ocaml-dispatch provides a basic mechanism for dispatching a request to a handler based on hierarchical path names conventionally found in URIs. It can be used both for dispatching requests in a server, as well as handing changes to hierarchical fragments in a client-side application.
Install the library and its depenencies via OPAM:
opam install dispatch
To install development versions of the library, pin the package from the root of the repository:
opam pin add .
You can install the latest changes by commiting them to the local git repository and running:
opam upgrade dispatch
For building and running the tests during development, you will need to install
the alcotest
package and reconfigure the build process to enable tests:
opam install alcotest
dune runtest
Dispatch is designed to work with whatever sort of handler you care to use,
whether it's synchronous, Lwt-based, or Async-based. Here's a simple example of
using the Dispatch.DSL
module to setup routing for a "Hello, World!" server.
The example assumes a Server
module and request
type, and that handlers
should return strings that will be interpreted as the body of the response.
open Dispatch
let hello_handler keys rest request =
let who = try List.assoc "who" keys with Not_found -> "World" in
Printf.sprintf "Hello, %s!" who
;;
let handler request =
let routes =
DSL.create
[ "/" , hello_handler
; "/hello/:who/", hello_handler
]
in
match dispatch routes request.path with
| Some handler -> handler request
| None -> "Not found!"
;;
let _ =
Server.start handler
BSD3, see LICENSE file for its text.