caddy/context_test.go

119 lines
4.1 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Matthew Holt and The Caddy Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package caddy
import (
"encoding/json"
"io"
)
func ExampleContext_LoadModule() {
// this whole first part is just setting up for the example;
// note the struct tags - very important; we specify inline_key
// because that is the only way to know the module name
var ctx Context
myStruct := &struct {
// This godoc comment will appear in module documentation.
GuestModuleRaw json.RawMessage `json:"guest_module,omitempty" caddy:"namespace=example inline_key=name"`
// this is where the decoded module will be stored; in this
// example, we pretend we need an io.Writer but it can be
// any interface type that is useful to you
guestModule io.Writer
}{
GuestModuleRaw: json.RawMessage(`{"name":"module_name","foo":"bar"}`),
}
// if a guest module is provided, we can load it easily
if myStruct.GuestModuleRaw != nil {
mod, err := ctx.LoadModule(myStruct, "GuestModuleRaw")
if err != nil {
// you'd want to actually handle the error here
// return fmt.Errorf("loading guest module: %v", err)
}
// mod contains the loaded and provisioned module,
// it is now ready for us to use
myStruct.guestModule = mod.(io.Writer)
}
// use myStruct.guestModule from now on
}
func ExampleContext_LoadModule_array() {
// this whole first part is just setting up for the example;
// note the struct tags - very important; we specify inline_key
// because that is the only way to know the module name
var ctx Context
myStruct := &struct {
// This godoc comment will appear in module documentation.
GuestModulesRaw []json.RawMessage `json:"guest_modules,omitempty" caddy:"namespace=example inline_key=name"`
// this is where the decoded module will be stored; in this
// example, we pretend we need an io.Writer but it can be
// any interface type that is useful to you
guestModules []io.Writer
}{
GuestModulesRaw: []json.RawMessage{
json.RawMessage(`{"name":"module1_name","foo":"bar1"}`),
json.RawMessage(`{"name":"module2_name","foo":"bar2"}`),
},
}
// since our input is []json.RawMessage, the output will be []any
mods, err := ctx.LoadModule(myStruct, "GuestModulesRaw")
if err != nil {
// you'd want to actually handle the error here
// return fmt.Errorf("loading guest modules: %v", err)
}
for _, mod := range mods.([]any) {
myStruct.guestModules = append(myStruct.guestModules, mod.(io.Writer))
}
// use myStruct.guestModules from now on
}
func ExampleContext_LoadModule_map() {
// this whole first part is just setting up for the example;
// note the struct tags - very important; we don't specify
// inline_key because the map key is the module name
var ctx Context
myStruct := &struct {
// This godoc comment will appear in module documentation.
GuestModulesRaw ModuleMap `json:"guest_modules,omitempty" caddy:"namespace=example"`
// this is where the decoded module will be stored; in this
// example, we pretend we need an io.Writer but it can be
// any interface type that is useful to you
guestModules map[string]io.Writer
}{
GuestModulesRaw: ModuleMap{
"module1_name": json.RawMessage(`{"foo":"bar1"}`),
"module2_name": json.RawMessage(`{"foo":"bar2"}`),
},
}
// since our input is map[string]json.RawMessage, the output will be map[string]any
mods, err := ctx.LoadModule(myStruct, "GuestModulesRaw")
if err != nil {
// you'd want to actually handle the error here
// return fmt.Errorf("loading guest modules: %v", err)
}
for modName, mod := range mods.(map[string]any) {
myStruct.guestModules[modName] = mod.(io.Writer)
}
// use myStruct.guestModules from now on
}