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| YAWS_API(5) | User API | YAWS_API(5) |
NAME¶
yaws_api - api available to yaws web server programmersSYNOPSIS¶
yaws_api:Function(...)DESCRIPTION¶
This is the api available to yaws web server programmers. The Erlang module yaws_api contains a wide variety of functions that can be used inside yaws pages.<html>
<body>
<h1> Header 1</h1>
<erl>
out(Arg) ->
{html, "<p> Insert this text into the document"}.
</erl>
</body>
</html>
-record(arg, {
clisock, %% the socket leading to the peer client
client_ip_port, %% {ClientIp, ClientPort} tuple
headers, %% headers
req, %% request
clidata, %% The client data (as a binary in POST requests)
server_path, %% The normalized server path
querydata, %% Was the URL on the form of ...?query (GET reqs)
appmoddata, %% the remainder of the path up to the query
docroot, %% where's the data
fullpath, %% full path to yaws file
cont, %% Continuation for chunked multipart uploads
state, %% State for use by users of the out/1 callback
pid, %% pid of the yaws worker process
opaque, %% useful to pass static data
appmod_prepath, %% path in front of: <appmod><appmoddata>
pathinfo %% Set to 'd/e' when calling c.yaws for the request
%% http://some.host/a/b/c.yaws/d/e
}).
-record(headers, {
connection,
accept,
host,
if_modified_since,
if_match,
if_none_match,
if_range,
if_unmodified_since,
range,
referer,
user_agent,
accept_ranges,
cookie = [],
keep_alive,
content_length,
authorization,
other = [] %% misc other headers
}).
API¶
- ssi(DocRoot, ListOfFiles)
- Server side include. Just include the files as is in the
document. The files will not be parsed and searched for <erl>
tags.
- pre_ssi_files(DocRoot, ListOfFiles) ->
- Server side include of pre indented code. The data in Files
will be included but contained in a <pre> tag. The data will be
htmlized.
- pre_ssi_string(String)
- Include htmlized content from String.
- f(Fmt, Args)
- The equivalent of io_lib:format/2. This function is
automatically -included in all erlang code which is a part of a yaws page.
- htmlize(Binary | List | Char)
- Htmlize an IO list object.
- setcookie(Name, Value, [Path, [ Expire, [Domain , [Secure]]]])
- Sets a cookie to the browser.
- find_cookie_val(Cookie, Header)
- This function can be used to search for a cookie that was
previously set by setcookie/2-6. For example if we set a cookie as
yaws_api:setcookie("sid",SomeRandomSid) , then on
subsequent requests from the browser we can call:
find_cookie("sid",(Arg#arg.headers)#headers.cookie)
The function returns [] if no cookie was found, otherwise the actual cookie is returned as a string.
- redirect(Url
- This function generates a redirect to the browser. It will
clear any previously set headers. So to generate a redirect and set
a cookie, we need to set the cookie after the redirect as in:
out(Arg) -> ... do some stuff Ret = [{redirect, "http://www.somewhere.com"}, setcookie("sid", Random) ].
- redirect_self(Arg)
- If we want to issue a redirect to ourselves, this function
is useful. It returns a record #redir_self{} defined in
yaws_api.hrl. The record contains fields to construct a URL to
ourselves.
-record(redir_self, { host, %% string() - our own host scheme, %% http | https scheme_str, %% "https://" | "http://" port, %% integer() - our own port port_str %% "" | ":<int>" - the optional port part %% to append to the url }).
- get_line(String)
- This function is convenient when getting \r\n terminated
lines from a stream of data. It returns:
{line, Line, Tail} or {lastline, Line, Tail}The function handles multilines as defined in e.g. SMTP or HTTP
- mime_type(FileName)
- Returns the mime type as defined by the extension of
FileName
- stream_chunk_deliver(YawsPid, Data)
- When a yaws function needs to deliver chunks of data which
it gets from a process. The other process can call this function to
deliver these chunks. It requires the out/1 function to return the
value {streamcontent, MimeType, FirstChunk} to work. YawsPid is the
process identifier of the yaws process delivering the original .yaws file.
That is self() in the yaws code. The Pid must typically be passed
(somehow) to the producer of the stream.
- stream_chunk_deliver_blocking(YawsPid, Data)
- A synchronous version of the above function. This
synchronous version must always be used when the producer of the stream is
faster than the consumer. This is usually the case since the client is the
WWW browser.
- stream_chunk_end(YawsPid)
- When the process discussed above is done delivering data,
it must call this function to let the yaws content delivering process
finish up the HTTP transaction.
- stream_process_deliver(Socket, IoList)
- Yaws allows application processes to deliver data directly
to the client. The application tells yaws about such a process by
returning {streamcontent_from_pid, MimeType, Pid} from its
out/1 function. In this case, Pid uses the
stream_process_deliver/2 function to deliver data to the client.
The application gets Socket from Arg#arg.clisock, and
IoList is the data to be sent to the client.
- stream_process_deliver_chunk(Socket, IoList)
- Same as above but delivers IoList using HTTP chunked
transfer format. IoList must have a size greater than zero. The
application process delivering the data will have had to have make sure
that the HTTP headers of the response indicate chunked transfer mode,
either by ensuring no Content-Length header is set or by specifically
setting the Transfer-Encoding header to chunked.
- stream_process_deliver_final_chunk(Socket, IoList)
- If the application process delivering data to the client
uses chunked transfer mode, it must call this to deliver the final chunk
of the transfer. This tells yaws to create a special final chunk in the
format required by the HTTP specification (RFC 2616). IoList may be
empty, but if its size is greater than zero, that data will be sent as a
separate chunk before the final chunk.
- stream_process_end(Socket, YawsPid)
- Application processes delivering data directly to clients
must call this function to inform yaws that they've finished using
Socket. The YawsPid argument will have been passed to the
process earlier when yaws sent it a message telling it to proceed with
data delivery. Yaws expects Socket to be open.
- stream_process_end(closed, YawsPid)
- Same as the previous function but the application calls
this if it closes the client socket as part of its data delivery process.
This allows yaws to continue without assuming the socket is still open and
encountering errors due to that assumption. The YawsPid argument
will have been passed to the application process earlier when yaws sent it
a message telling it to proceed with data delivery.
- parse_query(Arg)
- This function will parse the query part of the URL. It will
return a {Key, Value} list of the items supplied in the query part of the
URL.
- queryvar(Arg, VarName)
- This function is automatically included from yaws_api in
all
.yaws pages. It is used to search for a variable in the querypart of the url. Returns {ok, Val} or undefined. If a variable is defined multiple times, the function may also return {Val1, ....}.
- parse_post(Arg)
- This function will parse the POST data as supplied from the
browser. It will return a {Key, Value} list of the items set by the
browser.
- postvar(Arg, VarName)
- This function is automatically included from yaws_api in
all
.yaws pages. It is used to search for a variable in the POSTed data from the client. Returns {ok, Val} or undefined. If a variable is defined multiple times, the function may also return {Val1, ....}.
- getvar(Arg, VarName)
- This function looks at the HTTP request method from the
client and invokes postvar/2 if it is a POST from the client and
queryvar/2 if it is a GET request from the client.
- parse_multipart_post(Arg)
-
If the browser has set the Content-Type header to the value "multipart/form-data", which is the case when the browser wants to upload a file to the server the following happens:If the function returns {result, Res} no more data will come from the browser.If the function returns {cont, Cont, Res} the browser will supply more data. (The file was to big to come in one read)This indicates that there is more data to come and the out/1 function should return {get_more, Cont, User_state} where User_state might usefully be a File Descriptor. The Res value is a list of either: {head, {Name, Headers}} | {part_body, Binary} | {body, Binary}The function returns {error, Reason} when an error occurred during the parsing.Example usage could be:
<erl> out(A) -> case yaws_api:parse_multipart_post(A) of {cont, Cont, Res} -> St = handle_res(A, Res), {get_more, Cont, St}; {result, Res} -> handle_res(A, Res), {html, f("<pre>Done </pre>",[])}; {error, Reason} -> {html, f("An error occured: ~p", [Reason])} end. handle_res(A, [{head, {Name, _Hdrs}}|T]) -> io:format("head:~p~n",[Name]), handle_res(A, T); handle_res(A, [{part_body, Data}|T]) -> io:format("part_body:~p~n",[Data]), handle_res(A, T); handle_res(A, [{body, Data}|T]) -> io:format("body:~p~n",[Data]), handle_res(A, T); handle_res(A, []) -> io:format("End_res~n"). </erl>
- new_cookie_session(Opaque)
- Create a new cookie based session, the yaws system will set
the cookie. The new random generated cookie is returned from this
function. The Opaque argument will typically contain user data such as
user name and password
- new_cookie_session(Opaque, TTL)
- As above, but allows to set a session specific time-out
value, overriding the system specified time-out value.
- new_cookie_session(Opaque, TTL, CleanupPid)
- As above, but also sends a message {yaws_session_end,
Reason, Cookie, Opaque} to the provided CleanuPid where Reason can be
either of timeout or normal. The Cookie is the HTTP
cookie as returned by new_session() and the Opaque is the user
provided Opaque parameter to new_session(). The purpose of the
feature is to cleanup resources assigned to the session.
- cookieval_to_opaque(CookieVal)
-
- print_cookie_sessions()
-
- replace_cookie_session(Cookie, NewOpaque)
-
- delete_cookie_session(Cookie)
-
- setconf(Gconf, Groups)
- This function is intended for embedded mode in yaws. It
makes it possible to load a yaws configuration from another data source
than /etc/yaws.conf, such as a database. If yaws is started with the
environment {embedded, true}, yaws will start with an empty default
configuration, and wait for some other program to execute a
setconf/2 The Gconf is a #gconf{} record and the Group
variable is a list of lists of #sconf{} records. Each sublist must
contain #sconf{} records with the same IP/Port listen address. To
create a suitable initial #gconf{} record see the code in
yaws_config:make_default_gconf/2. Especially the yaws_dir parameter
is important to get right.
- url_decode(Str)
- Decode url-encoded string. A URL encoded string is a string
where all alfa numeric characters and the the character _ are preserved
and all other characters are encode as "%XY" where X and Y are
the hex values of the least respective most significant 4 bits in the 8
bit character.
- url_encode(Str)
- Url-encodes a string. All URLs in HTML documents must be
URL encoded.
- reformat_header(H)
- Returns a list of reformatted header values from a
#header{} record. The return list is suitable for retransmit.
- request_url(ARG)
- Return the url as requested by the client. Return value is
a #url{} record as defined in yaws_api.hrl
- parse_url(Str)
- Parse URL in a string, returns a #url record
- format_url(UrlRecord)
- Takes a #url record a formats the Url as a string
- call_cgi(Arg, Scriptfilename)
- Calls an executable CGI script, given by its full path.
Used to make `.yaws' wrappers for CGI programs. This function usually
returns streamcontent.
- call_cgi(Arg, Exefilename, Scriptfilename)
- Like before, but calls Exefilename to handle the
script. The file name of the script is handed to the executable via a CGI
meta variable.
- call_fcgi_responder(Arg)
- Calls a FastCGI responder. The address and port of the
FastCGI application server are taken from the server configuration (see
yaws.conf). Used to make `.yaws' wrappers for FastCGI responders. Returns
the same return values as out/1 (see below).
- call_fcgi_responder(Arg, Options)
- Same as above, but Options overrides the defaults from the
server configuration:
Options = [Option] Option -- one of the following:{app_server_host, string() | ip_address()} The hostname or the IP address of the FastCGI application server.{app_server_port, 0..65535} The TCP port number of the FastCGI application server.{path_info, string()} Override default pathinfo in Arg#arg.pathinfo.{extra_env, ExtraEnv} Override default pathinfo in Arg#arg.pathinfo.ExtraEnv = [Var] Var = {Name, Value} Name = string() Value = string(){trace_protocol, boolean()} Enable or disable tracing of FastCGI protocol messages as info log messages.{log_app_error, boolean()} Enable or disable logging of application error messages: output to stderr and non-zero exit value.
- call_fcgi_authorizer(Arg) -> {allowed, Out} | {denied, Out}
- Calls a FastCGI authorizer. The address and port of the
FastCGI application server are taken from the server configuration (see
yaws.conf). Used to make `.yaws' wrappers for FastCGI authorizers.
Variables contains the values of the variables returned by the FastCGI
application server in the "Variable-XXX: YYY" headers.
If access is denied, Out contains the complete response returned by the FastCGI application server. This response is typically returned as-is to the HTTP client.If access is allowed, Out contains the response returned by the FastCGI application server minus the body (i.e. minus the content) which should be ignored per the FastCGI specification. This response is typically not returned to the HTTP client. The calling application module may wish to inspect the response, for example by extracting variables (see fcgi_extract_variables below) or by inspecting the headers returned by the FastCGI application server.
Out -- See return values for out/1 below
- call_fcgi_authorizer(Arg, Options) -> {allowed, Out} | {denied, Out}
- Same as above, but Options overrides the defaults from the
server configuration. See call_fcgi_responder/2 above for a description of
Options.
- fcgi_extract_variables(Out) -> [{Name, Value}]
- Extracts the environment variables from a FastCGI
authorizer response by looking for headers of the form
"Variable-Name: Value".
Name = string() -- The name of the variable (the "Variable-" prefix has already been removed). Value = string() -- The value of the variable.
- dir_listing(Arg)
- Perform a directory listing. Can be used in special
directories when we don't want to turn on dir listings for the entire
server. Always returns ok.
RETURN VALUES from out/1¶
The out/1 function can return different values to control the behavior of the server.- {html, DeepList}
- This assumes that DeepList is formatted HTML code. The code
will be inserted in the page.
- {ehtml|exhtml, Term}
- This will transform the erlang term Term into a stream of
HTML content. The exhtml variant transforms into strict XHTML code. The
basic syntax of Term is
EHTML = [EHTML] | {Tag, Attrs, Body} | {Tag, Attrs} | {Tag} | binary() | character() Tag = atom() Attrs = [{Key, Value}] or {EventTag, {jscall, FunName, [Args]}} Key = atom() Value = string() Body = EHTMLFor example, {p, [], "Howdy"} expands into "<p>Howdy</p>" and{form, [{action, "a.yaws"}], {input, [{type,text}]}}expands into<form action="a.yaws" <input type="text"> </form>It may be more convenient to generate erlang tuples than plain html code.
- {content, MimeType, Content}
- This function will make the web server generate different
content than HTML. This return value is only allowed in a yaws file which
has only one <erl> </erl> part and no html parts at all.
- {streamcontent, MimeType, FirstChunk}
- This return value plays the same role as the content
return value above.
However it makes it possible to stream data to the client if the yaws code doesn't have access to all the data in one go. (Typically if a file is very large or if data arrives from back end servers on the network.
- {streamcontent_with_timeout, MimeType, FirstChunk, Timeout}
- Similar to above, but with an explicit timeout. The default
timeout is 30 secs. I.e if the application fails to deliver data to the
Yaws process, the streaming will stop. This is often not the desired
behaviour in Comet/Ajax applications. It's possible to provide 'infinity'
as timeout.
- {streamcontent_from_pid, MimeType, Pid}
- This return value is similar to the streamcontent
return value above.
However it makes it possible to stream data to the client directly from an application process to the socket. This approach can be useful for applications that employ long-polling (Comet) techniques, for example, and for applications wanting to avoid buffering data or avoid HTTP chunked mode transfer for streamed data.
- {streamcontent_with_size, Sz, MimeType, FirstChunk}
- This return value is similar to the streamcontent
return value above.
However it makes it possible to stream data to the client by setting the content length of the response. As the opposite of other ways to stream data, in this case, the response is not chunked encoded.
- {header, H}
- Accumulates a HTTP header. The trailing CRNL which is
supposed to end all HTTP headers must NOT be added. It is added by the
server. The following list of headers are given special treatment.
{connection, What}This sets the Connection: header. If What is the special value "close", the connection will be closed once the yaws page is delivered to the client.{server, What}Sets the Server: header. By setting this header, the server's signature will be dynamically overloaded.{location, Url}Sets the Location: header. This header is typically combined with the {status, 302} return value.{cache_control, What}Sets the Cache-Control: header.{expires, What}Sets the Expires: header.{date, What}Sets the Date: header.{allow, What}Sets the Allow: header.{last_modified, What}Sets the Last-Modified: header.{etag, What}Sets the Etag: header.{set_cookie, Cookie}Prepends a Set-Cookie: header to the list of previously set Set-Cookie: headers.{content_range, What}Sets the Content-Range: header.{content_type, MimeType}Sets the Content-Type: header.{content_encoding, What}Sets the Content-Encoding: header. If this header is defined, no deflate is performed by Yaws. So you can compress data by yourself.{content_length, Len}Normally yaws will ship Yaws pages using Transfer-Encoding: chunked. This is because we generally can't know how long a yaws page will be. If we for some reason want to force a Content-Length: header (and we actually do know the length of the content, we can force yaws to not ship the page chunked.{transfer_encoding, What}Sets the Transfer-Encoding: header.{www_authenticate, What}Sets the WWW-Authenticate: header.All other headers must be added using the normal HTTP syntax. Example:{header, {"My-X-Header", "gadong"}} of {header, "My-X-Header: gadong"}
- {allheaders, HeaderList}
- Will clear all previously accumulated headers and replace
them.
- {status, Code}
- Will set another HTTP status code than 200.
- break
- Will stop processing of any consecutive chunks of erl or
html code in the yaws file.
- ok
- Do nothing.
- flush
- Flush remaining data sent by the client.
- {redirect, Url}
- Erase all previous headers and accumulate a single Location
header. Set the status code.
- {redirect_local, Path}
- Does a redirect to the same Scheme://Host:Port/Path as we
currently are executing in.
- {get_more, Cont, State}
- When we are receiving large POSTs we can return this value
and be invoked again when more Data arrives.
- {page, Page}
- Make Yaws return a different page than the one being
requested.
- {page, {Options, Page}}
- Like the above, but supplying an additional deep list of
options. For now, the only type of option is {header, H} with the
effect of accumulating the HTTP header H for page Page.
- {ssi, File, Delimiter, Bindings}
- Server side include File and macro expansion in File. Each
occurrence of a string, say "xyz", inside File which is inside
Delimiters is replaced with the corresponding value in Bindings.
Example: Delimiter = %%File contains the string .... %%xyz%% .....Bindings contain the tuple {"xyz", "Dingbat"}The occurrence of %%xyz%% in File will be replaced with "Dingbat" in the Server side included output.The {ssi, File, Delimiter, Bindings} statement can also occur inside a deep ehtml structure.
- {bindings, [{Key1, Value2}, {Key2, Value2} .....]}
- Establish variable bindings that can be used in the page.
All bindings can then be used in the rest of yaws code (in HTML source and within erl tags). In HTML source %%Key%% is expanded to Value and within erl tags yaws_api:binding(Key) can be used to extract Value and yaws_api:binding_exists(Key) can be used to check for the existence of a binding.
- {yssi, YawsFile}
- Include a yaws file. Compile it and expand as if it had
occured inline.
- [ListOfValues]
- It is possible to return a deep list of the above defined
return values. Any occurrence of streamcontent,
streamcontent_with_timeout, streamcontent_with_size,
streamcontent_from_pid, get_more, page or
break in this list is legal only if it is the last position of the
list. If not, remaining values in the list are ignored.