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phoenix's Introduction

phoenix logo

Elixir Web Framework targeting full-featured, fault tolerant applications with realtime functionality

Build Status

Getting started

Requirements

  • Elixir v1.0.0+

Setup

  1. Install Phoenix

     git clone https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenix.git && cd phoenix && git checkout v0.4.1 && mix do deps.get, compile
    
  2. Create a new Phoenix application

     mix phoenix.new your_app /path/to/scaffold/your_app
    

    Important: Run this task in the Phoenix installation directory cloned in the step above. The path provided: /path/to/scaffold/your_app/ should be outside of the framework installation directory. This will either create a new application directory or install the application into an existing directory.

    Examples:

     mix phoenix.new your_app /Users/you/projects/my_app
     mix phoenix.new your_app ../relative_path/my_app
    
  3. Change directory to /path/to/scaffold/your_app. Install dependencies and start web server

     mix do deps.get, compile
     mix phoenix.start
    

When running in production, use protocol consolidation for increased performance:

   MIX_ENV=prod mix compile.protocols
   MIX_ENV=prod PORT=4001 elixir -pa _build/prod/consolidated -S mix phoenix.start

Router example

defmodule YourApp.Router do
  use Phoenix.Router

  scope alias: YourApp do
    get "/pages/:page", PageController, :show, as: :pages
    get "/files/*path", FileController, :show

    resources "/users", UserController do
      resources "/comments", CommentController
    end
  end

  scope path: "/admin", alias: YourApp.Admin, helper: "admin" do
    resources "/users", UserController
  end
end

Routes specified using get, post, put, and delete respond to the corresponding HTTP method. The second and third parameters are the controller module and function, respectively. For example, the line get "/files/*path", FileController, :show above will route GET requests matching /files/*path to the FileController.show function.

Resources

The resources macro generates a set of routes for the standard CRUD operations, so:

resources "/users", UserController

is the equivalent of writing:

get  "/users",          UserController, :index
get  "/users/:id",      UserController, :show
get  "/users/new",      UserController, :new
post "/users",          UserController, :create
get  "/users/:id/edit", UserController, :edit
put  "/users/:id",      UserController, :update
delete "/users/:id",    UserController, :destroy

Resources will also generate a set of named routes and associated helper methods:

resources "/users", UserController do
  resources "/comments", CommentController
end

iex> Router.user_path(:index)
"/users"

iex> Router.user_path(:show, 123)
"/users/123"

iex> Router.user_path(:show, 123, page: 5)
"/users/123?page=5"

iex> Router.user_path(:edit, 123)
"/users/123/edit"

iex> Router.user_path(:destroy, 123)
"/users/123"

iex> Router.user_path(:new)
"/users/new"

iex> Router.user_comment_path(:show, 99, 100)
"/users/99/comments/100"

iex> Router.user_comment_path(:index, 99, foo: "bar")
"/users/99/comments?foo=bar"

iex> Router.user_comment_path(:index, 99) |> Router.url
"http://example.com/users/99/comments"

iex> Router.user_comment_path(:edit, 88, 2, [])
"/users/88/comments/2/edit"

iex> Router.user_comment_path(:new, 88)
"/users/88/comments/new"

Method Overrides

Since browsers don't allow HTML forms to send PUT or DELETE requests, Phoenix allows the POST method to be overridden, either by adding a _method form parameter, or specifying an x-http-method-override HTTP header.

For example, to make a button to delete a post, you could write:

<form action="<%= post_path(:destroy, @post.id) %>" method="post">
  <input type="hidden" name="_method" value="DELETE">
  <input type="submit" value="Delete Post">
</form>

Controller examples

defmodule YourApp.PageController do
  use Phoenix.Controller
  alias YourApp.Router

  def show(conn, %{"page" => "admin"}) do
    redirect conn, Router.page_path(:show, "unauthorized")
  end
  def show(conn, %{"page" => page}) do
    render conn, "show", title: "Showing page #{page}"
  end

end

defmodule YourApp.UserController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def show(conn, %{"id" => id}) do
    text conn, "Showing user #{id}"
  end

  def index(conn, _params) do
   json conn, JSON.encode!(Repo.all(User))
  end
end

Views & Templates

Put simply, Phoenix Views render templates. Views also serve as a presentation layer for their templates where functions, alias, imports, etc are in context.

Rendering from the Controller

defmodule App.PageController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def index(conn, _params) do
    render conn, "index", message: "hello"
  end
end

By looking at the controller name App.PageController, Phoenix will use App.PageView to render web/templates/page/index.html.eex within the template web/templates/layout/application.html.eex. Let's break that down:

  • App.PageView is the module that will render the template (more on that later)
  • App is your application name
  • templates is your configured templates directory. See web/views.ex
  • pages is your controller name
  • html is the requested format (more on that later)
  • eex is the default renderer
  • application.html is the layout because application is the default layout name and html is the requested format (more on that later)

Every keyword passed to render in the controller is available as an assign within the template, so you can use <%= @message %> in the eex template that is rendered in the controller example.

You may also create helper functions within your views or layouts. For example, the previous controller will use App.PageView so you could have :

defmodule App.Views do
  defmacro __using__(_options) do
    quote do
      import unquote(__MODULE__)

      # This block is expanded within all views for aliases, imports, etc
      import App.I18n
      import App.Router.Helpers
    end
  end

  # Functions defined here are available to all other views/templates
  def title, do: "Welcome to Phoenix!"
end

defmodule App.PageView
  use App.Views
  alias Poison, as: JSON

  def display(something) do
    String.upcase(something)
  end

  def render("show.json", %{page: page}) do
    JSON.encode! %{title: page.title, url: page.url}
  end
end

Which would allow you to use these functions in your template : <%= display(@message) %>, <%= title %>

Note that all views extend App.Views, allowing you to define functions, aliases, imports, etc available in all templates. Additionally, render/2 functions can be defined to perform rendering directly as function definitions. The arguments to render/2 are controller action name with the response content-type mime extension.

To read more about eex templating, see the elixir documentation.

More on request format

The template format to render is chosen based on the following priority:

  • format query string parameter, ie ?format=json
  • The request header accept field, ie "text/html"
  • Fallback to html as default format, therefore rendering *.html.eex

To override the render format, for example when rendering your sitemap.xml, you can explicitly set the response content-type, using put_resp_content_type/2 and the template will be chosen from the given mime-type, ie:

def sitemap(conn, _params) do
  conn
  |> put_resp_content_type("text/xml")
  |> render "sitemap"
end

Note that the layout and view templates would be chosen by matching content types, ie application.[format].eex would be used to render show.[format].eex.

See this file for a list of supported mime types.

More on layouts

The "LayoutView" module name is hardcoded. This means that App.LayoutView will be used and, by default, will render templates from web/templates/layout.

The layout template can be changed easily from the controller via assign_layout/2. For example :

defmodule App.PageController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def index(conn, _params) do
    conn
    |> assign_layout("plain")
    |> render "index", message: "hello"
  end
end

To render the template's content inside a layout, use the assign <%= @inner %> that will be generated for you.

You may also omit using a layout with the following:

conn |> assign_layout(:none) |> render "index", message: "hello"

Template Engine Configuration

By default, eex is supported. To add haml support, simply include the following in your mix.exs deps:

{:phoenix_haml, "~> 0.0.4"}

and add the PhoenixHaml.Engine to your config/config.exs

config :phoenix, :template_engines,
  haml: PhoenixHaml.Engine

To configure other third-party Phoenix template engines, add the extension and module to your Mix Config, ie:

config :phoenix, :template_engines,
  slim: Slim.PhoenixEngine

Topics

Topics provide a simple publish/subscribe mechanism that can be used to facilitate messaging between components in an application. To subscribe a process to a given topic, call subscribe/2 passing in the PID and a string to identify the topic:

Phoenix.Topic.subscribe self, "foo"

Then, to broadcast messages to all subscribers to that topic:

Phoenix.Topic.broadcast "foo", { :message_type, some: 1, data: 2 }

For example, let's look at a rudimentary logger that prints messages when a controller action is invoked:

defmodule Logger do
  def start_link do
    sub = spawn_link &(log/0)
    Phoenix.Topic.subscribe(sub, "logging")
    {:ok, sub}
  end

  def log do
    receive do
      { :action, params } ->
        IO.puts "Called action #{params[:action]} in controller #{params[:controller]}"
      _ ->
    end
    log
  end
end

With this module added as a worker to the app's supervision tree, we can broadcast messages to the "logging" topic, and they will be handled by the logger:

def index(conn, _params) do
  Phoenix.Topic.broadcast "logging", { :action, controller: "pages", action: "index" }
  render conn, "index"
end

Channels

Channels broker websocket connections and integrate with the Topic PubSub layer for message broadcasting. You can think of channels as controllers, with two differences: they are bidirectional and the connection stays alive after a reply.

We can implement a channel by creating a module in the channels directory and by using Phoenix.Channels:

defmodule App.MyChannel do
  use Phoenix.Channel
end

The first thing to do is to implement the join function to authorize sockets on this Channel's topic:

defmodule App.MyChannel do
  use Phoenix.Channel

  def join(socket, "topic", message) do
    {:ok, socket}
  end

  def join(socket, _no, _message) do
    {:error, socket, :unauthorized}
  end

end

join events are specially treated. When {:ok, socket} is returned from the Channel, the socket is subscribed to the channel and authorized to pubsub on the channel/topic pair. When {:error, socket, reason} is returned, the socket is denied pubsub access.

Note that we must join a topic before you can send and receive events on a channel. This will become clearer when we look at the JavaScript code, hang tight!

A channel will use a socket underneath to send responses and receive events. As said, sockets are bidirectional, which mean you can receive events (similar to requests in your controller). You handle events with pattern matching, for example:

defmodule App.MyChannel do
  use Phoenix.Channel

  def event(socket, "user:active", %{user_id: user_id}) do
    socket
  end

  def event(socket, "user:idle", %{user_id: user_id}) do
    socket
  end

end

We can send replies directly to a single authorized socket with reply/3

defmodule App.MyChannel do
  use Phoenix.Channel

  def event(socket, "eventname", message) do
    reply socket, "return_event", "Echo: " <> message
    socket
  end

end

Note that, for added clarity, events should be prefixed by their subject and a colon (i.e. "subject:event"). Instead of reply/3, you may also use broadcast/3. In the previous case, this would publish a message to all clients who previously joined the current socket's topic.

Remember that a client first has to join a topic before it can send events. On the JavaScript side, this is how it would be done (don't forget to include /js/phoenix.js) :

var socket = new Phoenix.Socket("/ws");

socket.join("channel", "topic", {some_auth_token: "secret"}, callback);

First you create a socket which uses the route name /ws. This route's name is for you to decide in your router :

defmodule App.Router do
  use Phoenix.Router
  use Phoenix.Router.Socket, mount: "/ws"

  channel "channel", App.MyChannel
end

This mounts the socket router on /ws and also register the channel from earlier as channel. Let's recap:

  • The mountpoint for the socket in the router (/ws) has to match the route used on the JavaScript side when creating the new socket.
  • The channel name in the router has to match the first parameter on the JavaScript call to socket.join
  • The name of the topic used in def join(socket, "topic", message) function has to match the second parameter on the JavaScript call to socket.join

Now that a channel exists and we have reached it, it's time to do something fun with it! The callback from the previous JavaScript example receives the channel as a parameter and uses that to either subscribe to topics or send events to the server. Here is a quick example of both :

var socket = new Phoenix.Socket("/ws");

socket.join("channel", "topic", {}, function(channel) {

  channel.on("return_event", function(message) {
    console.log("Got " + message + " while listening for event return_event");
  });

  onSomeEvent(function() {
    channel.send("topic:event", {data: "json stuff"});
  });

});

If you wish, you can send a "join" event back to the client

def join(socket, topic, message) do
  reply socket, "join", %{content: "joined #{topic} successfully"}
  {:ok, socket}
end

Which you can handle after you get the channel object.

channel.on("return_event", function(message) {
  console.log("Got " + message + " while listening for event return_event");
});

Similarly, you can send an explicit message when denying conection.

def join(socket, topic, message) do
  reply socket, "error", %{reason: "failed to join #{topic}"}
  {:error, socket, :reason}
end

and handle that like any other event

channel.on("error", function(error) {
  console.log("Failed to join topic. Reason: +" error.reason);
});

It should be noted that join and error messages are not returned by default, as the client implicitly knows whether it has successfuly subscribed to a channel: the socket will simply not receive any messages should the connection be denied.

There are a few other things not covered in this readme that might be worth exploring :

  • By default a socket uses the ws:// protocol and the host from the current location. If you mean to use a separate router on a host other than location.host, be sure to specify the full path when initializing the socket, i.e. var socket = new Phoenix.Socket("//example.com/ws") or var socket = new Phoenix.Socket("ws://example.com/ws")
  • Both the client and server side allow for leave events (as opposed to join)
  • In JavaScript, you may manually .trigger() events which can be useful for testing
  • On the server side, string topics are converted into a Topic, which can be subscribed to from any elixir code. No need to use websockets!

Configuration

Phoenix provides a configuration per environment set by the MIX_ENV environment variable. The default environment dev will be set if MIX_ENV does not exist.

Configuration file structure:

├── your_app/config/
│   ├── config.exs          Base application configuration
│   ├── dev.exs
│   ├── prod.exs
│   └── test.exs
# your_app/config/config.exs
use Mix.Config

config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  port: System.get_env("PORT"),
  ssl: false,
  cookies: true,
  session_key: "_your_app_key",
  session_secret: "super secret"

config :phoenix, :code_reloader,
  enabled: false

import_config "#{Mix.env}.exs"


# your_app/config/dev.exs
use Mix.Config

config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  port: System.get_env("PORT") || 4000,
  ssl: false,
  host: "localhost",
  cookies: true,
  session_key: "_your_app_key",
  session_secret: "$+X2PG$PX0^88^HXB)...",
  debug_errors: true

config :phoenix, :code_reloader,
  enabled: true

config :logger, :console,
  level: :debug

Configuration for SSL

To launch your application with support for SSL, just place your keyfile and certfile in the priv directory and configure your router with the following options:

# your_app/config/prod.ex
use Mix.Config

config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  port: System.get_env("PORT"),
  ssl: false,
  host: "example.com",
  cookies: true,
  session_key: "_your_app_key",
  session_secret: "$+X2PG$PX0^88^HXB)..."

config :logger, :console,
  level: :info,
  metadata: [:request_id]

When you include the otp_app option, Plug will search within the priv directory of your application. If you use relative paths for keyfile and certfile and do not include the otp_app option, Plug will throw an error.

You can leave out the otp_app option if you provide absolute paths to the files.

Example:

Path.expand("../../../some/path/to/ssl/key.pem", __DIR__)

Serving Your Application Behind a Proxy

If you are serving your application behind a proxy such as nginx or apache, you will want to specify the proxy_port option. This will ensure the route helper functions will use the proxy port number.

Example:

# your_app/config/prod.ex
use Mix.Config

config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  ...
  port: 4000,
  proxy_port: 443
  ...

Configuration for Sessions

Phoenix supports a session cookie store that can be easily configured. Just add the following configuration settings to your application's config module:

# your_app/config/prod.ex
use Mix.Config

config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  ...
  cookies: true,
  session_key: "_your_app_key",
  session_secret: "super secret"
  ...

Then you can access session data from your application controllers. NOTE: that :key and :secret are required options.

Example:

defmodule YourApp.PageController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def show(conn, _params) do
    conn = put_session(conn, :foo, "bar")
    foo = get_session(conn, :foo)

    text conn, foo
  end
end

Custom Not Found and Error Pages

An error_controller can be configured on the Router Mix config, where two actions must be defined for custom 404 and 500 error handling. Additionally, catch_errors and debug_errors settings control how errors are caught and displayed. Router configuration options include:

  • error_controller - The optional Module to have error/2, not_found/2 actions invoked when 400/500's status occurs. Default Phoenix.Controller.ErrorController
  • catch_errors - Bool to catch errors at the Router level. Default true
  • debug_errors - Bool to display Phoenix's route/stacktrace debug pages for 404/500 statuses. Default false

The error/2 action will be invoked on the page controller when a 500 status has been assigned to the connection, but a response has not been sent, as well as anytime an error is thrown or raised (provided catch_errors: true)

The not_found/2 action will be invoked on the page controller when a 404 status is assigned to the conn and a response is not sent.

Example Custom Error handling with PageController

# config/config.exs
config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  ...
  catch_errors: true,
  debug_errors: false,
  error_controller: YourApp.PageController

# config/dev.exs
config :phoenix, YourApp.Router,
  ...
  debug_errors: true # Show Phoenix route/stacktrace debug pages for 404/500's


defmodule YourApp.PageController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def not_found(conn, _) do
    text conn, 404, "The page you were looking for couldn't be found"
  end

  def error(conn, _) do
    handle_error(conn, error(conn))
  end
  defp handle_error(conn, {:error, Ecto.NotSingleResult}) do
    not_found(conn, [])
  end
  defp handle_error(conn, _any) do
    text conn, 500, "Something went wrong"
  end
end

Catching Errors at the Controller layer

Errors can be caught at the controller layer by overriding call/2 on the controller. ie:

defmodule YourApp.UserController do
  use Phoenix.Controller

  def call(conn, opts) do
    try do
      super(conn, opts)
    rescue
      Ecto.NotSingleResult -> conn |> assign_status(404) |> render "user_404"
    end
  end

  def show(conn, %{"id" => id}) do
    render conn, "index", user: Repo.get!(User, id)
  end
end

Mix Tasks

mix phoenix                                    # List Phoenix tasks
mix phoenix.new     app_name destination_path  # Creates new Phoenix application
mix phoenix.routes  [MyApp.Router]             # Prints routes
mix phoenix.start   [MyApp.Router]             # Starts worker
mix phoenix --help                             # This help

Static Assets

Static assets are enabled by default and served from the priv/static/ directory of your application. The assets are mounted at the root path, so priv/static/js/phoenix.js would be served from example.com/js/phoenix.js. See configuration options for details on disabling assets and customizing the mount point.

Documentation

API documentation is available at http://api.phoenixframework.org/

Development

There are no guidelines yet. Do what feels natural. Submit a bug, join a discussion, open a pull request.

Building phoenix.coffee

$ coffee -o priv/static/js -cw priv/src/static/cs

Building documentation

  1. Clone docs repository into ../docs. Relative to your phoenix directory.
  2. Run MIX_ENV=docs mix run release_docs.exs in phoenix directory.
  3. Change directory to ../docs.
  4. Commit and push docs.

Feature Roadmap

  • Robust Routing DSL
    • GET/POST/PUT/PATCH/DELETE macros
    • Named route helpers
    • resource routing for RESTful endpoints
    • Scoped definitions
    • Member/Collection resource routes
  • Configuration
    • Environment based configuration with ExConf
    • Integration with config.exs
  • Middleware
    • Plug Based Connection handling
    • Code Reloading
    • Enviroment Based logging with log levels with Elixir's Logger
    • Static File serving
  • Controllers
    • html/json/text helpers
    • redirects
    • Plug layer for action hooks
    • Error page handling
    • Error page handling per env
  • Views
    • Precompiled View handling
    • I18n
  • Realtime
    • Websocket multiplexing/channels
    • Browser js client
    • iOS client (WIP)
    • Android client

phoenix's People

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