gorilla/mux === [![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/gorilla/mux?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/github.com/gorilla/mux) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gorilla/mux.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gorilla/mux) [![Sourcegraph](https://sourcegraph.com/github.com/gorilla/mux/-/badge.svg)](https://sourcegraph.com/github.com/gorilla/mux?badge) ![Gorilla Logo](http://www.gorillatoolkit.org/static/images/gorilla-icon-64.png) http://www.gorillatoolkit.org/pkg/mux Package `gorilla/mux` implements a request router and dispatcher for matching incoming requests to their respective handler. The name mux stands for "HTTP request multiplexer". Like the standard `http.ServeMux`, `mux.Router` matches incoming requests against a list of registered routes and calls a handler for the route that matches the URL or other conditions. The main features are: * It implements the `http.Handler` interface so it is compatible with the standard `http.ServeMux`. * Requests can be matched based on URL host, path, path prefix, schemes, header and query values, HTTP methods or using custom matchers. * URL hosts and paths can have variables with an optional regular expression. * Registered URLs can be built, or "reversed", which helps maintaining references to resources. * Routes can be used as subrouters: nested routes are only tested if the parent route matches. This is useful to define groups of routes that share common conditions like a host, a path prefix or other repeated attributes. As a bonus, this optimizes request matching. --- * [Install](#install) * [Examples](#examples) * [Matching Routes](#matching-routes) * [Listing Routes](#listing-routes) * [Static Files](#static-files) * [Registered URLs](#registered-urls) * [Full Example](#full-example) --- ## Install With a [correctly configured](https://golang.org/doc/install#testing) Go toolchain: ```sh go get -u github.com/gorilla/mux ``` ## Examples Let's start registering a couple of URL paths and handlers: ```go func main() { r := mux.NewRouter() r.HandleFunc("/", HomeHandler) r.HandleFunc("/products", ProductsHandler) r.HandleFunc("/articles", ArticlesHandler) http.Handle("/", r) } ``` Here we register three routes mapping URL paths to handlers. This is equivalent to how `http.HandleFunc()` works: if an incoming request URL matches one of the paths, the corresponding handler is called passing (`http.ResponseWriter`, `*http.Request`) as parameters. Paths can have variables. They are defined using the format `{name}` or `{name:pattern}`. If a regular expression pattern is not defined, the matched variable will be anything until the next slash. For example: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() r.HandleFunc("/products/{key}", ProductHandler) r.HandleFunc("/articles/{category}/", ArticlesCategoryHandler) r.HandleFunc("/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}", ArticleHandler) ``` The names are used to create a map of route variables which can be retrieved calling `mux.Vars()`: ```go func ArticlesCategoryHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { vars := mux.Vars(r) w.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK) fmt.Fprintf(w, "Category: %v\n", vars["category"]) } ``` And this is all you need to know about the basic usage. More advanced options are explained below. ### Matching Routes Routes can also be restricted to a domain or subdomain. Just define a host pattern to be matched. They can also have variables: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() // Only matches if domain is "www.example.com". r.Host("www.example.com") // Matches a dynamic subdomain. r.Host("{subdomain:[a-z]+}.domain.com") ``` There are several other matchers that can be added. To match path prefixes: ```go r.PathPrefix("/products/") ``` ...or HTTP methods: ```go r.Methods("GET", "POST") ``` ...or URL schemes: ```go r.Schemes("https") ``` ...or header values: ```go r.Headers("X-Requested-With", "XMLHttpRequest") ``` ...or query values: ```go r.Queries("key", "value") ``` ...or to use a custom matcher function: ```go r.MatcherFunc(func(r *http.Request, rm *RouteMatch) bool { return r.ProtoMajor == 0 }) ``` ...and finally, it is possible to combine several matchers in a single route: ```go r.HandleFunc("/products", ProductsHandler). Host("www.example.com"). Methods("GET"). Schemes("http") ``` Setting the same matching conditions again and again can be boring, so we have a way to group several routes that share the same requirements. We call it "subrouting". For example, let's say we have several URLs that should only match when the host is `www.example.com`. Create a route for that host and get a "subrouter" from it: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() s := r.Host("www.example.com").Subrouter() ``` Then register routes in the subrouter: ```go s.HandleFunc("/products/", ProductsHandler) s.HandleFunc("/products/{key}", ProductHandler) s.HandleFunc("/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}", ArticleHandler) ``` The three URL paths we registered above will only be tested if the domain is `www.example.com`, because the subrouter is tested first. This is not only convenient, but also optimizes request matching. You can create subrouters combining any attribute matchers accepted by a route. Subrouters can be used to create domain or path "namespaces": you define subrouters in a central place and then parts of the app can register its paths relatively to a given subrouter. There's one more thing about subroutes. When a subrouter has a path prefix, the inner routes use it as base for their paths: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() s := r.PathPrefix("/products").Subrouter() // "/products/" s.HandleFunc("/", ProductsHandler) // "/products/{key}/" s.HandleFunc("/{key}/", ProductHandler) // "/products/{key}/details" s.HandleFunc("/{key}/details", ProductDetailsHandler) ``` ### Listing Routes Routes on a mux can be listed using the Router.Walk method—useful for generating documentation: ```go package main import ( "fmt" "net/http" "github.com/gorilla/mux" ) func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { return } func main() { r := mux.NewRouter() r.HandleFunc("/", handler) r.HandleFunc("/products", handler) r.HandleFunc("/articles", handler) r.HandleFunc("/articles/{id}", handler) r.Walk(func(route *mux.Route, router *mux.Router, ancestors []*mux.Route) error { t, err := route.GetPathTemplate() if err != nil { return err } fmt.Println(t) return nil }) http.Handle("/", r) } ``` ### Static Files Note that the path provided to `PathPrefix()` represents a "wildcard": calling `PathPrefix("/static/").Handler(...)` means that the handler will be passed any request that matches "/static/*". This makes it easy to serve static files with mux: ```go func main() { var dir string flag.StringVar(&dir, "dir", ".", "the directory to serve files from. Defaults to the current dir") flag.Parse() r := mux.NewRouter() // This will serve files under http://localhost:8000/static/ r.PathPrefix("/static/").Handler(http.StripPrefix("/static/", http.FileServer(http.Dir(dir)))) srv := &http.Server{ Handler: r, Addr: "127.0.0.1:8000", // Good practice: enforce timeouts for servers you create! WriteTimeout: 15 * time.Second, ReadTimeout: 15 * time.Second, } log.Fatal(srv.ListenAndServe()) } ``` ### Registered URLs Now let's see how to build registered URLs. Routes can be named. All routes that define a name can have their URLs built, or "reversed". We define a name calling `Name()` on a route. For example: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() r.HandleFunc("/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}", ArticleHandler). Name("article") ``` To build a URL, get the route and call the `URL()` method, passing a sequence of key/value pairs for the route variables. For the previous route, we would do: ```go url, err := r.Get("article").URL("category", "technology", "id", "42") ``` ...and the result will be a `url.URL` with the following path: ``` "/articles/technology/42" ``` This also works for host variables: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() r.Host("{subdomain}.domain.com"). Path("/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}"). HandlerFunc(ArticleHandler). Name("article") // url.String() will be "http://news.domain.com/articles/technology/42" url, err := r.Get("article").URL("subdomain", "news", "category", "technology", "id", "42") ``` All variables defined in the route are required, and their values must conform to the corresponding patterns. These requirements guarantee that a generated URL will always match a registered route -- the only exception is for explicitly defined "build-only" routes which never match. Regex support also exists for matching Headers within a route. For example, we could do: ```go r.HeadersRegexp("Content-Type", "application/(text|json)") ``` ...and the route will match both requests with a Content-Type of `application/json` as well as `application/text` There's also a way to build only the URL host or path for a route: use the methods `URLHost()` or `URLPath()` instead. For the previous route, we would do: ```go // "http://news.domain.com/" host, err := r.Get("article").URLHost("subdomain", "news") // "/articles/technology/42" path, err := r.Get("article").URLPath("category", "technology", "id", "42") ``` And if you use subrouters, host and path defined separately can be built as well: ```go r := mux.NewRouter() s := r.Host("{subdomain}.domain.com").Subrouter() s.Path("/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}"). HandlerFunc(ArticleHandler). Name("article") // "http://news.domain.com/articles/technology/42" url, err := r.Get("article").URL("subdomain", "news", "category", "technology", "id", "42") ``` ## Full Example Here's a complete, runnable example of a small `mux` based server: ```go package main import ( "net/http" "log" "github.com/gorilla/mux" ) func YourHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { w.Write([]byte("Gorilla!\n")) } func main() { r := mux.NewRouter() // Routes consist of a path and a handler function. r.HandleFunc("/", YourHandler) // Bind to a port and pass our router in log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8000", r)) } ``` ## License BSD licensed. See the LICENSE file for details.