go-xmpp/router.go

198 lines
4.9 KiB
Go

package xmpp
import (
"strings"
)
/*
The XMPP router helps client and component developers select which XMPP they would like to process,
and associate processing code depending on the router configuration.
Here are important rules to keep in mind while setting your routes and matchers:
- Routes are evaluated in the order they are set.
- When a route matches, it is executed and all others routes are ignored. For each packet, only a single
route is executed.
TODO: Automatically reply to IQ that do not match any route, to comply to XMPP standard.
*/
type Router struct {
// Routes to be matched, in order.
routes []*Route
}
// NewRouter returns a new router instance.
func NewRouter() *Router {
return &Router{}
}
func (r *Router) Route(s Sender, p Packet) {
var match RouteMatch
if r.Match(p, &match) {
match.Handler.HandlePacket(s, p)
}
}
// NewRoute registers an empty routes
func (r *Router) NewRoute() *Route {
route := &Route{}
r.routes = append(r.routes, route)
return route
}
func (r *Router) Match(p Packet, match *RouteMatch) bool {
for _, route := range r.routes {
if route.Match(p, match) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// Handle registers a new route with a matcher for a given packet name (iq, message, presence)
// See Route.Packet() and Route.Handler().
func (r *Router) Handle(name string, handler Handler) *Route {
return r.NewRoute().Packet(name).Handler(handler)
}
// HandleFunc registers a new route with a matcher for for a given packet name (iq, message, presence)
// See Route.Path() and Route.HandlerFunc().
func (r *Router) HandleFunc(name string, f func(s Sender, p Packet)) *Route {
return r.NewRoute().Packet(name).HandlerFunc(f)
}
// ============================================================================
// Route
type Handler interface {
HandlePacket(s Sender, p Packet)
}
type Route struct {
handler Handler
// Matchers are used to "specialize" routes and focus on specific packet features
matchers []matcher
}
func (r *Route) Handler(handler Handler) *Route {
r.handler = handler
return r
}
// The HandlerFunc type is an adapter to allow the use of
// ordinary functions as XMPP handlers. If f is a function
// with the appropriate signature, HandlerFunc(f) is a
// Handler that calls f.
type HandlerFunc func(s Sender, p Packet)
// HandlePacket calls f(s, p)
func (f HandlerFunc) HandlePacket(s Sender, p Packet) {
f(s, p)
}
// HandlerFunc sets a handler function for the route
func (r *Route) HandlerFunc(f HandlerFunc) *Route {
return r.Handler(f)
}
// addMatcher adds a matcher to the route
func (r *Route) addMatcher(m matcher) *Route {
r.matchers = append(r.matchers, m)
return r
}
func (r *Route) Match(p Packet, match *RouteMatch) bool {
for _, m := range r.matchers {
if matched := m.Match(p, match); !matched {
return false
}
}
// We have a match, let's pass info route match info
match.Route = r
match.Handler = r.handler
return true
}
// --------------------
// Match on packet name
type nameMatcher string
func (n nameMatcher) Match(p Packet, match *RouteMatch) bool {
var name string
// TODO: To avoid type switch everywhere in matching, I think we will need to have
// to move to a concrete type for packets, to make matching and comparison more natural.
// Current code structure is probably too rigid.
// Maybe packet types should even be from an enum.
switch p.(type) {
case Message:
name = "message"
case IQ:
name = "iq"
case Presence:
name = "presence"
}
if name == string(n) {
return true
}
return false
}
// Packet matches on a packet name (iq, message, presence, ...)
// It matches on the Local part of the xml.Name
func (r *Route) Packet(name string) *Route {
name = strings.ToLower(name)
return r.addMatcher(nameMatcher(name))
}
// -------------------------
// Match on IQ and namespace
// nsIqMather matches on a list of IQ payload namespaces
type nsIQMatcher []string
func (m nsIQMatcher) Match(p Packet, match *RouteMatch) bool {
// TODO
iq, ok := p.(IQ)
if !ok {
return false
}
if len(iq.Payload) < 1 {
return false
}
return matchInArray(m, iq.Payload[0].Namespace())
}
// IQNamespaces adds an IQ matcher, expecting both an IQ and a
func (r *Route) IQNamespaces(namespaces ...string) *Route {
for k, v := range namespaces {
namespaces[k] = strings.ToLower(v)
}
return r.addMatcher(nsIQMatcher(namespaces))
}
// ============================================================================
// Matchers
// Matchers are used to "specialize" routes and focus on specific packet features
type matcher interface {
Match(Packet, *RouteMatch) bool
}
// RouteMatch extracts and gather match information
type RouteMatch struct {
Route *Route
Handler Handler
}
// matchInArray is a generic matching function to check if a string is a list
// of specific function
func matchInArray(arr []string, value string) bool {
for _, str := range arr {
if str == value {
return true
}
}
return false
}