::Middleware::RequestResponse is implementing a response cache. Here, incoming requets should first do a lookup in the cache to see if the request can be satisfied from the cache; if so, the response is sent from the cache. Otherwise, processing proceeds as normal, and in the response middleware a cache entry is made. Note that this is a very minimal response cache, that caches everything, forever, without regard to language, encoding, and so forth. The cache is held per instance of the middleware, and so lives between requests.

use Cro::HTTP::Request;
use Cro::HTTP::Response;
use OO::Monitors;

monitor CachedData {
    my class Entry {
        has $.status;
        has @.headers;
        has $.body-blob;
    }
    has Entry %!cache;

    method lookup(Cro::HTTP::Request $request) {
        with %!cache{$req.target} {
            my $resp = Cro::HTTP::Response.new: :$request, :status(.status);
            $resp.append-header($_) for .headers;
            $resp.set-body-byte-stream(supply emit .body-blob);
            return $resp;
        }
        return Nil;
    }

    method add($key, $status, @headers, $body-blob --> Nil) {
        %!cache{$key} = Entry.new: :$status, :@headers, :$body-blob;
    }
}

class ResponseCache does Cro::HTTP::Middleware::RequestResponse {
    has CachedData $!cache .= new;

    method process-requests(Supply $requests) {
        supply whenever $requests -> $req {
            with $!cache.lookup($req) -> $res {
                emit $res;
            }
            else {
                emit $req;
            }
        }
    }

    method process-responses(Supply $responses) {
        supply whenever $responses -> $res {
            my $key = $res.request.target;
            my $status = $res.status;
            my @headers = $res.header-list;
            whenever $res.body-blob -> $body-blob {
                # Produce the response, and cache the bytes, rather than
                # going through body serialization every time in the
                # future.
                $!cache.add($key, $status, @headers, $body-blob);
                $resp.set-body-byte-stream(supply emit $body-blob);
                emit $res;
            }
        }
    }
}

The Cro::HTTP::Middleware::RequestResponse role requires implementing the process-requests and process-responses methods, which are passed Supply instances containing a stream of requests and responses to process. The process-requests method should return a Supply that, for each request received, will emit either:

  • That request object, perhaps after some tweaks. The request object will continue onwards through the pipeline "as normal".

  • A Cro::HTTP::Response object, which represents an early response. This will be emitted as if it came after the response part of the middleware (and so will not be seen by process-response).

The process-responses method receives a Supply that will emit responses to be processed. It must emit those responses after processing them.

This role does not implement Cro::Transform, since it actually is a way of declaring a pair of transforms that work together with connection state. It instead does the Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Pair role, described below.

Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Pair§

This role represents a pairing of HTTP request and response transforms, such that they can be considered by the user to be a single piece of middleware. This role is recognized and processed specially by:

  • Cro::HTTP::Server in the before argument; it extracts the request part and inserts it at the location it is placed within the list of before middleware, and unshifts the response part onto the after middleware. This means any explicitly declared after middleware will process the output of the response middleware, and earlier before middleware will wrap around latter before middleware.

  • Cro::HTTP::Router in the before function; it extracts the request part and calls before on it, and then extracts the response part and calls after on it.

The Cro.compose(...) method does not recognize Cro::HTTP::Middleware::Pair but can still be used by calling .request and .response to get the two parts, inserting them at the appropriate point in the pipeline.