Introduction
Welcome to the documentation for @effect/platform
, a library designed for creating platform-independent abstractions (Node.js, Bun, browsers).
[!WARNING]
This documentation focuses on unstable modules. For stable modules, refer to the official website documentation.
HTTP API
Overview
The HttpApi
family of modules provide a declarative way to define HTTP APIs.
You can create an API by combining multiple endpoints, each with its own set of
schemas that define the request and response types.
After you have defined your API, you can use it to implement a server or derive
a client that can interact with the server.
Defining an API
To define an API, you need to create a set of endpoints. Each endpoint is
defined by a path, a method, and a set of schemas that define the request and
response types.
Each set of endpoints is added to an HttpApiGroup
, which can be combined with
other groups to create a complete API.
Your first HttpApiGroup
Let's define a simple CRUD API for managing users. First, we need to make an
HttpApiGroup
that contains our endpoints.
import { HttpApiEndpoint, HttpApiGroup } from "@effect/platform"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
class User extends Schema.Class<User>("User")({
id: Schema.Number,
name: Schema.String,
createdAt: Schema.DateTimeUtc
}) {}
const usersApi = HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(User),
HttpApiEndpoint.setPath(
Schema.Struct({
id: Schema.NumberFromString
})
)
)
),
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.post("create", "/users").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(User),
HttpApiEndpoint.setPayload(
Schema.Struct({
name: Schema.String
})
)
)
),
HttpApiGroup.add(HttpApiEndpoint.del("delete", "/users/:id")),
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.patch("update", "/users/:id").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(User),
HttpApiEndpoint.setPayload(
Schema.Struct({
name: Schema.String
})
)
)
)
)
You can also extend the HttpApiGroup
with a class to gain an opaque type.
We will use this API style in the following examples:
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id")
)
) {}
Creating the top level HttpApi
Once you have defined your groups, you can combine them into a single HttpApi
.
import { HttpApi } from "@effect/platform"
class MyApi extends HttpApi.empty.pipe(HttpApi.addGroup(UsersApi)) {}
Or with the non-opaque style:
const api = HttpApi.empty.pipe(HttpApi.addGroup(usersApi))
Adding OpenApi annotations
You can add OpenApi annotations to your API by using the OpenApi
module.
Let's add a title to our UsersApi
group:
import { OpenApi } from "@effect/platform"
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id")
),
OpenApi.annotate({
title: "Users API",
description: "API for managing users"
})
) {}
Now when you generate OpenApi documentation, the title and description will be
included.
You can also add OpenApi annotations to the top-level HttpApi
:
class MyApi extends HttpApi.empty.pipe(
HttpApi.addGroup(UsersApi),
OpenApi.annotate({
title: "My API",
description: "My awesome API"
})
) {}
Adding errors
You can add error responses to your endpoints using the following apis:
HttpApiEndpoint.addError
- add an error response for a single endpointHttpApiGroup.addError
- add an error response for all endpoints in a groupHttpApi.addError
- add an error response for all endpoints in the api
The group & api level errors are useful for adding common error responses that
can be used in middleware.
Here is an example of adding a 404 error to the UsersApi
group:
class UserNotFound extends Schema.TaggedError<UserNotFound>()(
"UserNotFound",
{}
) {}
class Unauthorized extends Schema.TaggedError<Unauthorized>()(
"Unauthorized",
{}
) {}
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.addError(UserNotFound, { status: 404 }),
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(User),
HttpApiEndpoint.setPath(Schema.Struct({ id: Schema.NumberFromString }))
)
),
HttpApiGroup.addError(Unauthorized, { status: 401 })
) {}
It is worth noting that you can add multiple error responses to an endpoint,
just by calling HttpApiEndpoint.addError
multiple times.
Multipart requests
If you need to handle file uploads, you can use the HttpApiSchema.Multipart
api to flag a HttpApiEndpoint
payload schema as a multipart request.
You can then use the schemas from the Multipart
module to define the expected
shape of the multipart request.
import { HttpApiSchema, Multipart } from "@effect/platform"
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.post("upload", "/users/upload").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setPayload(
HttpApiSchema.Multipart(
Schema.Struct({
files: Multipart.FilesSchema
})
)
)
)
)
) {}
Adding security annotations
The HttpApiSecurity
module provides a way to add security annotations to your
API.
It offers the following authorization types:
HttpApiSecurity.apiKey
- API key authorization through headers, query
parameters, or cookies.HttpApiSecurity.basicAuth
- HTTP Basic authentication.HttpApiSecurity.bearerAuth
- Bearer token authentication.
You can annotate your API with these security types using the
OpenApi.annotate
api as before.
import { HttpApiSecurity } from "@effect/platform"
const security = HttpApiSecurity.apiKey({
in: "cookie",
key: "token"
})
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id").pipe(
OpenApi.annotate({ security })
)
),
OpenApi.annotate({ security }),
HttpApiGroup.annotateEndpoints(OpenApi.Security, security),
HttpApiGroup.add(HttpApiEndpoint.get("list", "/users"))
) {}
Changing the response encoding
By default, the response is encoded as JSON. You can change the encoding using
the HttpApiSchema.withEncoding
api.
Here is an example of changing the encoding to text/csv:
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("csv", "/users/csv").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(
Schema.String.pipe(
HttpApiSchema.withEncoding({
kind: "Text",
contentType: "text/csv"
})
)
)
)
)
) {}
Implementing a server
Now that you have defined your API, you can implement a server that serves the
endpoints.
The HttpApiBuilder
module provides all the apis you need to implement your
server.
Implementing a HttpApiGroup
First up, let's implement an UsersApi
group with a single findById
endpoint.
The HttpApiBuilder.group
api takes the HttpApi
definition, the group name,
and a function that adds the handlers required for the group.
Each endpoint is implemented using the HttpApiBuilder.handle
api.
import {
HttpApi,
HttpApiBuilder,
HttpApiEndpoint,
HttpApiGroup
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { DateTime, Effect } from "effect"
class User extends Schema.Class<User>("User")({
id: Schema.Number,
name: Schema.String,
createdAt: Schema.DateTimeUtc
}) {}
class UsersApi extends HttpApiGroup.make("users").pipe(
HttpApiGroup.add(
HttpApiEndpoint.get("findById", "/users/:id").pipe(
HttpApiEndpoint.setSuccess(User),
HttpApiEndpoint.setPath(
Schema.Struct({
id: Schema.NumberFromString
})
)
)
)
) {}
class MyApi extends HttpApi.empty.pipe(HttpApi.addGroup(UsersApi)) {}
const UsersApiLive: Layer.Layer<HttpApiGroup.HttpApiGroup.Service<"users">> =
HttpApiBuilder.group(MyApi, "users", (handlers) =>
handlers.pipe(
HttpApiBuilder.handle("findById", ({ path: { id } }) =>
Effect.succeed(
new User({
id,
name: "John Doe",
createdAt: DateTime.unsafeNow()
})
)
)
)
)
Using services inside a HttpApiGroup
If you need to use services inside your handlers, you can return an
Effect
from the HttpApiBuilder.group
api.
class UsersRepository extends Context.Tag("UsersRepository")<
UsersRepository,
{
readonly findById: (id: number) => Effect.Effect<User>
}
>() {}
const UsersApiLive: Layer.Layer<
HttpApiGroup.HttpApiGroup.Service<"users">,
never,
UsersRepository
> = HttpApiBuilder.group(MyApi, "users", (handlers) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
const repository = yield* UsersRepository
return handlers.pipe(
HttpApiBuilder.handle("findById", ({ path: { id } }) =>
repository.findById(id)
)
)
})
)
Implementing a HttpApi
Once all your groups are implemented, you can implement the top-level HttpApi
.
This is done using the HttpApiBuilder.api
api, and then using Layer.provide
to add all the group implementations.
const MyApiLive: Layer.Layer<HttpApi.HttpApi.Service> = HttpApiBuilder.api(
MyApi
).pipe(Layer.provide(UsersApiLive))
Serving the API
Finally, you can serve the API using the HttpApiBuilder.serve
api.
You can also add middleware to the server using the HttpMiddleware
module, or
use some of the middleware Layer's from the HttpApiBuilder
module.
import { HttpMiddleware, HttpServer } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeHttpServer, NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { createServer } from "node:http"
const HttpLive = HttpApiBuilder.serve(HttpMiddleware.logger).pipe(
Layer.provide(HttpApiBuilder.middlewareCors()),
Layer.provide(MyApiLive),
HttpServer.withLogAddress,
Layer.provide(NodeHttpServer.layer(createServer, { port: 3000 }))
)
Layer.launch(HttpLive).pipe(NodeRuntime.runMain)
Implementing HttpApiSecurity
If you are using HttpApiSecurity
in your API, you can use the security
definition to implement a middleware that will protect your endpoints.
The HttpApiBuilder.middlewareSecurity
api will assist you in creating this
middleware.
Here is an example:
const security = HttpApiSecurity.apiKey({
in: "cookie",
key: "token"
})
class UsersRepository extends Context.Tag("UsersRepository")<
UsersRepository,
{
readonly findByToken: (token: Redacted.Redacted) => Effect.Effect<User>
}
>() {}
class CurrentUser extends Context.Tag("CurrentUser")<CurrentUser, User>() {}
const makeSecurityMiddleware: Effect.Effect<
HttpApiBuilder.SecurityMiddleware<CurrentUser>,
never,
UsersRepository
> = Effect.gen(function* () {
const repository = yield* UsersRepository
return HttpApiBuilder.middlewareSecurity(
security,
CurrentUser,
(token) => repository.findByToken(token)
)
})
const UsersApiLive = HttpApiBuilder.group(MyApi, "users", (handlers) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
const securityMiddleware = yield* makeSecurityMiddleware
return handlers.pipe(
HttpApiBuilder.handle("findById", ({ path: { id } }) =>
Effect.succeed(
new User({ id, name: "John Doe", createdAt: DateTime.unsafeNow() })
)
),
securityMiddleware
)
})
)
If you need to set the security cookie from within a handler, you can use the
HttpApiBuilder.securitySetCookie
api.
By default, the cookie will be set with the HttpOnly
and Secure
flags.
const security = HttpApiSecurity.apiKey({
in: "cookie",
key: "token"
})
const UsersApiLive = HttpApiBuilder.group(MyApi, "users", (handlers) =>
handlers.pipe(
HttpApiBuilder.handle("login", () =>
HttpApiBuilder.securitySetCookie(
security,
Redacted.make("keep me secret")
)
)
)
)
Serving Swagger documentation
You can add Swagger documentation to your API using the HttpApiSwagger
module.
You just need to provide the HttpApiSwagger.layer
to your server
implementation:
import { HttpApiSwagger } from "@effect/platform"
const HttpLive = HttpApiBuilder.serve(HttpMiddleware.logger).pipe(
Layer.provide(
HttpApiSwagger.layer({
path: "/docs"
})
),
Layer.provide(HttpApiBuilder.middlewareCors()),
Layer.provide(MyApiLive),
Layer.provide(NodeHttpServer.layer(createServer, { port: 3000 }))
)
Deriving a client
Once you have defined your API, you can derive a client that can interact with
the server.
The HttpApiClient
module provides all the apis you need to derive a client.
import { HttpApiClient } from "@effect/platform"
Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpApiClient.make(MyApi, {
baseUrl: "http://localhost:3000"
})
const user = yield* client.users.findById({ path: { id: 1 } })
yield* Effect.log(user)
})
HTTP Client
Overview
The @effect/platform/HttpClient*
modules provide a way to send HTTP requests,
handle responses, and abstract over the differences between platforms.
The HttpClient
interface has a set of methods for sending requests:
.execute
- takes a HttpClientRequest
and returns a HttpClientResponse
.{get, post, ...}
- convenience methods for creating a request and
executing it in one step
To access the HttpClient
, you can use the HttpClient.HttpClient
Context.Tag
.
This will give you access to a HttpClient.Service
instance, which is the default
type of the HttpClient
interface.
A First Example: Retrieving JSON Data (GET)
Here's a simple example demonstrating how to retrieve JSON data using HttpClient
from @effect/platform
.
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
const program = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1"
)
const json = yield* response.json
console.log(json)
}).pipe(
Effect.scoped,
Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer)
)
Effect.runPromise(program)
Custom HttpClient.Service
's
You can create your own HttpClient.Service
using the HttpClient.makeService
constructor.
import { HttpClient, HttpClientResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
const myClient = HttpClient.makeService((req) =>
Effect.succeed(
HttpClientResponse.fromWeb(
req,
new Response(
JSON.stringify({
userId: 1,
id: 1,
title: "title...",
body: "body..."
})
)
)
)
)
Tapping
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const program = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = (yield* HttpClient.HttpClient).pipe(
HttpClient.tapRequest(Console.log)
)
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1"
)
const json = yield* response.json
console.log(json)
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
Effect.runPromise(program)
HttpClientRequest
Overview
You can create a HttpClientRequest
using the following provided constructors:
Constructor | Description |
---|
HttpClientRequest.get | Create a GET request |
HttpClientRequest.post | Create a POST request |
HttpClientRequest.patch | Create a PATCH request |
HttpClientRequest.put | Create a PUT request |
HttpClientRequest.del | Create a DELETE request |
HttpClientRequest.head | Create a HEAD request |
HttpClientRequest.options | Create an OPTIONS request |
When making HTTP requests, sometimes you need to include additional information in the request headers. You can set headers using the setHeader
function for a single header or setHeaders
for multiple headers simultaneously.
import { HttpClientRequest } from "@effect/platform"
const req = HttpClientRequest.get("https://api.example.com/data").pipe(
HttpClientRequest.setHeader("Authorization", "Bearer your_token_here"),
HttpClientRequest.setHeaders({
"Content-Type": "application/json; charset=UTF-8",
"Custom-Header": "CustomValue"
})
)
console.log(JSON.stringify(req.headers, null, 2))
basicAuth
To include basic authentication in your HTTP request, you can use the basicAuth
method provided by HttpClientRequest
.
import { HttpClientRequest } from "@effect/platform"
const req = HttpClientRequest.get("https://api.example.com/data").pipe(
HttpClientRequest.basicAuth("your_username", "your_password")
)
console.log(JSON.stringify(req.headers, null, 2))
bearerToken
To include a Bearer token in your HTTP request, use the bearerToken
method provided by HttpClientRequest
.
import { HttpClientRequest } from "@effect/platform"
const req = HttpClientRequest.get("https://api.example.com/data").pipe(
HttpClientRequest.bearerToken("your_token")
)
console.log(JSON.stringify(req.headers, null, 2))
accept
To specify the media types that are acceptable for the response, use the accept
method provided by HttpClientRequest
.
import { HttpClientRequest } from "@effect/platform"
const req = HttpClientRequest.get("https://api.example.com/data").pipe(
HttpClientRequest.accept("application/xml")
)
console.log(JSON.stringify(req.headers, null, 2))
acceptJson
To indicate that the client accepts JSON responses, use the acceptJson
method provided by HttpClientRequest
.
import { HttpClientRequest } from "@effect/platform"
const req = HttpClientRequest.get("https://api.example.com/data").pipe(
HttpClientRequest.acceptJson
)
console.log(JSON.stringify(req.headers, null, 2))
GET
Converting to JSON
To convert a GET response to JSON:
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const getPostAsJson = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1"
)
return yield* response.json
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
getPostAsJson.pipe(
Effect.andThen((post) => Console.log(typeof post, post)),
NodeRuntime.runMain
)
Converting to Text
To convert a GET response to text:
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const getPostAsJson = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1"
)
return yield* response.text
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
getPostAsJson.pipe(
Effect.andThen((post) => Console.log(typeof post, post)),
NodeRuntime.runMain
)
More on Converting the Response
Here are some APIs you can use to convert the response:
API | Description |
---|
response.arrayBuffer | Convert to ArrayBuffer |
response.formData | Convert to FormData |
response.json | Convert to JSON |
response.stream | Convert to a Stream of Uint8Array |
response.text | Convert to text |
response.urlParamsBody | Convert to UrlParams |
Decoding Data with Schemas
A common use case when fetching data is to validate the received format. For this purpose, the HttpClient
module is integrated with @effect/schema
.
import {
FetchHttpClient,
HttpClient,
HttpClientResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const Post = Schema.Struct({
id: Schema.Number,
title: Schema.String
})
const getPostAndValidate = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1"
)
return yield* HttpClientResponse.schemaBodyJson(Post)(response)
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
getPostAndValidate.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
In this example, we define a schema for a post object with properties id
and title
. Then, we fetch the data and validate it against this schema using HttpClientResponse.schemaBodyJson
. Finally, we log the validated post object.
Note that we use Effect.scoped
after consuming the response. This ensures that any resources associated with the HTTP request are properly cleaned up once we're done processing the response.
Filtering And Error Handling
It's important to note that HttpClient.fetch
doesn't consider non-200
status codes as errors by default. This design choice allows for flexibility in handling different response scenarios. For instance, you might have a schema union where the status code serves as the discriminator, enabling you to define a schema that encompasses all possible response cases.
You can use HttpClient.filterStatusOk
, or HttpClient.fetchOk
to ensure only 2xx
responses are treated as successes.
In this example, we attempt to fetch a non-existent page and don't receive any error:
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const getText = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/non-existing-page"
)
return yield* response.text
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
getText.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
However, if we use HttpClient.filterStatusOk
, an error is logged:
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const getText = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = (yield* HttpClient.HttpClient).pipe(HttpClient.filterStatusOk)
const response = yield* client.get(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/non-existing-page"
)
return yield* response.text
}).pipe(Effect.scoped, Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
getText.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
POST
To make a POST request, you can use the HttpClientRequest.post
function provided by the HttpClientRequest
module. Here's an example of how to create and send a POST request:
import {
FetchHttpClient,
HttpClient,
HttpClientRequest
} from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const addPost = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
return yield* HttpClientRequest.post(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts"
).pipe(
HttpClientRequest.bodyJson({
title: "foo",
body: "bar",
userId: 1
}),
Effect.flatMap(client.execute),
Effect.flatMap((res) => res.json),
Effect.scoped
)
}).pipe(Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
addPost.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
If you need to send data in a format other than JSON, such as plain text, you can use different APIs provided by HttpClientRequest
.
In the following example, we send the data as text:
import {
FetchHttpClient,
HttpClient,
HttpClientRequest
} from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const addPost = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
return yield* HttpClientRequest.post(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts"
).pipe(
HttpClientRequest.bodyText(
JSON.stringify({
title: "foo",
body: "bar",
userId: 1
}),
"application/json; charset=UTF-8"
),
client.execute,
Effect.flatMap((res) => res.json),
Effect.scoped
)
}).pipe(Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
addPost.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
Decoding Data with Schemas
A common use case when fetching data is to validate the received format. For this purpose, the HttpClient
module is integrated with @effect/schema
.
import {
FetchHttpClient,
HttpClient,
HttpClientRequest,
HttpClientResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { Console, Effect } from "effect"
const Post = Schema.Struct({
id: Schema.Number,
title: Schema.String
})
const addPost = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
return yield* HttpClientRequest.post(
"https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts"
).pipe(
HttpClientRequest.bodyText(
JSON.stringify({
title: "foo",
body: "bar",
userId: 1
}),
"application/json; charset=UTF-8"
),
client.execute,
Effect.flatMap(HttpClientResponse.schemaBodyJson(Post)),
Effect.scoped
)
}).pipe(Effect.provide(FetchHttpClient.layer))
addPost.pipe(Effect.andThen(Console.log), NodeRuntime.runMain)
Testing
Injecting Fetch
To test HTTP requests, you can inject a mock fetch implementation.
import { FetchHttpClient, HttpClient } from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect, Layer } from "effect"
import * as assert from "node:assert"
const FetchTest = Layer.succeed(FetchHttpClient.Fetch, () =>
Promise.resolve(new Response("not found", { status: 404 }))
)
const TestLayer = FetchHttpClient.layer.pipe(Layer.provide(FetchTest))
const program = Effect.gen(function* () {
const client = yield* HttpClient.HttpClient
return yield* client.get("https://www.google.com/").pipe(
Effect.flatMap((res) => res.text),
Effect.scoped
)
})
Effect.gen(function* () {
const response = yield* program
assert.equal(response, "not found")
}).pipe(Effect.provide(TestLayer), Effect.runPromise)
HTTP Server
Overview
This section provides a simplified explanation of key concepts within the @effect/platform
TypeScript library, focusing on components used to build HTTP servers. Understanding these terms and their relationships helps in structuring and managing server applications effectively.
Core Concepts
-
HttpApp: This is an Effect
which results in a value A
. It can utilize ServerRequest
to produce the outcome A
. Essentially, an HttpApp
represents an application component that handles HTTP requests and generates responses based on those requests.
-
Default (HttpApp): A special type of HttpApp
that specifically produces a ServerResponse
as its output A
. This is the most common form of application where each interaction is expected to result in an HTTP response.
-
Server: A construct that takes a Default
app and converts it into an Effect
. This serves as the execution layer where the Default
app is operated, handling incoming requests and serving responses.
-
Router: A type of Default
app where the possible error outcome is RouteNotFound
. Routers are used to direct incoming requests to appropriate handlers based on the request path and method.
-
Handler: Another form of Default
app, which has access to both RouteContext
and ServerRequest.ParsedSearchParams
. Handlers are specific functions designed to process requests and generate responses.
-
Middleware: Functions that transform a Default
app into another Default
app. Middleware can be used to modify requests, responses, or handle tasks like logging, authentication, and more. Middleware can be applied in two ways:
- On a
Router
using router.use: Handler -> Default
which applies the middleware to specific routes. - On a
Server
using server.serve: () -> Layer | Middleware -> Layer
which applies the middleware globally to all routes handled by the server.
Applying Concepts
These components are designed to work together in a modular and flexible way, allowing developers to build complex server applications with reusable components. Here's how you might typically use these components in a project:
-
Create Handlers: Define functions that process specific types of requests (e.g., GET, POST) and return responses.
-
Set Up Routers: Organize handlers into routers, where each router manages a subset of application routes.
-
Apply Middleware: Enhance routers or entire servers with middleware to add extra functionality like error handling or request logging.
-
Initialize the Server: Wrap the main router with server functionality, applying any server-wide middleware, and start listening for requests.
Getting Started
Hello world example
In this example, we will create a simple HTTP server that listens on port 3000
. The server will respond with "Hello World!" when a request is made to the root URL (/) and return a 500
error for all other paths.
Node.js Example
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeHttpServer, NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Layer } from "effect"
import { createServer } from "node:http"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(), HttpServer.withLogAddress)
const port = 3000
const ServerLive = NodeHttpServer.layer(() => createServer(), { port })
NodeRuntime.runMain(Layer.launch(Layer.provide(app, ServerLive)))
[!NOTE]
The HttpServer.withLogAddress
middleware logs the address and port where the server is listening, helping to confirm that the server is running correctly and accessible on the expected endpoint.
Bun Example
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { BunHttpServer, BunRuntime } from "@effect/platform-bun"
import { Layer } from "effect"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(), HttpServer.withLogAddress)
const port = 3000
const ServerLive = BunHttpServer.layer({ port })
BunRuntime.runMain(Layer.launch(Layer.provide(app, ServerLive)))
To avoid boilerplate code for the final server setup, we'll use a helper function from the listen.ts
file:
import type { HttpPlatform, HttpServer } from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeHttpServer, NodeRuntime } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Layer } from "effect"
import { createServer } from "node:http"
export const listen = (
app: Layer.Layer<
never,
never,
HttpPlatform.HttpPlatform | HttpServer.HttpServer
>,
port: number
) =>
NodeRuntime.runMain(
Layer.launch(
Layer.provide(
app,
NodeHttpServer.layer(() => createServer(), { port })
)
)
)
Basic routing
Routing refers to determining how an application responds to a client request to a particular endpoint, which is a URI (or path) and a specific HTTP request method (GET, POST, and so on).
Route definition takes the following structure:
router.pipe(HttpRouter.METHOD(PATH, HANDLER))
Where:
- router is an instance of
Router
(import type { Router } from "@effect/platform/Http/Router"
). - METHOD is an HTTP request method, in lowercase (e.g., get, post, put, del).
- PATH is the path on the server (e.g., "/", "/user").
- HANDLER is the action that gets executed when the route is matched.
The following examples illustrate defining simple routes.
Respond with "Hello World!"
on the homepage:
router.pipe(HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World")))
Respond to POST request on the root route (/), the application's home page:
router.pipe(HttpRouter.post("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Got a POST request")))
Respond to a PUT request to the /user
route:
router.pipe(
HttpRouter.put("/user", HttpServerResponse.text("Got a PUT request at /user"))
)
Respond to a DELETE request to the /user
route:
router.pipe(
HttpRouter.del(
"/user",
HttpServerResponse.text("Got a DELETE request at /user")
)
)
Serving static files
To serve static files such as images, CSS files, and JavaScript files, use the HttpServerResponse.file
built-in action.
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.file("index.html"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Create an index.html
file in your project directory:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
<title>index.html</title>
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
</head>
<body>
index.html
</body>
</html>
Routing
Routing refers to how an application's endpoints (URIs) respond to client requests.
You define routing using methods of the HttpRouter
object that correspond to HTTP methods; for example, HttpRouter.get()
to handle GET requests and HttpRouter.post
to handle POST requests. You can also use HttpRouter.all()
to handle all HTTP methods.
These routing methods specify a Route.Handler
called when the application receives a request to the specified route (endpoint) and HTTP method. In other words, the application “listens” for requests that match the specified route(s) and method(s), and when it detects a match, it calls the specified handler.
The following code is an example of a very basic route.
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
Route methods
A route method is derived from one of the HTTP methods, and is attached to an instance of the HttpRouter
object.
The following code is an example of routes that are defined for the GET and the POST methods to the root of the app.
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("GET request to the homepage"))
HttpRouter.post("/", HttpServerResponse.text("POST request to the homepage"))
HttpRouter
supports methods that correspond to all HTTP request methods: get
, post
, and so on.
There is a special routing method, HttpRouter.all()
, used to load middleware functions at a path for all HTTP request methods. For example, the following handler is executed for requests to the route “/secret” whether using GET, POST, PUT, DELETE.
HttpRouter.all(
"/secret",
HttpServerResponse.empty().pipe(
Effect.tap(Console.log("Accessing the secret section ..."))
)
)
Route paths
Route paths, when combined with a request method, define the endpoints where requests can be made. Route paths can be specified as strings according to the following type:
type PathInput = `/${string}` | "*"
[!NOTE]
Query strings are not part of the route path.
Here are some examples of route paths based on strings.
This route path will match requests to the root route, /.
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("root"))
This route path will match requests to /user
.
HttpRouter.get("/user", HttpServerResponse.text("user"))
This route path matches requests to any path starting with /user
(e.g., /user
, /users
, etc.)
HttpRouter.get(
"/user*",
Effect.map(HttpServerRequest.HttpServerRequest, (req) =>
HttpServerResponse.text(req.url)
)
)
Route parameters
Route parameters are named URL segments that are used to capture the values specified at their position in the URL. By using a schema the captured values are populated in an object, with the name of the route parameter specified in the path as their respective keys.
Route parameters are named segments in a URL that capture the values specified at those positions. These captured values are stored in an object, with the parameter names used as keys.
For example:
Route path: /users/:userId/books/:bookId
Request URL: http://localhost:3000/users/34/books/8989
params: { "userId": "34", "bookId": "8989" }
To define routes with parameters, include the parameter names in the path and use a schema to validate and parse these parameters, as shown below.
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const Params = Schema.Struct({
userId: Schema.String,
bookId: Schema.String
})
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/users/:userId/books/:bookId",
HttpRouter.schemaPathParams(Params).pipe(
Effect.flatMap((params) => HttpServerResponse.json(params))
)
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Response methods
The methods on HttpServerResponse
object in the following table can send a response to the client, and terminate the request-response cycle. If none of these methods are called from a route handler, the client request will be left hanging.
Method | Description |
---|
empty | Sends an empty response. |
formData | Sends form data. |
html | Sends an HTML response. |
raw | Sends a raw response. |
setBody | Sets the body of the response. |
stream | Sends a streaming response. |
text | Sends a plain text response. |
Router
Use the HttpRouter
object to create modular, mountable route handlers. A Router
instance is a complete middleware and routing system, often referred to as a "mini-app."
The following example shows how to create a router as a module, define some routes, and mount the router module on a path in the main app.
Create a file named birds.ts
in your app directory with the following content:
import { HttpRouter, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
export const birds = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Birds home page")),
HttpRouter.get("/about", HttpServerResponse.text("About birds"))
)
In your main application file, load the router module and mount it.
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer } from "@effect/platform"
import { birds } from "./birds.js"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(HttpRouter.mount("/birds", birds))
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
When you run this code, your application will be able to handle requests to /birds
and /birds/about
, serving the respective responses defined in the birds
router module.
Writing Middleware
In this section, we'll build a simple "Hello World" application and demonstrate how to add three middleware functions: myLogger
for logging, requestTime
for displaying request timestamps, and validateCookies
for validating incoming cookies.
Example Application
Here is an example of a basic "Hello World" application with middleware.
Middleware myLogger
This middleware logs "LOGGED" whenever a request passes through it.
const myLogger = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log("LOGGED")
return yield* app
})
)
To use the middleware, add it to the router using HttpRouter.use()
:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const myLogger = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log("LOGGED")
return yield* app
})
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpRouter.use(myLogger), HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
With this setup, every request to the app will log "LOGGED" to the terminal. Middleware execute in the order they are loaded.
Middleware requestTime
Next, we'll create a middleware that records the timestamp of each HTTP request and provides it via a service called RequestTime
.
class RequestTime extends Context.Tag("RequestTime")<RequestTime, number>() {}
const requestTime = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
return yield* app.pipe(Effect.provideService(RequestTime, Date.now()))
})
)
Update the app to use this middleware and display the timestamp in the response:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Context, Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
class RequestTime extends Context.Tag("RequestTime")<RequestTime, number>() {}
const requestTime = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
return yield* app.pipe(Effect.provideService(RequestTime, Date.now()))
})
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/",
Effect.gen(function* () {
const requestTime = yield* RequestTime
const responseText = `Hello World<br/><small>Requested at: ${requestTime}</small>`
return yield* HttpServerResponse.html(responseText)
})
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpRouter.use(requestTime), HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Now, when you make a request to the root path, the response will include the timestamp of the request.
Middleware validateCookies
Finally, we'll create a middleware that validates incoming cookies. If the cookies are invalid, it sends a 400 response.
Here's an example that validates cookies using an external service:
class CookieError {
readonly _tag = "CookieError"
}
const externallyValidateCookie = (testCookie: string | undefined) =>
testCookie && testCookie.length > 0
? Effect.succeed(testCookie)
: Effect.fail(new CookieError())
const cookieValidator = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
const req = yield* HttpServerRequest.HttpServerRequest
yield* externallyValidateCookie(req.cookies.testCookie)
return yield* app
}).pipe(
Effect.catchTag("CookieError", () =>
HttpServerResponse.text("Invalid cookie")
)
)
)
Update the app to use the cookieValidator
middleware:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerRequest,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
class CookieError {
readonly _tag = "CookieError"
}
const externallyValidateCookie = (testCookie: string | undefined) =>
testCookie && testCookie.length > 0
? Effect.succeed(testCookie)
: Effect.fail(new CookieError())
const cookieValidator = HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
const req = yield* HttpServerRequest.HttpServerRequest
yield* externallyValidateCookie(req.cookies.testCookie)
return yield* app
}).pipe(
Effect.catchTag("CookieError", () =>
HttpServerResponse.text("Invalid cookie")
)
)
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpRouter.use(cookieValidator), HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Test the middleware with the following commands:
curl -i http://localhost:3000
curl -i http://localhost:3000 --cookie "testCookie=myvalue"
curl -i http://localhost:3000 --cookie "testCookie="
This setup validates the testCookie
and returns "Invalid cookie" if the validation fails, or "Hello World" if it passes.
Applying Middleware in Your Application
Middleware functions are powerful tools that allow you to modify the request-response cycle. Middlewares can be applied at various levels to achieve different scopes of influence:
- Route Level: Apply middleware to individual routes.
- Router Level: Apply middleware to a group of routes within a single router.
- Server Level: Apply middleware across all routes managed by a server.
Applying Middleware at the Route Level
At the route level, middlewares are applied to specific endpoints, allowing for targeted modifications or enhancements such as logging, authentication, or parameter validation for a particular route.
Example
Here's a practical example showing how to apply middleware at the route level:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const withMiddleware = (name: string) =>
HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log(name)
return yield* app
})
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/a", HttpServerResponse.text("a").pipe(withMiddleware("M1"))),
HttpRouter.get("/b", HttpServerResponse.text("b").pipe(withMiddleware("M2")))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Testing the Middleware
You can test the middleware by making requests to the respective routes and observing the console output:
curl -i http://localhost:3000/a
curl -i http://localhost:3000/b
Applying Middleware at the Router Level
Applying middleware at the router level is an efficient way to manage common functionalities across multiple routes within your application. Middleware can handle tasks such as logging, authentication, and response modifications before reaching the actual route handlers.
Example
Here's how you can structure and apply middleware across different routers using the @effect/platform
library:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const withMiddleware = (name: string) =>
HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log(name)
return yield* app
})
)
const router1 = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/a", HttpServerResponse.text("a")),
HttpRouter.get("/b", HttpServerResponse.text("b")),
HttpRouter.use(withMiddleware("M1")),
HttpRouter.get("/c", HttpServerResponse.text("c"))
)
const router2 = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/d", HttpServerResponse.text("d")),
HttpRouter.get("/e", HttpServerResponse.text("e")),
HttpRouter.get("/f", HttpServerResponse.text("f")),
HttpRouter.use(withMiddleware("M2"))
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.mount("/r1", router1),
HttpRouter.use(withMiddleware("M3")),
HttpRouter.get("/g", HttpServerResponse.text("g")),
HttpRouter.mount("/r2", router2),
HttpRouter.use(withMiddleware("M4"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Testing the Middleware
To ensure that the middleware is working as expected, you can test it by making HTTP requests to the defined routes and checking the console output for middleware logs:
curl -i http://localhost:3000/r1/a
curl -i http://localhost:3000/r1/c
curl -i http://localhost:3000/r2/d
curl -i http://localhost:3000/g
Applying Middleware at the Server Level
Applying middleware at the server level allows you to introduce certain functionalities, such as logging, authentication, or general request processing, that affect every request handled by the server. This ensures that all incoming requests, regardless of the route, pass through the applied middleware, making it an essential feature for global error handling, logging, or authentication.
Example
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const withMiddleware = (name: string) =>
HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log(name)
return yield* app
})
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/a", HttpServerResponse.text("a").pipe(withMiddleware("M1"))),
HttpRouter.get("/b", HttpServerResponse.text("b")),
HttpRouter.use(withMiddleware("M2")),
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("root"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(withMiddleware("M3")))
listen(app, 3000)
Testing the Middleware
To confirm the middleware is functioning as intended, you can send HTTP requests to the defined routes and check the console for middleware logs:
curl -i http://localhost:3000/a
curl -i http://localhost:3000/b
curl -i http://localhost:3000/
Applying Multiple Middlewares
Middleware functions are simply functions that transform a Default
app into another Default
app. This flexibility allows for stacking multiple middleware functions, much like composing functions in functional programming. The flow
function from the Effect
library facilitates this by enabling function composition.
Example
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect, flow } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const withMiddleware = (name: string) =>
HttpMiddleware.make((app) =>
Effect.gen(function* () {
console.log(name)
return yield* app
})
)
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/a",
HttpServerResponse.text("a").pipe(
flow(withMiddleware("M1"), withMiddleware("M2"))
)
),
HttpRouter.get("/b", HttpServerResponse.text("b")),
HttpRouter.use(flow(withMiddleware("M3"), withMiddleware("M4"))),
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("root"))
)
const app = router.pipe(
HttpServer.serve(flow(withMiddleware("M5"), withMiddleware("M6")))
)
listen(app, 3000)
Testing the Middleware Composition
To verify that the middleware is functioning as expected, you can send HTTP requests to the routes and check the console for the expected middleware log output:
curl -i http://localhost:3000/a
curl -i http://localhost:3000/b
curl -i http://localhost:3000/
Built-in middleware
Middleware Summary
Middleware | Description |
---|
Logger | Provides detailed logging of all requests and responses, aiding in debugging and monitoring application activities. |
xForwardedHeaders | Manages X-Forwarded-* headers to accurately maintain client information such as IP addresses and host names in proxy scenarios. |
logger
The HttpMiddleware.logger
middleware enables logging for your entire application, providing insights into each request and response. Here's how to set it up:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World"))
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(HttpMiddleware.logger))
listen(app, 3000)
To disable the logger for specific routes, you can use HttpMiddleware.withLoggerDisabled
:
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World")),
HttpRouter.get(
"/no-logger",
HttpServerResponse.text("no-logger").pipe(HttpMiddleware.withLoggerDisabled)
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(HttpMiddleware.logger))
listen(app, 3000)
This middleware handles X-Forwarded-*
headers, useful when your app is behind a reverse proxy or load balancer and you need to retrieve the original client's IP and host information.
import {
HttpMiddleware,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerRequest,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/",
Effect.gen(function* () {
const req = yield* HttpServerRequest.HttpServerRequest
console.log(req.headers)
console.log(req.remoteAddress)
return yield* HttpServerResponse.text("Hello World")
})
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve(HttpMiddleware.xForwardedHeaders))
listen(app, 3000)
Error Handling
Catching Errors
Below is an example illustrating how to catch and manage errors that occur during the execution of route handlers:
import { HttpRouter, HttpServer, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/throw",
Effect.sync(() => {
throw new Error("BROKEN")
})
),
HttpRouter.get("/fail", Effect.fail("Uh oh!"))
)
const app = router.pipe(
Effect.catchTags({
RouteNotFound: () =>
HttpServerResponse.text("Route Not Found", { status: 404 })
}),
Effect.catchAllCause((cause) =>
HttpServerResponse.text(cause.toString(), { status: 500 })
),
HttpServer.serve()
)
listen(app, 3000)
You can test the error handling setup with curl
commands by trying to access routes that trigger errors:
curl -i http://localhost:3000/nonexistent
curl -i http://localhost:3000/throw
curl -i http://localhost:3000/fail
Validations
Validation is a critical aspect of handling HTTP requests to ensure that the data your server receives is as expected. We'll explore how to validate headers and cookies using the @effect/platform
and @effect/schema
libraries, which provide structured and robust methods for these tasks.
Headers often contain important information needed by your application, such as content types, authentication tokens, or session data. Validating these headers ensures that your application can trust and correctly process the information it receives.
import {
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerRequest,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/",
Effect.gen(function* () {
const headers = yield* HttpServerRequest.schemaHeaders(
Schema.Struct({ test: Schema.String })
)
return yield* HttpServerResponse.text("header: " + headers.test)
}).pipe(
Effect.catchTag("ParseError", (e) =>
HttpServerResponse.text(`Invalid header: ${e.message}`)
)
)
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
You can test header validation using the following curl
commands:
curl -i http://localhost:3000
curl -i -H "test: myvalue" http://localhost:3000
Cookies
Cookies are commonly used to maintain session state or user preferences. Validating cookies ensures that the data they carry is intact and as expected, enhancing security and application integrity.
Here's how you can validate cookies received in HTTP requests:
import {
Cookies,
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerRequest,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { Schema } from "@effect/schema"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/",
Effect.gen(function* () {
const cookies = yield* HttpServerRequest.schemaCookies(
Schema.Struct({ test: Schema.String })
)
return yield* HttpServerResponse.text("cookie: " + cookies.test)
}).pipe(
Effect.catchTag("ParseError", (e) =>
HttpServerResponse.text(`Invalid cookie: ${e.message}`)
)
)
)
)
const app = router.pipe(HttpServer.serve())
listen(app, 3000)
Validate the cookie handling with the following curl
commands:
curl -i http://localhost:3000
curl -i http://localhost:3000 --cookie "test=myvalue"
ServerRequest
How do I get the raw request?
The native request object depends on the platform you are using, and it is not directly modeled in @effect/platform
. Instead, you need to refer to the specific platform package you are working with, such as @effect/platform-node
or @effect/platform-bun
.
Here is an example using Node.js:
import {
HttpRouter,
HttpServer,
HttpServerRequest,
HttpServerResponse
} from "@effect/platform"
import { NodeHttpServer, NodeHttpServerRequest } from "@effect/platform-node"
import { Effect } from "effect"
import { listen } from "./listen.js"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get(
"/",
Effect.gen(function* () {
const req = yield* HttpServerRequest.HttpServerRequest
const raw = NodeHttpServerRequest.toIncomingMessage(req)
console.log(raw)
return HttpServerResponse.empty()
})
)
)
listen(HttpServer.serve(router), 3000)
Conversions
toWebHandler
The toWebHandler
function converts a Default
(i.e. a type of HttpApp
that specifically produces a ServerResponse
as its output) into a web handler that can process Request
objects and return Response
objects.
import { HttpApp, HttpRouter, HttpServerResponse } from "@effect/platform"
const router = HttpRouter.empty.pipe(
HttpRouter.get("/", HttpServerResponse.text("content 1")),
HttpRouter.get("/foo", HttpServerResponse.text("content 2"))
)
const handler = HttpApp.toWebHandler(router)
const response = await handler(new Request("http://localhost:3000/foo"))
console.log(await response.text())