I'm trying to figure out how to do custom coercion with compojure-api and spec. By reading the docs and code I have been able to do coercion on the input (the body) but am unable to do coercion on the response body.
Specifically, I have a custom type, a timestamp, that is represented as a long within my app but for the web API I want to consume and return ISO timestamps (no, I don't want to use Joda internally).
The following is what I have that works for input coercion but I have been unable to properly coerce the response.
(ns foo
(:require [clj-time.core :as t]
[clj-time.coerce :as t.c]
[spec-tools.conform :as conform]
[spec-tools.core :as st]))
(def timestamp (st/create-spec
{:spec pos-int?
:form `pos-int?
:json-schema/default "2017-10-12T05:04:57.585Z"
:type :timestamp}))
(defn json-timestamp->long [_ val]
(t.c/to-long val))
(def custom-json-conforming
(st/type-conforming
(merge
conform/json-type-conforming
{:timestamp json-timestamp->long}
conform/strip-extra-keys-type-conforming)))
(def custom-coercion
(-> compojure.api.coercion.spec/default-options
(assoc-in [:body :formats "application/json"] custom-json-
conforming)
compojure.api.coercion.spec/create-coercion))
;; how do I use this for the response coercion?
(defn timestamp->json-string [_ val]
(t.c/to-string val))
;; I've tried the following but it doesn't work:
#_(def custom-coercion
(-> compojure.api.coercion.spec/default-options
(assoc-in [:body :formats "application/json"] custom-json-
conforming)
(assoc-in [:response :formats "application/json"]
(st/type-conforming
{:timestamp timestamp->json-string}))
compojure.api.coercion.spec/create-coercion))
Problem is that Spec Conforming is a one-way transformation pipeline:
s/conform (and because of that st/conform) does both transform and validate for the result. Your response coercion first converts the integer into date string and the validates it against the original spec predicate, which is pos-int? and it fails on that.
To support two-way transformations, you need to define the end result as either of the possible formats: e.g. change your predicate to something like #(or (pos-int? %) (string? %)) and it should work.
Or you can have two different Spec Records, one for input (timestamp-long with pos-int? predicate) and another for outputs (timestamp-string with string? predicate). But one needs to remember to use correct ones for request & responses.
CLJ-2251 could possible help if there was and extra :transform mode (not written in the issue yet), which would do conforming without validating the end results.
Normally, return transformations are done by the format encoder, but they usually dispatch on value types. For example Cheshire just sees an Long and has no clue that it should be written as date string.
Maybe people on the #clojure-spec slack could help. Would also like to know how to build this kind of two-way transformation with spec.
According to Om Next's documentation:
query->ast
(om.next/query->ast '[(:foo {:bar 1})])
Given a query expression return the AST.
ast->query
(om.next/ast->query ast)
Given a query expression AST, unparse it into a query expression.
Question: Why would one need these functions? That is, why would one need to directly manipulate a query abstract syntax tree (which I'm assuming are clojure maps that represent a query tree, along with some meta data) in om next?
There are some scenarios where you need to manipulate the query ast directly. In remote parsing mode, the parser expects your read functions to return either {:remote-name true } or a (possibly modified) {:remote-name AST-node} (which comes in as :ast in env). Most often you'll have to modify the AST to restructure it or add some data.
Example 1:
You have a query: [{:widget {:list [:name :created]}}]
The :widget part is pure UI related, your server doesn't need to know it exists, it only cares/knows about the :list.
Basically you'll have to modify the AST in the parser:
(defmethod read :list
[{:keys [ast query state]} key _ ]
(let [st #state]
{:value (om/db->tree query (get st key) st)
:remote (assoc ast :query-root true)}))
If you use om/process-rootsin your send function, it'll pick up the :query-root out of the ast and rewrite the query from [{:widget {:list [:name :created]}}] to [{:list [:name :created]}].
Example 2:
Another example would be when you want to mutate something at a remote:
(defmethod mutate 'item/update
[{:keys [state ast]} key {:keys [id title]}]
{:remote (assoc ast :params {:data {:id id :title title })})
Here you need to explicitly tell Om to include the data you want to send in the AST. At your remote you then pick apart :data to update the title at the given id
Most of the time you won't use the functions you described in your questions directly. The env available in every method of the parser has the ast in it.
Something I stumbled on, while trying to use Compassus:
Let's say you have a complex union/join query that includes parametric sub-queries. Something like this:
`[({:foo/info
{:foo/header [:foo-id :name]
:foo/details [:id :description :title]}} {:foo-id ~'?foo-id
:foo-desc ~'?foo-desc})]
Now let's say you want to set parameters so on the server you can parse it with om/parser and see those params as 3rd argument of read dispatch. Of course it's possible to write a function that would find all necessary parameters in the query and set the values. That's not easy though, and as I said - imagine your queries can be quite complex.
So what you can do - is to modify ast, ast includes :children :params key. So let's say the actual values for :foo-id and :foo-desc are in the state atom under :route-params key:
(defn set-ast-params [children params]
"traverses given vector of `children' in an AST and sets `params`"
(mapv
(fn [c]
(let [ks (clojure.set/intersection (-> params keys set)
(-> c :params keys set))]
(update-in c [:params] #(merge % (select-keys params (vec ks))))))
children))
(defmethod readf :foo/info
[{:keys [state query ast] :as env} k params]
(let [{:keys [route-params] :as st} #state
ast' (-> ast
(update :children #(set-ast-params % route-params))
om/ast->query
om.next.impl.parser/expr->ast)]
{:value (get st k)
:remote ast'}))
So basically you are:
- grabbing ast
- modifying it with actual values
you think maybe you can send it to server right then. Alas, no! Not yet. Thing is - when you do {:remote ast}, Om takes :query part of the ast, composes ast out of it and then sends it to the server. So you actually need to: turn your modified ast into query and then convert it back to ast again.
Notes:
set-ast-params function in this example would only work for the first level (if you have nested parametrized queries - it won't work),
make it recursive - it's not difficult
there are two different ways to turn ast to query and vice-versa:
(om/ast->query) ;; retrieves query from ast and sets the params based
;; of `:params` key of the ast, BUT. it modifies the query,
;; if you have a join query it takes only the first item in it. e.g. :
[({:foo/foo [:id]
:bar/bar [:id]} {:id ~'?id})]
;; will lose its `:bar` part
(om.next.impl.parser/ast->expr) ;; retrieves query from an ast,
;; but doesn't set query params based on `:params` keys of the ast.
;; there are also
(om/query->ast) ;; and
(om.next.impl.parser/expr->ast)
Iam new to clojure and need some help to get a value out of a lazy sequence.
You can have a look at my full data structure here: http://pastebin.com/ynLJaLaP
What I need is the content of the title:
{: _content AlbumTitel2}
I managed to get a list of all _content values:
(def albumtitle (map #(str (get % :title)) photosets))
(println albumtitle)
and the result is:
({:_content AlbumTitel2} {:_content test} {:_content AlbumTitel} {:_content album123} {:_content speciale} {:_content neues B5 Album} {:_content Album Nr 2})
But how can I get the value of every :_content?
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks!
You could simply do this
(map (comp :_content :title) photosets)
Keywords work as functions, so the composition with comp will first retrieve the :title value of each photoset and then further retrieve the :_content value of that value.
Alternatively this could be written as
(map #(get-in % [:title :_content]) photosets)
A semi alternative solution is to do
(->> data
(map :title)
(map :_content))
This take advances of the fact that keywords are functions and the so called thread last macro. What it does is injecting the result of the first expression in as the last argument of the second etc..
The above code gets converted to
(map :_content (map :title data))
Clearly not as readable, and not easy to expand later either.
PS I asume something went wrong when the data was pasted to the web, because:
{: _content AlbumTitel2}
Is not Clojure syntax, this however is:
{:_content "AlbumTitel2"}
No the whitespace after :, and "" around text. Just in case you might want to paste some Clojure some other time.
I have the following routes definition:
(require '[compojure.core :as ccore]
'[ring.util.response :as response])
(def *main-routes*
(ccore/defroutes avalanche-routes
(ccore/GET "/" [] "Hello World 2")
(ccore/GET "/images/:id" [id] (get-image-response id))))
In this example, requesting / works like a charm and returns the expected Hello World 2.
The get-images-response method is defined like this:
(defn get-image-response
[id]
(let [record (db/get-image id false)]
(-> (response/response (:data record))
(response/content-type (:content-type record))
(response/header "Content-Length" (:size record)))))
I get a 404 though, so the serving of binary files doesn't quite work yet. Any ideas why?
Edit:
Ok, the issue relates to the fact that images are being requested on /images/name.jpg. As soon as I remove the .jpg the handler gets called. So the question becomes how do I match on anything but the extension?
Compojure uses clout for route matching. The dot character has a special meaning in clout routes. It represents a token separator, similarly to the slash character. The following characters all have this meaning in clout: / . , ; ?.
That means that a route like "/images/:id" will not match a uri of the form /images/name.jpg since images, name and jpg each represent a separate token in clout.
In order to match it, you could compose your route in a number of different ways, depending on your need.
If all your images have the .jpg extension, the easiest thing to do would be:
(GET "/images/:id.jpg" [id] ...)
If the extension varies you could do the following:
(GET "/images/:name.:extension" [name extension] ...)
If you want to restrict the extension, you can pass compojure/clout a regular expression:
(GET ["/images/:name.:ext", :ext #"(jpe?g|png|gif)"] [name ext] ...)
You could also go with a wildcard, which is less precise and would match any uri starting with /images/:
(GET "/images/*" [*] ...)
The real answer in this case was that there was a bug in the clojure-couchdb library. The patch is available on github here.
It boils down to adding the {:as :byte-array} map parameter and value to the request sent via clj-http to couch's api.
The other issue in my code was that ring doesn't really know what to do with byte-arrays when it's rendering them. Rather than patching ring, I just wrapped the byte-array into a java.io.ByteArrayInputStream. Here is the complete code for handling the download:
(defn get-image-response
[id]
(let [record (db/get-image id false)]
(-> (response/response (new java.io.ByteArrayInputStream (:data record)))
(response/content-type (:content-type (:content-type record)))
(response/header "Content-Length" (:size record)))))
I'm new to Clojure and have been using Compojure to write a basic web application. I'm hitting a wall with Compojure's defroutes syntax, though, and I think I need to understand both the "how" and the "why" behind it all.
It seems like a Ring-style application begins with an HTTP request map, then just passes the request through a series of middleware functions until it gets transformed into a response map, which gets sent back to the browser. This style seems too "low level" for developers, thus the need for a tool like Compojure. I can see this need for more abstractions in other software ecosystems as well, most notably with Python's WSGI.
The problem is that I don't understand Compojure's approach. Let's take the following defroutes S-expression:
(defroutes main-routes
(GET "/" [] (workbench))
(POST "/save" {form-params :form-params} (str form-params))
(GET "/test" [& more] (str "<pre>" more "</pre>"))
(GET ["/:filename" :filename #".*"] [filename]
(response/file-response filename {:root "./static"}))
(ANY "*" [] "<h1>Page not found.</h1>"))
I know that the key to understanding all of this lies within some macro voodoo, but I don't totally understand macros (yet). I've stared at the defroutes source for a long time, but just don't get it! What's going on here? Understanding the "big idea" will probably help me answer these specific questions:
How do I access the Ring environment from within a routed function (e.g. the workbench function)? For example, say I wanted to access the HTTP_ACCEPT headers or some other part of the request/middleware?
What's the deal with the destructuring ({form-params :form-params})? What keywords are available for me when destructuring?
I really like Clojure but I am so stumped!
Compojure explained (to some degree)
NB. I am working with Compojure 0.4.1 (here's the 0.4.1 release commit on GitHub).
Why?
At the very top of compojure/core.clj, there's this helpful summary of Compojure's purpose:
A concise syntax for generating Ring handlers.
On a superficial level, that's all there is to the "why" question. To go a bit deeper, let's have a look at how a Ring-style app functions:
A request arrives and is transformed into a Clojure map in accordance with the Ring spec.
This map is funnelled into a so-called "handler function", which is expected to produce a response (which is also a Clojure map).
The response map is transformed into an actual HTTP response and sent back to the client.
Step 2. in the above is the most interesting, as it is the handler's responsibility to examine the URI used in the request, examine any cookies etc. and ultimately arrive at an appropriate response. Clearly it is necessary that all this work be factored into a collection of well-defined pieces; these are normally a "base" handler function and a collection of middleware functions wrapping it. Compojure's purpose is to simplify the generation of the base handler function.
How?
Compojure is built around the notion of "routes". These are actually implemented at a deeper level by the Clout library (a spinoff of the Compojure project -- many things were moved to separate libraries at the 0.3.x -> 0.4.x transition). A route is defined by (1) an HTTP method (GET, PUT, HEAD...), (2) a URI pattern (specified with syntax which will apparently be familiar to Webby Rubyists), (3) a destructuring form used in binding parts of the request map to names available in the body, (4) a body of expressions which needs to produce a valid Ring response (in non-trivial cases this is usually just a call to a separate function).
This might be a good point to have a look at a simple example:
(def example-route (GET "/" [] "<html>...</html>"))
Let's test this at the REPL (the request map below is the minimal valid Ring request map):
user> (example-route {:server-port 80
:server-name "127.0.0.1"
:remote-addr "127.0.0.1"
:uri "/"
:scheme :http
:headers {}
:request-method :get})
{:status 200,
:headers {"Content-Type" "text/html"},
:body "<html>...</html>"}
If :request-method were :head instead, the response would be nil. We'll return to the question of what nil means here in a minute (but notice that it is not a valid Ring respose!).
As is apparent from this example, example-route is just a function, and a very simple one at that; it looks at the request, determines whether it's interested in handling it (by examining :request-method and :uri) and, if so, returns a basic response map.
What is also apparent is that the body of the route does not really need to evaluate to a proper response map; Compojure provides sane default handling for strings (as seen above) and a number of other object types; see the compojure.response/render multimethod for details (the code is entirely self-documenting here).
Let's try using defroutes now:
(defroutes example-routes
(GET "/" [] "get")
(HEAD "/" [] "head"))
The responses to the example request displayed above and to its variant with :request-method :head are like expected.
The inner workings of example-routes are such that each route is tried in turn; as soon as one of them returns a non-nil response, that response becomes the return value of the whole example-routes handler. As an added convenience, defroutes-defined handlers are wrapped in wrap-params and wrap-cookies implicitly.
Here's an example of a more complex route:
(def echo-typed-url-route
(GET "*" {:keys [scheme server-name server-port uri]}
(str (name scheme) "://" server-name ":" server-port uri)))
Note the destructuring form in place of the previously used empty vector. The basic idea here is that the body of the route might be interested in some information about the request; since this always arrives in the form of a map, an associative destructuring form can be supplied to extract information from the request and bind it to local variables which will be in scope in the route's body.
A test of the above:
user> (echo-typed-url-route {:server-port 80
:server-name "127.0.0.1"
:remote-addr "127.0.0.1"
:uri "/foo/bar"
:scheme :http
:headers {}
:request-method :get})
{:status 200,
:headers {"Content-Type" "text/html"},
:body "http://127.0.0.1:80/foo/bar"}
The brilliant follow-up idea to the above is that more complex routes may assoc extra information onto the request at the matching stage:
(def echo-first-path-component-route
(GET "/:fst/*" [fst] fst))
This responds with a :body of "foo" to the request from the previous example.
Two things are new about this latest example: the "/:fst/*" and the non-empty binding vector [fst]. The first is the aforementioned Rails-and-Sinatra-like syntax for URI patterns. It's a bit more sophisticated than what is apparent from the example above in that regex constraints on URI segments are supported (e.g. ["/:fst/*" :fst #"[0-9]+"] can be supplied to make the route accept only all-digit values of :fst in the above). The second is a simplified way of matching on the :params entry in the request map, which is itself a map; it's useful for extracting URI segments from the request, query string parameters and form parameters. An example to illustrate the latter point:
(defroutes echo-params
(GET "/" [& more]
(str more)))
user> (echo-params
{:server-port 80
:server-name "127.0.0.1"
:remote-addr "127.0.0.1"
:uri "/"
:query-string "foo=1"
:scheme :http
:headers {}
:request-method :get})
{:status 200,
:headers {"Content-Type" "text/html"},
:body "{\"foo\" \"1\"}"}
This would be a good time to have a look at the example from the question text:
(defroutes main-routes
(GET "/" [] (workbench))
(POST "/save" {form-params :form-params} (str form-params))
(GET "/test" [& more] (str "<pre>" more "</pre>"))
(GET ["/:filename" :filename #".*"] [filename]
(response/file-response filename {:root "./static"}))
(ANY "*" [] "<h1>Page not found.</h1>"))
Let's analyse each route in turn:
(GET "/" [] (workbench)) -- when dealing with a GET request with :uri "/", call the function workbench and render whatever it returns into a response map. (Recall that the return value might be a map, but also a string etc.)
(POST "/save" {form-params :form-params} (str form-params)) -- :form-params is an entry in the request map provided by the wrap-params middleware (recall that it is implicitly included by defroutes). The response will be the standard {:status 200 :headers {"Content-Type" "text/html"} :body ...} with (str form-params) substituted for .... (A slightly unusual POST handler, this...)
(GET "/test" [& more] (str "<pre> more "</pre>")) -- this would e.g. echo back the string representation of the map {"foo" "1"} if the user agent asked for "/test?foo=1".
(GET ["/:filename" :filename #".*"] [filename] ...) -- the :filename #".*" part does nothing at all (since #".*" always matches). It calls the Ring utility function ring.util.response/file-response to produce its response; the {:root "./static"} part tells it where to look for the file.
(ANY "*" [] ...) -- a catch-all route. It is good Compojure practice always to include such a route at the end of a defroutes form to ensure that the handler being defined always returns a valid Ring response map (recall that a route matching failure results in nil).
Why this way?
One purpose of the Ring middleware is to add information to the request map; thus cookie-handling middleware adds a :cookies key to the request, wrap-params adds :query-params and/or :form-params if a query string / form data is present and so on. (Strictly speaking, all the information the middleware functions are adding must be already present in the request map, since that is what they get passed; their job is to transform it to be it more convenient to work with in the handlers they wrap.) Ultimately the "enriched" request is passed to the base handler, which examines the request map with all the nicely preprocessed information added by the middleware and produces a response. (Middleware can do more complex things than that -- like wrapping several "inner" handlers and choosing between them, deciding whether to call the wrapped handler(s) at all etc. That is, however, outside the scope of this answer.)
The base handler, in turn, is usually (in non-trivial cases) a function which tends to need just a handful of items of information about the request. (E.g. ring.util.response/file-response doesn't care about most of the request; it only needs a filename.) Hence the need for a simple way of extracting just the relevant parts of a Ring request. Compojure aims to provide a special-purpose pattern matching engine, as it were, which does just that.
There is an excellent article at booleanknot.com from James Reeves (author of Compojure), and reading it made it "click" for me, so I have retranscribed some of it here (really that's all I did).
There is also a slidedeck here from the same author, that answers this exact question.
Compojure is based on Ring, which is an abstraction for http requests.
A concise syntax for generating Ring handlers.
So, what are those Ring handlers ? Extract from the doc :
;; Handlers are functions that define your web application.
;; They take one argument, a map representing a HTTP request,
;; and return a map representing the HTTP response.
;; Let's take a look at an example:
(defn what-is-my-ip [request]
{:status 200
:headers {"Content-Type" "text/plain"}
:body (:remote-addr request)})
Pretty simple, but also quite low-level.
The above handler can be defined more concisely using the ring/util library.
(use 'ring.util.response)
(defn handler [request]
(response "Hello World"))
Now we want to call different handlers depending on the request.
We could do some static routing like so :
(defn handler [request]
(or
(if (= (:uri request) "/a") (response "Alpha"))
(if (= (:uri request) "/b") (response "Beta"))))
And refactor it like this :
(defn a-route [request]
(if (= (:uri request) "/a") (response "Alpha")))
(defn b-route [request]
(if (= (:uri request) "/b") (response "Beta"))))
(defn handler [request]
(or (a-route request)
(b-route request)))
The interesting thing that James notes then is that this allows nesting routes, because "the result of combining two or more routes together is itself a route".
(defn ab-routes [request]
(or (a-route request)
(b-route request)))
(defn cd-routes [request]
(or (c-route request)
(d-route request)))
(defn handler [request]
(or (ab-routes request)
(cd-routes request)))
By now, we are beginning to see some code that looks like it could be factored, using a macro. Compojure provides a defroutes macro:
(defroutes ab-routes a-route b-route)
;; is identical to
(def ab-routes (routes a-route b-route))
Compojure provides other macros, like the GET macro:
(GET "/a" [] "Alpha")
;; will expand to
(fn [request#]
(if (and (= (:request-method request#) ~http-method)
(= (:uri request#) ~uri))
(let [~bindings request#]
~#body)))
That last function generated looks like our handler !
Please make sure to check out James post, as it goes into more detailed explanations.
For anybody who still struggled to find out what is going on with the routes, it might be that, like me, you don't understand the idea of destructuring.
Actually reading the docs for let helped clear up the whole "where do the magic values come from?" question.
I'm pasting the relevant sections below:
Clojure supports abstract structural
binding, often called destructuring,
in let binding lists, fn parameter
lists, and any macro that expands into
a let or fn. The basic idea is that a
binding-form can be a data structure
literal containing symbols that get
bound to the respective parts of the
init-expr. The binding is abstract in
that a vector literal can bind to
anything that is sequential, while a
map literal can bind to anything that
is associative.
Vector binding-exprs allow you to bind
names to parts of sequential things
(not just vectors), like vectors,
lists, seqs, strings, arrays, and
anything that supports nth. The basic
sequential form is a vector of
binding-forms, which will be bound to
successive elements from the
init-expr, looked up via nth. In
addition, and optionally, & followed
by a binding-forms will cause that
binding-form to be bound to the
remainder of the sequence, i.e. that
part not yet bound, looked up via
nthnext . Finally, also optional, :as
followed by a symbol will cause that
symbol to be bound to the entire
init-expr:
(let [[a b c & d :as e] [1 2 3 4 5 6 7]]
[a b c d e])
->[1 2 3 (4 5 6 7) [1 2 3 4 5 6 7]]
Vector binding-exprs allow you to bind
names to parts of sequential things
(not just vectors), like vectors,
lists, seqs, strings, arrays, and
anything that supports nth. The basic
sequential form is a vector of
binding-forms, which will be bound to
successive elements from the
init-expr, looked up via nth. In
addition, and optionally, & followed
by a binding-forms will cause that
binding-form to be bound to the
remainder of the sequence, i.e. that
part not yet bound, looked up via
nthnext . Finally, also optional, :as
followed by a symbol will cause that
symbol to be bound to the entire
init-expr:
(let [[a b c & d :as e] [1 2 3 4 5 6 7]]
[a b c d e])
->[1 2 3 (4 5 6 7) [1 2 3 4 5 6 7]]
I haven't started on clojure web stuff yet but, I will, here's the stuff I bookmarked.
https://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AQqGP1CDN0uIZGhmZjJmcGZfMjNjNHIycGZu&hl=en
https://github.com/weavejester/compojure/wiki/Routes-In-Detail
http://mmcgrana.github.com/2010/03/clojure-web-development-ring.html
What's the deal with the destructuring ({form-params :form-params})? What keywords are available for me when destructuring?
The keys available are those that are in the input map. Destructuring is available inside let and doseq forms, or inside the parameters to fn or defn
The following code will hopefully be informative:
(let [{a :thing-a
c :thing-c :as things} {:thing-a 0
:thing-b 1
:thing-c 2}]
[a c (keys things)])
=> [0 2 (:thing-b :thing-a :thing-c)]
a more advanced example, showing nested destructuring:
user> (let [{thing-id :id
{thing-color :color :as props} :properties} {:id 1
:properties {:shape
"square"
:color
0xffffff}}]
[thing-id thing-color (keys props)])
=> [1 16777215 (:color :shape)]
When used wisely, destructuring declutters your code by avoiding boilerplate data access. by using :as and printing the result (or the result's keys) you can get a better idea of what other data you could access.