| // Copyright 2012 The Gorilla Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| /* |
| Package context stores values shared during a request lifetime. |
| |
| Note: gorilla/context, having been born well before `context.Context` existed, |
| does not play well > with the shallow copying of the request that |
| [`http.Request.WithContext`](https://golang.org/pkg/net/http/#Request.WithContext) |
| (added to net/http Go 1.7 onwards) performs. You should either use *just* |
| gorilla/context, or moving forward, the new `http.Request.Context()`. |
| |
| For example, a router can set variables extracted from the URL and later |
| application handlers can access those values, or it can be used to store |
| sessions values to be saved at the end of a request. There are several |
| others common uses. |
| |
| The idea was posted by Brad Fitzpatrick to the go-nuts mailing list: |
| |
| http://groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts/msg/e2d679d303aa5d53 |
| |
| Here's the basic usage: first define the keys that you will need. The key |
| type is interface{} so a key can be of any type that supports equality. |
| Here we define a key using a custom int type to avoid name collisions: |
| |
| package foo |
| |
| import ( |
| "github.com/gorilla/context" |
| ) |
| |
| type key int |
| |
| const MyKey key = 0 |
| |
| Then set a variable. Variables are bound to an http.Request object, so you |
| need a request instance to set a value: |
| |
| context.Set(r, MyKey, "bar") |
| |
| The application can later access the variable using the same key you provided: |
| |
| func MyHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { |
| // val is "bar". |
| val := context.Get(r, foo.MyKey) |
| |
| // returns ("bar", true) |
| val, ok := context.GetOk(r, foo.MyKey) |
| // ... |
| } |
| |
| And that's all about the basic usage. We discuss some other ideas below. |
| |
| Any type can be stored in the context. To enforce a given type, make the key |
| private and wrap Get() and Set() to accept and return values of a specific |
| type: |
| |
| type key int |
| |
| const mykey key = 0 |
| |
| // GetMyKey returns a value for this package from the request values. |
| func GetMyKey(r *http.Request) SomeType { |
| if rv := context.Get(r, mykey); rv != nil { |
| return rv.(SomeType) |
| } |
| return nil |
| } |
| |
| // SetMyKey sets a value for this package in the request values. |
| func SetMyKey(r *http.Request, val SomeType) { |
| context.Set(r, mykey, val) |
| } |
| |
| Variables must be cleared at the end of a request, to remove all values |
| that were stored. This can be done in an http.Handler, after a request was |
| served. Just call Clear() passing the request: |
| |
| context.Clear(r) |
| |
| ...or use ClearHandler(), which conveniently wraps an http.Handler to clear |
| variables at the end of a request lifetime. |
| |
| The Routers from the packages gorilla/mux and gorilla/pat call Clear() |
| so if you are using either of them you don't need to clear the context manually. |
| */ |
| package context |