Keeping your frontend in sync with your API server can be difficult - when the
API changes its input parameters or return type, XHR requests from the
frontend will fail at runtime. If your API is defined by
servant combinators, you can use
servant-reflex
to share the API between the server and frontend.
Syncronization between is checked at compile time, and rather than building XHR
requests by hand, API endpoints are available behind reflex
's FRP semantics.
We have a webservice API defined in a module where both the server (compiled with ghc) and the frontend (compiled with ghcjs) can see it:
type API = "getint" :> Get '[JSON] Int
:<|> "sayhi" :> QueryParam "username" Text
:> QueryParams "greetings" Text
:> QueryFlag "gusto"
:> Get '[JSON] Text
:<|> "double" :> ReqBody '[JSON] Double
:> Post '[JSON] Double
:<|> Raw
servant-reflex
then computes client functions that can query the API through
an XhrRequest
.
runGUI :: forall t m.MonadWidget t m => do
-- servant-reflex computes FRP functions for each API endpoint
let (getint :<|> sayhi :<|> doubleit :<|> _) = client (Proxy :: Proxy API)
(Proxy :: Proxy m)
(Proxy :: Proxy ())
(constDyn (BasePath "/"))
These client functions are computed from your API type. They manage
serialization, XhrRequest
generation, and deserialization for you. a
parameters used in URL captures become Dynamic t (Either Text a)
parameters
in the client functions. QueryFlag
, QueryParams
and QueryParam
API
parameters map to Dynamic t Bool
, Dynamic t [a]
and Dynamic t (QParam a)
respectively. These parameters to the client function are wrapped with failure
possibility to allow you to indicate at any time whether input validation for
that parameter has failed and no valid XHR request can be generated. The final
parameter is a trigger event for the XHR request. The return value
Event t (ReqResult a)
contains responses from the API server.
-- No need to write these functions. servant-reflex creates them for you!
getint :: MonadWidget t m
=> Event t () -- ^ Trigger the XHR Request
-> m (Event t (ReqResult () Int)) -- ^ Consume the answer
sayhi :: MonadWidget t m
=> Dynamic t (QParam Text)
-- ^ One input parameter - the 'name', wrapped in 'QParam'
-> Dynamic t [Text]
-- ^ Another input: list of preferred greetings
-> Dynamic t Bool
-- ^ Flag for capitalizing the response
-> Event t ()
-- ^ Trigger the XHR Request
-> m (Event t (ReqResult () Text))
doubleit :: MonadWidget t m
=> Dynamic t (Either Text Double)
-> Event t ()
-> m (Event t (ReqResult () Double))
ReqResult tag a
is defined in
Servant.Common.Req
and reports whether or not your request was sent (if validation fails, the
request won't be sent), and how decoding of the response went. You can pattern
match on these explicitly, but usually you'll want to use
fmapMaybe :: (a -> Maybe b) -> Event t a -> Event t b
and one of the
elimination functions to filter the result type you care about, like this:
-- ... continued ...
res :: Event t (ReqResult Double) <- doubleIt xs triggers
let ys = fmapMaybe reqSuccess res
errs = fmapMaybe reqFailure res
-- Green <p> tag showing the last good result
elAttr "p" ("style" =: "color:green") $ do
text "Last good result: "
dynText =<< holdDyn "" (fmap show ys)
-- Red <p> tag showing the last error, cleared by a new good value
elAttr "p" ("style" =: "color:red") $
dynText =<< holdDyn "" (leftmost [errs, const "" <$> ys])
This example builds some input fields to enter API parameters, buttons to trigger the API calls, and text elements to show the results:
elClass "div" "int-demo" $ do
intButton <- button "Get Int"
serverInts <- fmapMaybe resSuccess <$> getint intButton
display =<< holdDyn (Just 0) serverInts
elClass "div" "hello-demo" $ do
nameText <- QParamSome . value <$> textInput def
greetings <- (fmap words . value) <$> textInput def
withGusto <- checkbox def
helloButton <- button "Say hi"
hellos <- fmapMaybe resResult <$> sayhi nameText greetings withGusto helloButton
display =<< holdDyn Nothing hellos
elClass "div" "demo-double" $ do
inputDouble <- (fmapMaybe readMaybe) <$> textInput def
doubleButton <- button "Double it"
outputDouble <- fmapMaybe resSuccess <$> doubleit inputDouble doubleButton
display =<< holdDyn Nothing outputDouble
For a great introduction to recative DOM building, see the
README for the
reflex-platform
. For more information about servant, see their
documentation. Thanks to
the respective authors of these fabulous libraries.
This repository comes with a small example of an API shared between a ghcjs-compiled frontend (exec/) and a ghc-compiled backend (testserver/. To build these components, we will use the nix packages for the testserver. It manages the frontend build as a dependency.
nix build -f travis.nix testserver -o server
Point it at the static directory and run it:
STATIC_DIR=server/static server/back -p 8000
Browse to http://localhost:8000 and click around. Open the firefox or chrome developer tools and examine the XHR activity under the Network tab.
For a larger example of a project that shares types between backend and frontend, see hsnippet.
The input and the return type of a client function like getDouble
are both
event streams. The individual input events and responses occur at different
times and aren't automatically paired up, but you can recover the
relationship by tagging the requests.
So far we have used an Event t ()
to trigger sending a request. If we choose
e.g. Double
for the third Proxy
argument to client
, then Event t Double
will be used to trigger requests, and each ReqResult
will carry the tag of
its request. Imagine we wanted to display not just the last "double" from
doubleIt
, but a whole table of valid inputs and their doubled responses:
...
inp <- textInput def
-- Convert the raw text into an `Either Text Double`
let inpNum = maybe (Left "No Parse") Right . readMaybe . T.unpack <$> value inp
go <- button "Double It"
-- Call 'doubleIt' with triggers that coincide with good input parses
rs <- doubleIt inpNum (fforMaybe (tagPromptlyDyn inpNum go) $ \case
Left _ -> Nothing
Right a -> Just a
)
-- Accumulate good responses in a map
doubleTable <- foldDyn (<>) mempty $ ffor rs $ \case
ResponseSuccess tag v _ -> tag =: v
_ -> mempty
el "table" $ do
listWithKey doubleTable $ \k dv -> el "tr" $ do
el "td" $ text (T.pack $ show k)
el "td" $ dynText (T.pack . show <$> dv)
...
Servant.Reflex.Multi
provides an alternative client-generation function
called clientA
(client applicative). Choose a container type that has both
Applicative
and Traversable
instances, and pass it to clientA
through
another Proxy
. Our sayHi
client function will then have this type:
sayHi
:: Dynamic t (f (QParam Text))
-> Dynamic t (f [Text])
-> Dynamic t (f Bool)
-> Event t tag
-> m (Event t (f (ReqResult tag Text)))
The dynamic params are each wrapped in f
. For every firing of the trigger
event tag
, all of these parameters will be combined according to f
's
Applicative
instance (when f
is []
, you will get all combinations of
all parameters taken together as a request; when f
is ZipList
, the Nth
elemens of each parameters list will be taken together as a request). Using
this interface, you can trigger many XHR's from a single event occurence, and
expect the responses to be structured the same way as the requests.