Roda

Roda is a routing tree web toolkit, designed for building fast and maintainable web applications in ruby.

Installation

$ gem install roda

Resources

Website

roda.jeremyevans.net

Source

github.com/jeremyevans/roda

Bugs

github.com/jeremyevans/roda/issues

Google Group

groups.google.com/group/ruby-roda

IRC

chat.freenode.net/#roda

Goals

  • Simplicity

  • Reliability

  • Extensibility

  • Performance

Simplicity

Roda is designed to be simple, both internally and externally. It uses a routing tree to enable you to write simpler and DRYer code.

Reliability

Roda supports and encourages immutability. Roda apps are designed to be frozen in production, which eliminates possible thread safety issues. Additionally, Roda limits the instance variables, constants, and methods that it uses, so that they do not conflict with the ones you use for your application.

Extensibility

Roda is built completely out of plugins, which makes it very extensible. You can override any part of Roda and call super to get the default behavior.

Performance

Roda has low per-request overhead, and the use of a routing tree and intelligent caching of internal datastructures makes it significantly faster than other popular ruby web frameworks.

Usage

Here’s a simple application, showing how the routing tree works:

# cat config.ru
require "roda"

class App < Roda
  route do |r|
    # GET / request
    r.root do
      r.redirect "/hello"
    end

    # /hello branch
    r.on "hello" do
      # Set variable for all routes in /hello branch
      @greeting = 'Hello'

      # GET /hello/world request
      r.get "world" do
        "#{@greeting} world!"
      end

      # /hello request
      r.is do
        # GET /hello request
        r.get do
          "#{@greeting}!"
        end

        # POST /hello request
        r.post do
          puts "Someone said #{@greeting}!"
          r.redirect
        end
      end
    end
  end
end

run App.freeze.app

Here’s a breakdown of what is going on in the block above:

The route block is called whenever a new request comes in. It is yielded an instance of a subclass of Rack::Request with some additional methods for matching routes. By convention, this argument should be named r.

The primary way routes are matched in Roda is by calling r.on, r.is, r.root, r.get, or r.post. Each of these “routing methods” takes a “match block”.

Each routing method takes each of the arguments (called matchers) that is given and tries to match it to the current request. If the method is able to match all of the arguments, it yields to the match block; otherwise, the block is skipped and execution continues.

  • r.on matches if all of the arguments match.

  • r.is matches if all of the arguments match and there are no further entries in the path after matching.

  • r.get matches any GET request when called without arguments.

  • r.get (when called with any arguments) matches only if the current request is a GET request and there are no further entries in the path after matching.

  • r.root only matches a GET request where the current path is /.

If a routing method matches and control is yielded to the match block, whenever the match block returns, Roda will return the Rack response array (containing status, headers, and body) to the caller.

If the match block returns a string and the response body hasn’t already been written to, the block return value will be interpreted as the body for the response. If none of the routing methods match and the route block returns a string, it will be interpreted as the body for the response.

r.redirect immediately returns the response, allowing for code such as r.redirect(path) if some_condition. If r.redirect is called without arguments and the current request method is not GET, it redirects to the current path.

The .freeze.app at the end is optional. Freezing the app makes modifying app-level settings raise an error, alerting you to possible thread-safety issues in your application. It is recommended to freeze the app in production and during testing. The .app is an optimization, which saves a few method calls for every request.

The Routing Tree

Roda is called a routing tree web toolkit because the way most sites are structured, routing takes the form of a tree (based on the URL structure of the site). In general:

  • r.on is used to split the tree into different branches.

  • r.is finalizes the routing path.

  • r.get and r.post handle specific request methods.

So, a simple routing tree might look something like this:

r.on "a" do           # /a branch
  r.on "b" do         # /a/b branch
    r.is "c" do       # /a/b/c request
      r.get do end    # GET  /a/b/c request
      r.post do end   # POST /a/b/c request
    end
    r.get "d" do end  # GET  /a/b/d request
    r.post "e" do end # POST /a/b/e request
  end
end

It’s also possible to handle the same requests, but structure the routing tree by first branching on the request method:

r.get do              # GET 
  r.on "a" do         # GET /a branch
    r.on "b" do       # GET /a/b branch
      r.is "c" do end # GET /a/b/c request
      r.is "d" do end # GET /a/b/d request
    end
  end
end

r.post do             # POST
  r.on "a" do         # POST /a branch
    r.on "b" do       # POST /a/b branch
      r.is "c" do end # POST /a/b/c request
      r.is "e" do end # POST /a/b/e request
    end
  end
end

This allows you to easily separate your GET request handling from your POST request handling. If you only have a small number of POST request URLs and a large number of GET request URLs, this may make things easier.

However, routing first by the path and last by the request method is likely to lead to simpler and DRYer code. This is because you can act on the request at any point during the routing. For example, if all requests in the /a branch need access permission A and all requests in the /a/b branch need access permission B, you can easily handle this in the routing tree:

r.on "a" do           # /a branch
  check_perm(:A)  
  r.on "b" do         # /a/b branch
    check_perm(:B)  
    r.is "c" do       # /a/b/c request
      r.get do end    # GET  /a/b/c request
      r.post do end   # POST /a/b/c request
    end
    r.get "d" do end  # GET  /a/b/d request
    r.post "e" do end # POST /a/b/e request
  end
end

Being able to operate on the request at any point during the routing is one of the major advantages of Roda.

Matchers

Other than r.root, the routing methods all take arguments called matchers. If all of the matchers match, the routing method yields to the match block. Here’s an example showcasing how different matchers work:

class App < Roda
  route do |r|
    # GET /
    r.root do
      "Home"
    end

    # GET /about
    r.get "about" do
      "About"
    end

    # GET /post/2011/02/16/hello
    r.get "post", Integer, Integer, Integer, String do |year, month, day, slug|
      "#{year}-#{month}-#{day} #{slug}" #=> "2011-02-16 hello"
    end

    # GET /username/foobar branch
    r.on "username", String, method: :get do |username|
      user = User.find_by_username(username)

      # GET /username/foobar/posts
      r.is "posts" do
        # You can access user here, because the blocks are closures.
        "Total Posts: #{user.posts.size}" #=> "Total Posts: 6"
      end

      # GET /username/foobar/following
      r.is "following" do
        user.following.size.to_s #=> "1301"
      end
    end

    # /search?q=barbaz
    r.get "search" do
      "Searched for #{r.params['q']}" #=> "Searched for barbaz"
    end

    r.is "login" do
      # GET /login
      r.get do
        "Login"
      end

      # POST /login?user=foo&password=baz
      r.post do
        "#{r.params['user']}:#{r.params['password']}" #=> "foo:baz"
      end
    end
  end
end

Here’s a description of the matchers. Note that “segment”, as used here, means one part of the path preceded by a /. So, a path such as /foo/bar//baz has four segments: /foo, /bar, /, and /baz. The / here is considered the empty segment.

String

If a string does not contain a slash, it matches a single segment containing the text of the string, preceded by a slash.

""    # matches "/"
"foo" # matches "/foo"
"foo" # does not match "/food"

If a string contains any slashes, it matches one additional segment for each slash:

"foo/bar" # matches "/foo/bar"
"foo/bar" # does not match "/foo/bard"

Regexp

Regexps match one or more segments by looking for the pattern, preceded by a slash, and followed by a slash or the end of the path:

/foo\w+/ # matches "/foobar"
/foo\w+/ # does not match "/foo/bar"
/foo/i # matches "/foo", "/Foo/"
/foo/i # does not match "/food"

If any patterns are captured by the Regexp, they are yielded:

/foo\w+/   # matches "/foobar", yields nothing
/foo(\w+)/ # matches "/foobar", yields "bar"

Class

There are two classes that are supported as matchers, String and Integer.

String

matches any non-empty segment, yielding the segment except for the preceding slash

Integer

matches any segment of 0-9, returns matched values as integers

Using String and Integer is the recommended way to handle arbitrary segments

String # matches "/foo", yields "foo"
String # matches "/1", yields "1"
String # does not match "/"

Integer # does not match "/foo"
Integer # matches "/1", yields 1
Integer # does not match "/"

Symbol

Symbols match any nonempty segment, yielding the segment except for the preceding slash:

:id # matches "/foo" yields "foo"
:id # does not match "/"

Symbol matchers operate the same as the class String matcher, and is the historical way to do arbitrary segment matching. It is recommended to use the class String matcher in new code as it is a bit more intuitive.

Proc

Procs match unless they return false or nil:

proc{true}  # matches anything
proc{false} # does not match anything

Procs don’t capture anything by default, but they can do so if you add the captured text to r.captures.

Arrays

Arrays match when any of their elements match. If multiple matchers are given to r.on, they all must match (an AND condition). If an array of matchers is given, only one needs to match (an OR condition). Evaluation stops at the first matcher that matches.

Additionally, if the matched object is a String, the string is yielded. This makes it easy to handle multiple strings without a Regexp:

['page1', 'page2'] # matches "/page1", "/page2"
[]                 # does not match anything

Hash

Hashes allow easily calling specialized match methods on the request. The default registered matchers included with Roda are documented below. Some plugins add additional hash matchers, and the hash_matcher plugin allows for easily defining your own:

class App < Roda
  plugin :hash_matcher

  hash_matcher(:foo) do |v|
    # ...
  end

  route do |r|
    r.on foo: 'bar' do
      # ...
    end
  end
end

:all

The :all matcher matches if all of the entries in the given array match, so

r.on all: [String, String] do
  # ...
end

is the same as:

r.on String, String do
  # ...
end

The reason it also exists as a separate hash matcher is so you can use it inside an array matcher, so:

r.on ['foo', {all: ['foos', Integer]}] do
end

would match /foo and /foos/10, but not /foos.

:method

The :method matcher matches the method of the request. You can provide an array to specify multiple request methods and match on any of them:

{method: :post}             # matches POST
{method: ['post', 'patch']} # matches POST and PATCH

false, nil

If false or nil is given directly as a matcher, it doesn’t match anything.

Everything else

Everything else raises an error, unless support is specifically added for it (some plugins add support for additional matcher types).

Optional segments

There are multiple ways you can handle optional segments in Roda. For example, let’s say you want to accept both /items/123 and /items/123/456, with 123 being the item’s id, and 456 being some optional data.

The simplest way to handle this is by treating this as two separate routes with a shared branch:

r.on "items", Integer do |item_id|
  # Shared code for branch here

  # /items/123/456
  r.is Integer do |optional_data|
  end

  # /items/123
  r.is do
  end
end

This works well for many cases, but there are also cases where you really want to treat it as one route with an optional segment. One simple way to do that is to use a parameter instead of an optional segment (e.g. /items/123?opt=456).

r.is "items", Integer do |item_id|
  optional_data = r.params['opt'].to_s
end

However, if you really do want to use a optional segment, there are a couple different ways to use matchers to do so. One is using an array matcher where the last element is true:

r.is "items", Integer, [String, true] do |item_id, optional_data|
end

Note that this technically yields only one argument instead of two arguments if the optional segment isn’t provided.

An alternative way to implement this is via a regexp:

r.is "items", /(\d+)(?:\/(\d+))?/ do |item_id, optional_data|
end

Match/Route Block Return Values

If the response body has already been written to by calling response.write directly, then any return value of a match block or route block is ignored.

If the response body has not already been written to, then the match block or route block return value is inspected:

String

used as the response body

nil, false

ignored

everything else

raises an error

Plugins can add support for additional match block and route block return values. One example of this is the json plugin, which allows returning arrays and hashes in match and route blocks and converts those directly to JSON and uses the JSON as the response body.

Status Codes

When it comes time to finalize a response, if a status code has not been set manually and anything has been written to the response, the response will use a 200 status code. Otherwise, it will use a 404 status code. This enables the principle of least surprise to work: if you don’t handle an action, a 404 response is assumed.

You can always set the status code manually, via the status attribute for the response.

route do |r|
  r.get "hello" do
    response.status = 200
  end
end

When redirecting, the response will use a 302 status code by default. You can change this by passing a second argument to r.redirect:

route do |r|
  r.get "hello" do
    r.redirect "/other", 301 # use 301 Moved Permanently
  end
end

Verb Methods

As displayed above, Roda has r.get and r.post methods for matching based on the HTTP request method. If you want to match on other HTTP request methods, use the all_verbs plugin.

When called without any arguments, these match as long as the request has the appropriate method, so:

r.get do end

matches any GET request, and

r.post do end

matches any POST request

If any arguments are given to the method, these match only if the request method matches, all arguments match, and the path has been fully matched by the arguments, so:

r.post "" do end

matches only POST requests where the current path is /.

r.get "a/b" do end

matches only GET requests where the current path is /a/b.

The reason for this difference in behavior is that if you are not providing any arguments, you probably don’t want to also test for an exact match with the current path. If that is something you do want, you can provide true as an argument:

r.on "foo" do
  r.get true do # Matches GET /foo, not GET /foo/.*
  end
end

If you want to match the request method and do only a partial match on the request path, you need to use r.on with the :method hash matcher:

r.on "foo", method: :get do # Matches GET /foo(/.*)?
end

Root Method

As displayed above, you can also use r.root as a match method. This method matches GET requests where the current path is /. r.root is similar to r.get "", except that it does not consume the / from the path.

Unlike the other matching methods, r.root takes no arguments.

Note that r.root does not match if the path is empty; you should use r.get true for that. If you want to match either the empty path or /, you can use r.get ["", true], or use the slash_path_empty plugin.

Note that r.root only matches GET requests. So, to handle POST / requests, use r.post ''.

Request and Response

While the request object is yielded to the route block, it is also available via the request method. Likewise, the response object is available via the response method.

The request object is an instance of a subclass of Rack::Request, with some additional methods.

If you want to extend the request and response objects with additional modules, you can use the module_include plugin.

Pollution

Roda tries very hard to avoid polluting the scope of the route block. This should make it unlikely that Roda will cause namespace issues with your application code. Some of the things Roda does:

  • The only instance variables defined by default in the scope of the route block are @_request and @_response. All instance variables in the scope of the route block used by plugins that ship with Roda are prefixed with an underscore.

  • The only methods defined (beyond the default methods for Object) are: call, env, opts, request, response, and session.

  • Constants inside the Roda namespace are all prefixed with Roda (e.g., Roda::RodaRequest).

Composition

You can mount any Rack app (including another Roda app), with its own middlewares, inside a Roda app, using r.run:

class API < Roda
  route do |r|
    r.is do
      # ...
    end
  end
end

class App < Roda
  route do |r|
    r.on "api" do
      r.run API
    end
  end
end

run App.app

This will take any path starting with /api and send it to API. In this example, API is a Roda app, but it could easily be a Sinatra, Rails, or other Rack app.

When you use r.run, Roda calls the given Rack app (API in this case); whatever the Rack app returns will be returned as the response for the current application.

If you have a lot of rack applications that you want to dispatch to, and which one to dispatch to is based on the request path prefix, look into the multi_run plugin.

multi_route plugin

If you are just looking to split up the main route block up by branches, you should use the multi_route plugin, which keeps the current scope of the route block:

class App < Roda
  plugin :multi_route

  route "api" do |r|
    r.is do
      # ...
    end
  end

  route do |r|
    r.on "api" do
      r.route "api"
    end
  end
end

run App.app

This allows you to set instance variables in the main route block and still have access to them inside the api route block.

Testing

It is very easy to test Roda with Rack::Test or Capybara. Roda’s own tests use minitest/spec. The default Rake task will run the specs for Roda.

Settings

Each Roda app can store settings in the opts hash. The settings are inherited by subclasses.

Roda.opts[:layout] = "guest"

class Users < Roda; end
class Admin < Roda
  opts[:layout] = "admin"
end

Users.opts[:layout] # => 'guest'
Admin.opts[:layout] # => 'admin'

Feel free to store whatever you find convenient. Note that when subclassing, Roda only does a shallow clone of the settings.

If you store nested structures and plan to mutate them in subclasses, it is your responsibility to dup the nested structures inside Roda.inherited (making sure to call super). This should be is done so that that modifications to the parent class made after subclassing do not affect the subclass, and vice-versa.

The plugins that ship with Roda freeze their settings and only allow modification to their settings by reloading the plugin, and external plugins are encouraged to follow this approach.

The following options are respected by the default library or multiple plugins:

:add_script_name

Prepend the SCRIPT_NAME for the request to paths. This is useful if you mount the app as a path under another app.

:freeze_middleware

Whether to freeze all middleware when building the rack app.

:json_parser

A callable for parsing JSON (JSON.parse in general used by default).

:json_serializer

A callable for serializing JSON (to_json in general used by default).

:root

Set the root path for the app. This defaults to the current working directory of the process.

:sessions_convert_symbols

This should be set to true if the sessions in use do not support roundtripping of symbols (for example, when sessions are serialized via JSON).

There may be other options supported by individual plugins, if so it will be mentioned in the documentation for the plugin.

Rendering

Roda ships with a render plugin that provides helpers for rendering templates. It uses Tilt, a gem that interfaces with many template engines. The erb engine is used by default.

Note that in order to use this plugin you need to have Tilt installed, along with the templating engines you want to use.

This plugin adds the render and view methods, for rendering templates. By default, view will render the template inside the default layout template; render will just render the template.

class App < Roda
  plugin :render

  route do |r|
    @var = '1'

    r.get "render" do
      # Renders the views/home.erb template, which will have access to
      # the instance variable @var, as well as local variable content.
      render("home", locals: {content: "hello, world"})
    end

    r.get "view" do
      @var2 = '1'

      # Renders the views/home.erb template, which will have access to the
      # instance variables @var and @var2, and takes the output of that and
      # renders it inside views/layout.erb (which should yield where the
      # content should be inserted).
      view("home")
    end
  end
end

You can override the default rendering options by passing a hash to the plugin:

class App < Roda
  plugin :render,
    escape: true, # Automatically escape output in erb templates using Erubi's escaping support
    views: 'admin_views', # Default views directory
    layout_opts: {template: 'admin_layout', engine: 'html.erb'},    # Default layout options
    template_opts: {default_encoding: 'UTF-8'} # Default template options
end

Security

Web application security is a very large topic, but here are some things you can do with Roda to prevent some common web application vulnerabilities.

Session Security

By default, Roda doesn’t turn on sessions, and if you don’t need sessions, you can skip this section. If you do need sessions, Roda offers two recommended ways to implement cookie-based sessions.

If you do not need any session support in middleware, and only need session support in the Roda application, then use the sessions plugin:

require 'roda'
class App < Roda
  plugin :sessions, secret: ENV['SESSION_SECRET']
end

The :secret option should be a randomly generated string of at least 64 bytes.

If you have middleware that need access to sessions, then use the RodaSessionMiddleware that ships with Roda:

require 'roda'
require 'roda/session_middleware'
class App < Roda
  use RodaSessionMiddleware, secret: ENV['SESSION_SECRET']
end

If you need non-cookie based sessions (such as sessions stored in a database), you should use an appropriate external middleware.

It is possible to use other session cookie middleware such as Rack::Session::Cookie, but other middleware may not have the same security features that Roda’s session support does. For example, the session cookies used by the Rack::Session::Cookie middleware are not encrypted, just signed to prevent tampering. This means you should not store any secret data in the session when using Rack::Session::Cookie.

For any cookie-based sessions, make sure that the necessary secrets (:secret option) are not disclosed to an attacker. Knowledge of the secret(s) can allow an attacker to inject arbitrary session values. In the case of Rack::Session::Cookie, that can also lead remote code execution.

Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)

CSRF can be prevented by using the route_csrf plugin that ships with Roda. The route_csrf plugin uses modern security practices to create CSRF tokens, requires request-specific tokens by default, and offers control to the user over where in the routing tree that CSRF tokens are checked. For example, if you are using the public plugin to serve static files and the assets plugin to serve assets, you wouldn’t need to check for CSRF tokens for either of those, so you could put the CSRF check after those in the routing tree, but before handling other requests:

route do |r|
  r.public
  r.assets

  check_csrf! # Must call this to check for valid CSRF tokens

  # ...
end

Cross Site Scripting (XSS)

The easiest way to prevent XSS with Roda is to use a template library that automatically escapes output by default. The :escape option to the render plugin sets the ERb template processor to escape by default, so that in your templates:

<%= '<>' %>  # outputs &lt;&gt; 
<%== '<>' %> # outputs <>

When using the :escape option, you will need to ensure that your layouts are not escaping the output of the content template:

<%== yield %> # not <%= yield %>

This support requires Erubi.

Unexpected Parameter Types

Rack converts submitted parameters into a hash of strings, arrays, and nested hashes. Since the user controls the submission of parameters, you should treat any submission of parameters with caution, and should be explicitly checking and/or converting types before using any submitted parameters. One way to do this is explicitly after accessing them:

# Convert foo_id parameter to an integer
request.params['foo_id'].to_i

However, it is easy to forget to convert the type, and if the user submits foo_id as a hash or array, a NoMethodError will be raised. Worse is if you do:

some_method(request.params['bar'])

Where some_method supports both a string argument and a hash argument, and you expect the parameter will be submitted as a string, and some_method‘s handling of a hash argument performs an unauthorized action.

Roda ships with a typecast_params plugin that can easily handle the typecasting of submitted parameters, and it is recommended that all Roda applications that deal with parameters use it or another tool to explicitly convert submitted parameters to the expected types.

Content Security Policy

The Content-Security-Policy HTTP header can be used to instruct the browser on what types of content to allow and where content can be loaded from. Roda ships with a content_security_policy plugin that allows for the easy configuration of the content security policy. Here’s an example of a fairly restrictive content security policy configuration:

class App < Roda
  plugin :content_security_policy do |csp|
    csp.default_src :none # deny everything by default
    csp.style_src :self
    csp.script_src :self
    csp.connect_src :self
    csp.img_src :self
    csp.font_src :self
    csp.form_action :self
    csp.base_uri :none
    csp.frame_ancestors :none
    csp.block_all_mixed_content
    csp.report_uri 'CSP_REPORT_URI'
  end
end

Other Security Related HTTP Headers

You may want to look into setting the following HTTP headers, which can be done at the web server level, but can also be done at the application level using using the default_headers plugin:

Strict-Transport-Security

Enforces SSL/TLS Connections to the application.

X-Content-Type-Options

Forces some browsers to respect a declared Content-Type header.

X-Frame-Options

Provides click-jacking protection by not allowing usage inside a frame.

X-XSS-Protection

Enables an XSS mitigation filter in some browsers.

Example:

class App < Roda
  plugin :default_headers,
    'Content-Type'=>'text/html',
    'Strict-Transport-Security'=>'max-age=16070400;',
    'X-Content-Type-Options'=>'nosniff',
    'X-Frame-Options'=>'deny',
    'X-XSS-Protection'=>'1; mode=block'
end

Rendering Templates Derived From User Input

Roda’s rendering plugin by default checks that rendered templates are inside the views directory. This is because rendering templates outside the views directory is not commonly needed, and it prevents a common attack (which is especially severe if there is any location on the file system that users can write files to).

You can specify which directories are allowed using the :allowed_paths render plugin option. If you really want to turn path checking off, you can do so via the check_paths: false render plugin option.

Code Reloading

Roda does not ship with integrated support for code reloading, but there are rack-based reloaders that will work with Roda apps.

For most applications, rack-unreloader is probably the fastest approach to reloading while still being fairly safe, as it reloads just files that have been modified, and unloads constants defined in the files before reloading them. However, it requires modifying your application code to use rack-unreloader specific APIs.

A similar solution that reloads files and unloads constants is ActiveSupport::Dependencies. ActiveSupport::Dependencies doesn’t require modifying your application code, but it modifies some core methods, including require and const_missing. It requires less configuration, but depends that you follow Rails’ file and class naming conventions. It also provides autoloading (on the fly) of files when a missing constant is accessed. If your application does not rely on autoloading then require_dependency must be used to require the dependencies or they won’t be reloaded.

AutoReloader provides transparent reloading for all files reached from one of the reloadable_paths option entries, by detecting new top-level constants and removing them when any of the reloadable loaded files changes. It overrides require and require_relative when activated (usually in the development environment). No configurations other than reloadable_paths are required.

Both rerun and shotgun use a fork/exec approach for loading new versions of your app. rerun is faster as it only reloads the app on changes, whereas shotgun reloads the app on every request. Both work without any changes to application code, but may be slower as they have to reload the entire application on every change. However, for small apps that load quickly, either may be a good approach.

Rack::Reloader ships with rack and just reloads monitored files when they change, without unloading constants. It’s fast but may cause issues in cases where you remove classes, constants, or methods, or when you are not clearing out cached data manually when files are reloaded.

There is no one reloading solution that is the best for all applications and development approaches. Consider your needs and the tradeoffs of each of the reloading approaches, and pick the one you think will work best.

If you are unsure where to start, it may be best to start with rerun or shotgun (unless you’re running on JRuby or Windows), and only consider other options if rerun or shotgun are not fast enough.

Plugins

By design, Roda has a very small core, providing only the essentials. All nonessential features are added via plugins.

Roda’s plugins can override any Roda method and call super to get the default behavior, which makes Roda very extensible.

Roda ships with a large number of plugins, and some other libraries ship with support for Roda.

How to create plugins

Authoring your own plugins is pretty straightforward. Plugins are just modules, which may contain any of the following modules:

InstanceMethods

module included in the Roda class

ClassMethods

module that extends the Roda class

RequestMethods

module included in the class of the request

RequestClassMethods

module extending the class of the request

ResponseMethods

module included in the class of the response

ResponseClassMethods

module extending the class of the response

If the plugin responds to load_dependencies, it will be called first, and should be used if the plugin depends on another plugin.

If the plugin responds to configure, it will be called last, and should be used to configure the plugin.

Both load_dependencies and configure are called with the additional arguments and block that was given to the plugin call.

So, a simple plugin to add an instance method would be:

module MarkdownHelper
  module InstanceMethods
    def markdown(str)
      BlueCloth.new(str).to_html
    end
  end
end

Roda.plugin MarkdownHelper

Registering plugins

If you want to ship a Roda plugin in a gem, but still have Roda load it automatically via Roda.plugin :plugin_name, you should place it where it can be required via roda/plugins/plugin_name and then have the file register it as a plugin via Roda::RodaPlugins.register_plugin. It’s recommended, but not required, that you store your plugin module in the Roda::RodaPlugins namespace:

class Roda
  module RodaPlugins
    module Markdown
      module InstanceMethods
        def markdown(str)
          BlueCloth.new(str).to_html
        end
      end
    end

    register_plugin :markdown, Markdown
  end
end

To avoid namespace pollution, you should avoid creating your module directly in the Roda namespace. Additionally, any instance variables created inside InstanceMethods should be prefixed with an underscore (e.g., @_variable) to avoid polluting the scope. Finally, do not add any constants inside the InstanceMethods module, add constants to the plugin module itself (Markdown in the above example).

If you are planning on shipping your plugin in an external gem, it is recommended that you follow standard gem naming conventions for extensions. So if your plugin module is named FooBar, your gem name should be roda-foo_bar.

No Introspection

Because a routing tree does not store the routes in a data structure, but directly executes the routing tree block, you cannot introspect the routes when using a routing tree.

If you would like to introspect your routes when using Roda, there is an external plugin named roda-route_list, which allows you to add appropriate comments to your routing files, and has a parser that will parse those comments into routing metadata that you can then introspect.

Inspiration

Roda was inspired by Sinatra and Cuba. It started out as a fork of Cuba, from which it borrows the idea of using a routing tree (which Cuba in turn took from Rum). From Sinatra, it takes the ideas that route blocks should return the request bodies and that routes should be canonical. Roda’s plugin system is based on the plugin system used by Sequel.

Ruby Support Policy

Roda fully supports the currently supported versions of Ruby (MRI) and JRuby. It may support unsupported versions of Ruby or JRuby, but such support may be dropped in any minor version of keeping it becomes a support issue. The minimum Ruby version required to run the current version of Roda is 1.9.2.

License

MIT

Maintainer

Jeremy Evans <[email protected]>