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Kirill Smelkov
go
Commits
31053d4e
Commit
31053d4e
authored
Nov 04, 2009
by
Rob Pike
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add a final section with a complete example
R=rsc CC=go-dev
http://go/go-review/1017033
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@@ -2360,6 +2360,137 @@ for try := 0; try < 2; try++ {
}
</
pre
>
<h2
id=
"web_server"
>
A web server
</h2>
<p>
Let's finish with a complete Go program, a web server.
This one is actually a kind of web re-server.
Google provides a service at
<a
href=
"http://chart.apis.google.com"
>
http://chart.apis.google.com
</a>
that does automatic formatting of data into charts and graphs.
It's hard to use interactively, though,
because you need to put the data into the URL as a query.
The program here provides a nicer interface to one form of data: given a short piece of text,
it calls on the chart server to produce a QR code, a matrix of boxes that encode the
text.
That image can be grabbed with your cell phone's camera and interpreted as,
for instance, a URL, saving you typing the URL into the phone's tiny keyboard.
</p>
<p>
Here's the complete program.
An explanation follows.
</p>
<pre>
package main
import (
"flag";
"http";
"io";
"log";
"strings";
"template";
)
var addr = flag.String("addr", ":1718", "http service address") // Q = 17, R = 18
var fmap = template.FormatterMap{
"html": template.HtmlFormatter,
"url+html": UrlHtmlFormatter,
}
var templ = template.MustParse(templateStr, fmap)
func main() {
flag.Parse();
http.Handle("/", http.HandlerFunc(QR));
err := http.ListenAndServe(*addr, nil);
if err != nil {
log.Exit("ListenAndServe:", err);
}
}
func QR(c *http.Conn, req *http.Request) {
templ.Execute(req.FormValue("s"), c);
}
func UrlHtmlFormatter(w io.Writer, v interface{}, fmt string) {
template.HtmlEscape(w, strings.Bytes(http.URLEscape(v.(string))));
}
const templateStr = `
<
html
>
<
head
>
<
title
>
QR Link Generator
<
/title
>
<
/head
>
<
body
>
{.section @}
<
img src="http://chart.apis.google.com/chart?chs=300x300
&
cht=qr
&
choe=UTF-8
&
chl={@|url+html}"
/
>
<
br
>
{@|html}
<
br
>
<
br
>
{.end}
<
form action="/" name=f method="GET"
><
input maxLength=1024 size=70
name=s value="" title="Text to QR Encode"
><
input type=submit
value="Show QR" name=qr
>
<
/form
>
<
/body
>
<
/html
>
`
</pre>
<p>
The pieces up to
<code>
main
</code>
should be easy to follow.
The one flag sets a default HTTP port for our server. The template
variable
<code>
templ
</code>
is where the fun happens. It builds an HTML template
that will be executed by the server to display the page; more about
that in a moment.
</p>
<p>
The
<code>
main
</code>
function parses the flags and, using the mechanism
we talked about above, binds the function
<code>
QR
</code>
to the root path
for the server. Then
<code>
http.ListenAndServe
</code>
is called to start the
server; it blocks while the server runs.
</p>
<p>
<code>
QR
</code>
just receives the request, which contains form data, and
executes the template on the data in the field named
<code>
s
</code>
.
</p>
<p>
The template package, inspired by
<a
href=
"http://code.google.com/p/json-template"
>
json-template
</a>
, is
powerful;
this program just touches on its capabilities.
In essence, it rewrites a piece of text on the fly by substituting elements derived
from data items passed to
<code>
templ.Execute
</code>
, in this case the
string in the form data.
Within the template text (
<code>
templateStr
</code>
),
brace-delimited pieces denote template actions.
The piece from the
<code>
{.section @}
</code>
to
<code>
{.end}
</code>
executes with the value of the data item
<code>
@
</code>
,
which is a shorthand for
“
the current item
”
, in this case the form data.
(When the string is empty, this piece of the template is suppressed.)
</p>
<p>
The snippet
<code>
{@|url+html}
</code>
says to run the data through the formatter
installed in the formatter map (
<code>
fmap
</code>
)
under the name
<code>
"url+html"
</code>
.
That is the function
<code>
UrlHtmlFormatter
</code>
, which sanitizes the string
for safe display on the web page.
</p>
<p>
The rest of the template string is just the HTML to show when the page loads.
If this is too quick an explanation, see the
<a
href=
"/pkg/template/"
>
documentation
</a>
for the template package for a more thorough discussion.
</p>
<p>
And there you have it: a useful webserver in a few lines of code plus some
data-driven HTML text.
Go is powerful enough to make a lot happen in a few lines.
</p>
<!--
TODO
<pre>
...
...
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