Phoenix.Endpoint behaviour (Phoenix v1.6.0-rc.0) View Source

Defines a Phoenix endpoint.

The endpoint is the boundary where all requests to your web application start. It is also the interface your application provides to the underlying web servers.

Overall, an endpoint has three responsibilities:

  • to provide a wrapper for starting and stopping the endpoint as part of a supervision tree

  • to define an initial plug pipeline for requests to pass through

  • to host web specific configuration for your application

Endpoints

An endpoint is simply a module defined with the help of Phoenix.Endpoint. If you have used the mix phx.new generator, an endpoint was automatically generated as part of your application:

defmodule YourAppWeb.Endpoint do
  use Phoenix.Endpoint, otp_app: :your_app

  # plug ...
  # plug ...

  plug YourApp.Router
end

Endpoints must be explicitly started as part of your application supervision tree. Endpoints are added by default to the supervision tree in generated applications. Endpoints can be added to the supervision tree as follows:

children = [
  YourAppWeb.Endpoint
]

Endpoint configuration

All endpoints are configured in your application environment. For example:

config :your_app, YourAppWeb.Endpoint,
  secret_key_base: "kjoy3o1zeidquwy1398juxzldjlksahdk3"

Endpoint configuration is split into two categories. Compile-time configuration means the configuration is read during compilation and changing it at runtime has no effect. The compile-time configuration is mostly related to error handling.

Runtime configuration, instead, is accessed during or after your application is started and can be read through the config/2 function:

YourAppWeb.Endpoint.config(:port)
YourAppWeb.Endpoint.config(:some_config, :default_value)

Dynamic configuration

For dynamically configuring the endpoint, such as loading data from environment variables or configuration files, Phoenix invokes the init/2 callback on the endpoint, passing the atom :supervisor as the first argument and the endpoint configuration as second.

All of Phoenix configuration, except the Compile-time configuration below can be set dynamically from the init/2 callback.

Compile-time configuration

  • :code_reloader - when true, enables code reloading functionality. For the list of code reloader configuration options see Phoenix.CodeReloader.reload!/1. Keep in mind code reloading is based on the file-system, therefore it is not possible to run two instances of the same app at the same time with code reloading in development, as they will race each other and only one will effectively recompile the files. In such cases, tweak your config files so code reloading is enabled in only one of the apps or set the MIX_BUILD environment variable to give them distinct build directories

  • :debug_errors - when true, uses Plug.Debugger functionality for debugging failures in the application. Recommended to be set to true only in development as it allows listing of the application source code during debugging. Defaults to false

  • :force_ssl - ensures no data is ever sent via HTTP, always redirecting to HTTPS. It expects a list of options which are forwarded to Plug.SSL. By default it sets the "strict-transport-security" header in HTTPS requests, forcing browsers to always use HTTPS. If an unsafe request (HTTP) is sent, it redirects to the HTTPS version using the :host specified in the :url configuration. To dynamically redirect to the host of the current request, set :host in the :force_ssl configuration to nil

Runtime configuration

  • :adapter - which webserver adapter to use for serving web requests. See the "Adapter configuration" section below

  • :cache_static_manifest - a path to a json manifest file that contains static files and their digested version. This is typically set to "priv/static/cache_manifest.json" which is the file automatically generated by mix phx.digest. It can be either: a string containing a file system path or a tuple containing the application name and the path within that application.

  • :cache_static_manifest_latest - a map of the static files pointing to their digest version. This is automatically loaded from cache_static_manifest on boot. However, if you have your own static handling mechanism, you may want to set this value explicitly. This is used by projects such as LiveView to detect if the client is running on the latest version of all assets.

  • :cache_manifest_skip_vsn - when true, skips the appended query string "?vsn=d" when generatic paths to static assets. This query string is used by Plug.Static to set long expiry dates, therefore, you should set this option to true only if you are not using Plug.Static to serve assets, for example, if you are using a CDN. If you are setting this option, you should also consider passing --no-vsn to mix phx.digest. Defaults to false.

  • :check_origin - configure the default :check_origin setting for transports. See socket/3 for options. Defaults to true.

  • :secret_key_base - a secret key used as a base to generate secrets for encrypting and signing data. For example, cookies and tokens are signed by default, but they may also be encrypted if desired. Defaults to nil as it must be set per application

  • :server - when true, starts the web server when the endpoint supervision tree starts. Defaults to false. The mix phx.server task automatically sets this to true

  • :url - configuration for generating URLs throughout the app. Accepts the :host, :scheme, :path and :port options. All keys except :path can be changed at runtime. Defaults to:

    [host: "localhost", path: "/"]

    The :port option requires either an integer or string. The :host option requires a string. The :scheme option accepts "http" and "https" values. Default value is inferred from top level :http or :https option. It is useful when hosting Phoenix behind a load balancer or reverse proxy and terminating SSL there. The :path option can be used to override root path. Useful when hosting Phoenix behind a reverse proxy with URL rewrite rules

  • :static_url - configuration for generating URLs for static files. It will fallback to url if no option is provided. Accepts the same options as url

  • :watchers - a set of watchers to run alongside your server. It expects a list of tuples containing the executable and its arguments. Watchers are guaranteed to run in the application directory, but only when the server is enabled. For example, the watcher below will run the "watch" mode of the webpack build tool when the server starts. You can configure it to whatever build tool or command you want:

    [
      node: [
        "node_modules/webpack/bin/webpack.js",
        "--mode",
        "development",
        "--watch",
        "--watch-options-stdin"
      ]
    ]

    The :cd and :env options can be given at the end of the list to customize the watcher:

    [node: [..., cd: "assets"]]

    A watcher can also be a module-function-args tuple that will be invoked accordingly:

    [another: {Mod, :fun, [arg1, arg2]}]
  • :live_reload - configuration for the live reload option. Configuration requires a :patterns option which should be a list of file patterns to watch. When these files change, it will trigger a reload. If you are using a tool like pow in development, you may need to set the :url option appropriately.

    live_reload: [
      url: "ws://localhost:4000",
      patterns: [
        ~r{priv/static/.*(js|css|png|jpeg|jpg|gif)$},
        ~r{web/views/.*(ex)$},
        ~r{web/templates/.*(eex)$}
      ]
    ]
  • :pubsub_server - the name of the pubsub server to use in channels and via the Endpoint broadcast functions. The PubSub server is typically started in your supervision tree.

  • :render_errors - responsible for rendering templates whenever there is a failure in the application. For example, if the application crashes with a 500 error during a HTML request, render("500.html", assigns) will be called in the view given to :render_errors. Defaults to:

    [view: MyApp.ErrorView, accepts: ~w(html), layout: false, log: :debug]

    The default format is used when none is set in the connection

Adapter configuration

Phoenix allows you to choose which webserver adapter to use. The default is Phoenix.Endpoint.Cowboy2Adapter which can be configured via the following top-level options.

  • :http - the configuration for the HTTP server. It accepts all options as defined by Plug.Cowboy. Defaults to false

  • :https - the configuration for the HTTPS server. It accepts all options as defined by Plug.Cowboy. Defaults to false

  • :drainer - a drainer process that triggers when your application is shutting down to wait for any on-going request to finish. It accepts all options as defined by Plug.Cowboy.Drainer. Defaults to [], which will start a drainer process for each configured endpoint, but can be disabled by setting it to false.

Endpoint API

In the previous section, we have used the config/2 function that is automatically generated in your endpoint. Here's a list of all the functions that are automatically defined in your endpoint:

Link to this section Summary

Callbacks

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Access the endpoint configuration given by key.

Reload the endpoint configuration on application upgrades.

Returns the host from the :url configuration.

Initialize the endpoint configuration.

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic within the current node.

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic within the current node.

Generates the path information when routing to this endpoint.

Returns the script name from the :url configuration.

Starts the endpoint supervision tree.

Generates an integrity hash to a static file in priv/static.

Generates a two item tuple containing the static_path and static_integrity.

Generates a route to a static file in priv/static.

Generates the static URL without any path information.

Generates the endpoint base URL, but as a URI struct.

Subscribes the caller to the given topic.

Unsubscribes the caller from the given topic.

Generates the endpoint base URL without any path information.

Functions

Checks if Endpoint's web server has been configured to start.

Defines a websocket/longpoll mount-point for a socket.

Link to this section Types

Specs

event() :: String.t()

Specs

msg() :: map() | {:binary, binary()}

Specs

topic() :: String.t()

Link to this section Callbacks

Link to this callback

broadcast(topic, event, msg)

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Specs

broadcast(topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok | {:error, term()}

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Link to this callback

broadcast!(topic, event, msg)

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Specs

broadcast!(topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok | no_return()

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Raises in case of failures.

Link to this callback

broadcast_from(from, topic, event, msg)

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Specs

broadcast_from(from :: pid(), topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok | {:error, term()}

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Link to this callback

broadcast_from!(from, topic, event, msg)

View Source

Specs

broadcast_from!(from :: pid(), topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok | no_return()

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic to all nodes.

Raises in case of failures.

Specs

config(key :: atom(), default :: term()) :: term()

Access the endpoint configuration given by key.

Link to this callback

config_change(changed, removed)

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Specs

config_change(changed :: term(), removed :: term()) :: term()

Reload the endpoint configuration on application upgrades.

Specs

host() :: String.t()

Returns the host from the :url configuration.

Specs

init(:supervisor, config :: Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, Keyword.t()}

Initialize the endpoint configuration.

Invoked when the endpoint supervisor starts, allows dynamically configuring the endpoint from system environment or other runtime sources.

Link to this callback

local_broadcast(topic, event, msg)

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Specs

local_broadcast(topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok

Broadcasts a msg as event in the given topic within the current node.

Link to this callback

local_broadcast_from(from, topic, event, msg)

View Source

Specs

local_broadcast_from(from :: pid(), topic(), event(), msg()) :: :ok

Broadcasts a msg from the given from as event in the given topic within the current node.

Specs

path(path :: String.t()) :: String.t()

Generates the path information when routing to this endpoint.

Specs

script_name() :: [String.t()]

Returns the script name from the :url configuration.

Specs

start_link(keyword()) :: Supervisor.on_start()

Starts the endpoint supervision tree.

Starts endpoint's configuration cache and possibly the servers for handling requests.

Specs

static_integrity(path :: String.t()) :: String.t() | nil

Generates an integrity hash to a static file in priv/static.

Specs

static_lookup(path :: String.t()) ::
  {String.t(), String.t()} | {String.t(), nil}

Generates a two item tuple containing the static_path and static_integrity.

Specs

static_path(path :: String.t()) :: String.t()

Generates a route to a static file in priv/static.

Specs

static_url() :: String.t()

Generates the static URL without any path information.

Specs

struct_url() :: URI.t()

Generates the endpoint base URL, but as a URI struct.

Specs

subscribe(topic(), opts :: Keyword.t()) :: :ok | {:error, term()}

Subscribes the caller to the given topic.

See Phoenix.PubSub.subscribe/3 for options.

Specs

unsubscribe(topic()) :: :ok | {:error, term()}

Unsubscribes the caller from the given topic.

Specs

url() :: String.t()

Generates the endpoint base URL without any path information.

Link to this section Functions

Link to this function

server?(otp_app, endpoint)

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Checks if Endpoint's web server has been configured to start.

  • otp_app - The OTP app running the endpoint, for example :my_app
  • endpoint - The endpoint module, for example MyAppWeb.Endpoint

Examples

iex> Phoenix.Endpoint.server?(:my_app, MyAppWeb.Endpoint)
true
Link to this macro

socket(path, module, opts \\ [])

View Source (macro)

Defines a websocket/longpoll mount-point for a socket.

Options

  • :websocket - controls the websocket configuration. Defaults to true. May be false or a keyword list of options. See "Common configuration" and "WebSocket configuration" for the whole list

  • :longpoll - controls the longpoll configuration. Defaults to false. May be true or a keyword list of options. See "Common configuration" and "Longpoll configuration" for the whole list

If your socket is implemented using Phoenix.Socket, you can also pass to each transport above all options accepted on use Phoenix.Socket. An option given here will override the value in use Phoenix.Socket.

Examples

socket "/ws", MyApp.UserSocket

socket "/ws/admin", MyApp.AdminUserSocket,
  longpoll: true,
  websocket: [compress: true]

Path params

It is possible to include variables in the path, these will be available in the params that are passed to the socket.

socket "/ws/:user_id", MyApp.UserSocket,
  websocket: [path: "/project/:project_id"]

Common configuration

The configuration below can be given to both :websocket and :longpoll keys:

  • :path - the path to use for the transport. Will default to the transport name ("/websocket" or "/longpoll")

  • :serializer - a list of serializers for messages. See Phoenix.Socket for more information

  • :transport_log - if the transport layer itself should log and, if so, the level

  • :check_origin - if the transport should check the origin of requests when the origin header is present. May be true, false, a list of hosts that are allowed, or a function provided as MFA tuple. Defaults to :check_origin setting at endpoint configuration.

    If true, the header is checked against :host in YourAppWeb.Endpoint.config(:url)[:host]. If false, your app is vulnerable to Cross-Site WebSocket Hijacking (CSWSH) attacks. Only use in development, when the host is truly unknown or when serving clients that do not send the origin header, such as mobile apps. You can also specify a list of explicitly allowed origins. Wildcards are supported.

    check_origin: [
      "https://example.com",
      "//another.com:888",
      "//*.other.com"
    ]

    Or a custom MFA function:

    check_origin: {MyAppWeb.Auth, :my_check_origin?, []}

    The MFA is invoked with the request %URI{} as the first argument, followed by arguments in the MFA list.

  • :code_reloader - enable or disable the code reloader. Defaults to your endpoint configuration

  • :connect_info - a list of keys that represent data to be copied from the transport to be made available in the user socket connect/3 callback

    The valid keys are:

    • :peer_data - the result of Plug.Conn.get_peer_data/1
    • :trace_context_headers - a list of all trace context headers. Supported headers are defined by the W3C Trace Context Specification. These headers are necessary for libraries such as OpenTelemetry to extract trace propagation information to know this request is part of a larger trace in progress.
    • :x_headers - all request headers that have an "x-" prefix
    • :uri - a %URI{} with information from the conn
    • :user_agent - the value of the "user-agent" request header
    • {:session, session_config} - the session information from Plug.Conn. The session_config is an exact copy of the arguments given to Plug.Session. This requires the "_csrf_token" to be given as request parameter with the value of URI.encode_www_form(Plug.CSRFProtection.get_csrf_token()) when connecting to the socket. It can also be a MFA to allow loading config in runtime {MyAppWeb.Auth, :get_session_config, []}. Otherwise the session will be nil. Arbitrary keywords may also appear following the above valid keys, which is useful for passing custom connection information to the socket. For example: socket "/socket", AppWeb.UserSocket, websocket: [
      connect_info: [:peer_data, :trace_context_headers, :x_headers, :uri, session: [store: :cookie]]
      ] With arbitrary keywords: socket "/socket", AppWeb.UserSocket, websocket: [
      connect_info: [:uri, custom_value: "abcdef"]
      ]

Websocket configuration

The following configuration applies only to :websocket.

  • :timeout - the timeout for keeping websocket connections open after it last received data, defaults to 60_000ms

  • :max_frame_size - the maximum allowed frame size in bytes, defaults to "infinity"

  • :compress - whether to enable per message compression on all data frames, defaults to false

  • :subprotocols - a list of supported websocket subprotocols. Used for handshake Sec-WebSocket-Protocol response header, defaults to nil.

    For example:

    subprotocols: ["sip", "mqtt"]
  • :error_handler - custom error handler for connection errors. If Phoenix.Socket.connect/3 returns an {:error, reason} tuple, the error handler will be called with the error reason. For WebSockets, the error handler must be a MFA tuple that receives a Plug.Conn, the error reason, and returns a Plug.Conn with a response. For example:

    error_handler: {MySocket, :handle_error, []}

    and a {:error, :rate_limit} return may be handled on MySocket as:

    def handle_error(conn, :rate_limit), do: Plug.Conn.send_resp(conn, 429, "Too many requests")

Longpoll configuration

The following configuration applies only to :longpoll:

  • :window_ms - how long the client can wait for new messages in its poll request

  • :pubsub_timeout_ms - how long a request can wait for the pubsub layer to respond

  • :crypto - options for verifying and signing the token, accepted by Phoenix.Token. By default tokens are valid for 2 weeks