HTTP web server and client, supports http1 and http2
See Raxx.Kit for a project generator that helps you set up a web project based on Raxx/Ace.
defmodule MyApp do
use Ace.HTTP.Service, port: 8080, cleartext: true
use Raxx.SimpleServer
@impl Raxx.SimpleServer
def handle_request(%{method: :GET, path: []}, %{greeting: greeting}) do
response(:ok)
|> set_header("content-type", "text/plain")
|> set_body("#{greeting}, World!")
end
endThe arguments given to use Ace.HTTP.Service are default values when starting the service.
config = %{greeting: "Hello"}
MyApp.start_link(config, port: 1234)Here the default port value has been overridden at startup
Ace implements the Raxx HTTP interface. This allows applications to be built with any components from the Raxx ecosystem.
Raxx has tooling for streaming, server-push, routing, api documentation and more. See documentation for details.
The correct version of raxx is included with ace, raxx does not need to be added as a dependency.
If a service is started without the cleartext it will start using TLS. This requires a certificate and key.
config = %{greeting: "Hello"}
options = [port: 8443, certfile: "path/to/certificate", keyfile: "path/to/key"]
MyApp.start_link(application, options)TLS is required to serve content via HTTP/2.
The normal way to run services is as part of a projects supervision tree. When starting a new project use the --sup flag.
mix new my_app --supAdd the services to be supervised in the application file lib/my_app/application.ex.
defmodule MyApp.Application do
@moduledoc false
use Application
def start(_type, _args) do
import Supervisor.Spec, warn: false
children = [
{MyApp, [%{greeting: "Hello"}]}
]
opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: MyApp.Supervisor]
Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
end
endStart project using iex -S mix and visit http://localhost:8080.
mix test --include ci:true
Will run h2spec as one of the tests.
If the h2spec is not specified in the environment variable $H2SPEC_PATH or on the
$PATH, it will be downloaded into test/support/h2spec/ and executed.
Other servers you can use for Elixir/erlang applications are Cowboy and Elli.
Of the three Cowboy is the most widely used. Both Elli and Cowboy are written in erlang, Ace is written in Elixir.