What is Rack middleware?
Asked Answered
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9

286

What is Rack middleware in Ruby? I couldn't find any good explanation for what they mean by "middleware".

Firedrake answered 13/2, 2010 at 5:16 Comment(3)
There is also a guide on RailsGuide now covering Rack comprehensively, including middleware: guides.rubyonrails.org/rails_on_rack.htmlLimonite
Thanks a lot to PhusionPassenger team, they have a well explained article on their blog. rubyraptor.org/…Ethbin
Rack and rack middleware are explained in THIS article. Also explained about creating a rack based application.Ejection
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383

Rack as Design

Rack middleware is more than "a way to filter a request and response" - it's an implementation of the pipeline design pattern for web servers using Rack.

It very cleanly separates out the different stages of processing a request - separation of concerns being a key goal of all well designed software products.

For example with Rack I can have separate stages of the pipeline doing:

  • Authentication: when the request arrives, are the users logon details correct? How do I validate this OAuth, HTTP Basic Authentication, name/password?

  • Authorization: "is the user authorised to perform this particular task?", i.e. role-based security.

  • Caching: have I processed this request already, can I return a cached result?

  • Decoration: how can I enhance the request to make downstream processing better?

  • Performance & Usage Monitoring: what stats can I get from the request and response?

  • Execution: actually handle the request and provide a response.

Being able to separate the different stages (and optionally include them) is a great help in developing well structured applications.

Community

There's also a great eco-system developing around Rack Middleware - you should be able to find pre-built rack components to do all of the steps above and more. See the Rack GitHub wiki for a list of middleware.

What's Middleware?

Middleware is a dreadful term which refers to any software component/library which assists with but is not directly involved in the execution of some task. Very common examples are logging, authentication and the other common, horizontal processing components. These tend to be the things that everyone needs across multiple applications but not too many people are interested (or should be) in building themselves.

More Information

Depone answered 13/2, 2010 at 9:8 Comment(4)
One thing I'm unclear on: do all the middleware share the same data? Is it possible to separate them (i.e. sandbox one) for security?Zoarah
Rack is part of your application so all middleware componets the same copy of the request and each can modify it in any way they want. AFAIK, there's no way to sandbox them the same way there's no way to sandbox one object from another within the same process (attempts at Ruby sandboxing notwithstanding).Depone
and Do understand Rack is different from Rake.Lacreshalacrimal
I like to think of middleware as being anything that sits in the middle of my app between what I've coded and what goes to and from my server... which is hosted on rackspace. The reason the term 'rack middleware' is confusing, as we all know, is because it was Confucius that wrote all the original rack middleware, more than 2000 years ago. In France.Spitter
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84

First of all, Rack is exactly two things:

  • A webserver interface convention
  • A gem

Rack - The Webserver Interface

The very basics of rack is a simple convention. Every rack compliant webserver will always call a call method on an object you give him and serve the result of that method. Rack specifies exactly how this call method has to look like, and what it has to return. That's rack.

Let's give it a simple try. I'll use WEBrick as rack compliant webserver, but any of them will do. Let's create a simple web application that returns a JSON string. For this we'll create a file called config.ru. The config.ru will automatically be called by the rack gem's command rackup which will simply run the contents of the config.ru in a rack-compliant webserver. So let's add the following to the config.ru file:

class JSONServer
  def call(env)
    [200, {"Content-Type" => "application/json"}, ['{ "message" : "Hello!" }']]
  end
end

map '/hello.json' do
  run JSONServer.new
end

As the convention specifies our server has a method called call that accepts an environment hash and returns an array with the form [status, headers, body] for the webserver to serve. Let's try it out by simply calling rackup. A default rack compliant server, maybe WEBrick or Mongrel will start and immediately wait for requests to serve.

$ rackup
[2012-02-19 22:39:26] INFO  WEBrick 1.3.1
[2012-02-19 22:39:26] INFO  ruby 1.9.3 (2012-01-17) [x86_64-darwin11.2.0]
[2012-02-19 22:39:26] INFO  WEBrick::HTTPServer#start: pid=16121 port=9292

Let's test our new JSON server by either curling or visiting the url http://localhost:9292/hello.json and voila:

$ curl http://localhost:9292/hello.json
{ message: "Hello!" }

It works. Great! That's the basis for every web framework, be it Rails or Sinatra. At some point they implement a call method, work through all the framework code, and finally return a response in the typical [status, headers, body] form.

In Ruby on Rails for example the rack requests hits the ActionDispatch::Routing.Mapper class which looks like this:

module ActionDispatch
  module Routing
    class Mapper
      ...
      def initialize(app, constraints, request)
        @app, @constraints, @request = app, constraints, request
      end

      def matches?(env)
        req = @request.new(env)
        ...
        return true
      end

      def call(env)
        matches?(env) ? @app.call(env) : [ 404, {'X-Cascade' => 'pass'}, [] ]
      end
      ...
  end
end

So basically Rails checks, dependent on the env hash if any route matches. If so it passes the env hash on to the application to compute the response, otherwise it immediately responds with a 404. So any webserver that is is compliant with the rack interface convention, is able to serve a fully blown Rails application.

Middleware

Rack also supports the creation of middleware layers. They basically intercept a request, do something with it and pass it on. This is very useful for versatile tasks.

Let's say we want to add logging to our JSON server that also measures how long a request takes. We can simply create a middleware logger that does exactly this:

class RackLogger
  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    @start = Time.now
    @status, @headers, @body = @app.call(env)
    @duration = ((Time.now - @start).to_f * 1000).round(2)

    puts "#{env['REQUEST_METHOD']} #{env['REQUEST_PATH']} - Took: #{@duration} ms"
    [@status, @headers, @body]
  end
end

When it gets created, it saves itself a copy of the actual rack application. In our case that's an instance of our JSONServer. Rack automatically calls the call method on the middleware and expects back a [status, headers, body] array, just like our JSONServer returns.

So in this middleware, the start point is taken, then the actual call to the JSONServer is made with @app.call(env), then the logger outputs the logging entry and finally returns the response as [@status, @headers, @body].

To make our little rackup.ru use this middleware, add a use RackLogger to it like this:

class JSONServer
  def call(env)
    [200, {"Content-Type" => "application/json"}, ['{ "message" : "Hello!" }']]
  end
end

class RackLogger
  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    @start = Time.now
    @status, @headers, @body = @app.call(env)
    @duration = ((Time.now - @start).to_f * 1000).round(2)

    puts "#{env['REQUEST_METHOD']} #{env['REQUEST_PATH']} - Took: #{@duration} ms"
    [@status, @headers, @body]
  end
end

use RackLogger

map '/hello.json' do
  run JSONServer.new
end   

Restart the server and voila, it outputs a log on every request. Rack allows you to add multiple middlewares that are called in the order they are added. It's just a great way to add functionality without changing the core of the rack application.

Rack - The Gem

Although rack - first of all - is a convention it also is a gem that provides great functionality. One of them we already used for our JSON server, the rackup command. But there's more! The rack gem provides little applications for lots of use cases, like serving static files or even whole directories. Let's see how we serve a simple file, for example a very basic HTML file located at htmls/index.html:

<!DOCTYPE HTML>
  <html>
  <head>
    <title>The Index</title>
  </head>

  <body>
    <p>Index Page</p>
  </body>
</html>

We maybe want to serve this file from the website root, so let's add the following to our config.ru:

map '/' do
  run Rack::File.new "htmls/index.html"
end

If we visit http://localhost:9292 we see our html file perfectly rendered. That's was easy, right?

Let's add a whole directory of javascript files by creating some javascript files under /javascripts and adding the following to the config.ru:

map '/javascripts' do
  run Rack::Directory.new "javascripts"
end

Restart the server and visit http://localhost:9292/javascript and you'll see a list of all javascript files you can include now straight from anywhere.

Biagio answered 21/2, 2012 at 12:38 Comment(3)
If you don't know what rack is, you'll know exactly what it is and how to use it after you read this blog post. Very nice. Ironically, though, the link to the official rack documentation at the end of the post is no longer available!Kew
Your right, thanks. I included the contents into the post and removed the dead link.Biagio
I would say that it's not a convention. it's an interface, a contract well defined for a request-response modelChoke
H
21

I had a problem understanding Rack myself for a good amount of time. I only fully understood it after working on making this miniature Ruby web server myself. I've shared my learnings about Rack (in the form of a story) here on my blog: http://blog.gauravchande.com/what-is-rack-in-ruby-rails

Feedback is more than welcome.

Hallie answered 16/10, 2013 at 23:9 Comment(4)
Link-only answers are discouraged on Stack Overflow, because if the resource the link goes to becomes unavailable in the future, the answer becomes useless. Please at least summarize the relevant points of your blog post and add them to this answer.Sprout
Thanks for you post. I'm a very beginner Rails programmer and I understood rack concept with your clear post.Lewin
Great blog post. The other answers seem a bit more convoluted IMO.Street
What an awesome explanation. Thanks, Gaurav.Nucleolar
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11

What is Rack?

Rack provides a minimal interface between between webservers supporting Ruby and Ruby frameworks.

Using Rack you can write a Rack Application.

Rack will pass the Environment hash (a Hash, contained inside a HTTP request from a client, consisting of CGI-like headers) to your Rack Application which can use things contained in this hash to do whatever it wants.

What is a Rack Application?

To use Rack, you must provide an 'app' - an object that responds to the #call method with the Environment Hash as a parameter (typically defined as env). #call must return an Array of exactly three values:

  • the Status Code (eg '200'),
  • a Hash of Headers,
  • the Response Body (which must respond to the Ruby method, each).

You can write a Rack Application that returns such an array - this will be sent back to your client, by Rack, inside a Response (this will actually be an instance of the Class Rack::Response [click to go to docs]).

A Very Simple Rack Application:

  • gem install rack
  • Create a config.ru file - Rack knows to look for this.

We will create a tiny Rack Application that returns a Response (an instance of Rack::Response) who's Response Body is an array that contains a String: "Hello, World!".

We will fire up a local server using the command rackup.

When visiting the relevant port in our browser we will see "Hello, World!" rendered in the viewport.

#./message_app.rb
class MessageApp
  def call(env)
    [200, {}, ['Hello, World!']]
  end
end

#./config.ru
require_relative './message_app'

run MessageApp.new

Fire up a local server with rackup and visit localhost:9292 and you should see 'Hello, World!' rendered.

This is not a comprehensive explanation, but essentially what happens here is that the Client (the browser) sends a HTTP Request to Rack, via your local server, and Rack instantiates MessageApp and runs call, passing in the Environment Hash as a parameter into the method (the env argument).

Rack takes the return value (the array) and uses it to create an instance of Rack::Response and sends that back to the Client. The browser uses magic to print 'Hello, World!' to the screen.

Incidentally, if you want to see what the environment hash looks like, just put puts env underneath def call(env).

Minimal as it is, what you have written here is a Rack application!

Making a Rack Application interact with the Incoming Environment hash

In our little Rack app, we can interact with the env hash (see here for more about the Environment hash).

We will implement the ability for the user to input their own query string into the URL, hence, that string will be present in the HTTP request, encapsulated as a value in one of the key/value pairs of the Environment hash.

Our Rack app will access that query string from the Environment hash and send that back to the client (our browser, in this case) via the Body in the Response.

From the Rack docs on the Environment Hash: "QUERY_STRING: The portion of the request URL that follows the ?, if any. May be empty, but is always required!"

#./message_app.rb
class MessageApp
  def call(env)
    message = env['QUERY_STRING']
    [200, {}, [message]]
  end
end

Now, rackup and visit localhost:9292?hello (?hello being the query string) and you should see 'hello' rendered in the viewport.

Rack Middleware

We will:

  • insert a piece of Rack Middleware into our codebase - a class: MessageSetter,
  • the Environment hash will hit this class first and will be passed in as a parameter: env,
  • MessageSetter will insert a 'MESSAGE' key into the env hash, its value being 'Hello, World!' if env['QUERY_STRING'] is empty; env['QUERY_STRING'] if not,
  • finally, it will return @app.call(env) - @app being the next app in the 'Stack': MessageApp.

First, the 'long-hand' version:

#./middleware/message_setter.rb
class MessageSetter
  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    if env['QUERY_STRING'].empty?
      env['MESSAGE'] = 'Hello, World!'
    else
      env['MESSAGE'] = env['QUERY_STRING']
    end
    @app.call(env)
  end
end

#./message_app.rb (same as before)
class MessageApp
  def call(env)
    message = env['QUERY_STRING']
    [200, {}, [message]]
  end
end

#config.ru
require_relative './message_app'
require_relative './middleware/message_setter'

app = Rack::Builder.new do
  use MessageSetter
  run MessageApp.new
end

run app

From the Rack::Builder docs we see that Rack::Builder implements a small DSL to iteratively construct Rack applications. This basically means that you can build a 'Stack' consisting of one or more Middlewares and a 'bottom level' application to dispatch to. All requests going through to your bottom-level application will be first processed by your Middleware(s).

#use specifies middleware to use in a stack. It takes the middleware as an argument.

Rack Middleware must:

  • have a constructor that takes the next application in the stack as a parameter.
  • respond to the call method that takes the Environment hash as a parameter.

In our case, the 'Middleware' is MessageSetter, the 'constructor' is MessageSetter's initialize method, the 'next application' in the stack is MessageApp.

So here, because of what Rack::Builder does under the hood, the app argument of MessageSetter's initialize method is MessageApp.

(get your head around the above before moving on)

Therefore, each piece of Middleware essentially 'passes down' the existing Environment hash to the next application in the chain - so you have the opportunity to mutate that environment hash within the Middleware before passing it on to the next application in the stack.

#run takes an argument that is an object that responds to #call and returns a Rack Response (an instance of Rack::Response).

Conclusions

Using Rack::Builder you can construct chains of Middlewares and any request to your application will be processed by each Middleware in turn before finally being processed by the final piece in the stack (in our case, MessageApp). This is extremely useful because it separates-out different stages of processing requests. In terms of 'separation of concerns', it couldn't be much cleaner!

You can construct a 'request pipeline' consisting of several Middlewares that deal with things such as:

  • Authentication
  • Authorisation
  • Caching
  • Decoration
  • Performance & Usage Monitoring
  • Execution (actually handle the request and provide a response)

(above bullet points from another answer on this thread)

You will often see this in professional Sinatra applications. Sinatra uses Rack! See here for the definition of what Sinatra IS!

As a final note, our config.ru can be written in a short-hand style, producing exactly the same functionality (and this is what you'll typically see):

require_relative './message_app'
require_relative './middleware/message_setter'

use MessageSetter
run MessageApp.new

And to show more explicitly what MessageApp is doing, here is its 'long-hand' version that explicitly shows that #call is creating a new instance of Rack::Response, with the required three arguments.

class MessageApp
  def call(env)
    Rack::Response.new([env['MESSAGE']], 200, {})
  end
end

Useful links

Liles answered 12/2, 2017 at 1:15 Comment(2)
Thank you very much for the detailed explanation.Landau
haha thanks @ThomasDeranek ! I have to admit I've sometimes wondered why it's not had more upvotes lolLiles
P
10

image showing rack in between unicorn and rails

Rack is a gem which provides a simple interface to abstract HTTP request/response. Rack sits between web frameworks (Rails, Sinatra etc) and web servers (unicorn, puma) as an adaptor. From above image this keeps unicorn server completely independent from knowing about rails and rails doesn't know about unicorn. This is a good example of loose coupling, separation of concerns.

Above image is from this rails conference talk on rack https://youtu.be/3PnUV9QzB0g I recommend watching it for deeper understanding.

Pelf answered 17/5, 2020 at 18:38 Comment(0)
B
8

config.ru minimal runnable example

app = Proc.new do |env|
  [
    200,
    {
      'Content-Type' => 'text/plain'
    },
    ["main\n"]
  ]
end

class Middleware
  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    @status, @headers, @body = @app.call(env)
    [@status, @headers, @body << "Middleware\n"]
  end
end

use(Middleware)

run(app)

Run rackup and visit localhost:9292. The output is:

main
Middleware

So it is clear that the Middleware wraps and calls the main app. Therefore it is able to pre-process the request, and post-process the response in any way.

As explained at: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/rails_on_rack.html#action-dispatcher-middleware-stack , Rails uses Rack middlewares for a lot of it's functionality, and you can add you own too with config.middleware.use family methods.

The advantage of implementing functionality in a middleware is that you can reuse it on any Rack framework, thus all major Ruby ones, and not just Rails.

Baboon answered 10/11, 2014 at 15:26 Comment(0)
P
7

Rack middleware is a way to filter a request and response coming into your application. A middleware component sits between the client and the server, processing inbound requests and outbound responses, but it's more than interface that can be used to talk to web server. It’s used to group and order modules, which are usually Ruby classes, and specify dependency between them. Rack middleware module must only: – have constructor that takes next application in stack as parameter – respond to “call” method, that takes environment hash as a parameter. Returning value from this call is an array of: status code, environment hash and response body.

Pastorship answered 11/3, 2016 at 14:41 Comment(0)
L
4

I've used Rack middleware to solve a couple problems:

  1. Catching JSON parse errors with custom Rack middleware and returning nicely formatted error messages when client submits busted JSON
  2. Content Compression via Rack::Deflater

It afforded pretty elegant fixes in both cases.

Leung answered 12/11, 2013 at 18:17 Comment(2)
This answer, while somewhat useful, does not actually address the question of what Rack Middleware is.Sprout
Also this one is fairly link-only answer... :PUnstoppable
F
2

Rack - The Interface b/w Web & App Server

Rack is a Ruby package which provides an interface for a web server to communicate with the application. It is easy to add middleware components between the web server and the app to modify the way your request/response behaves. The middleware component sits between the client and the server, processing inbound requests and outbound responses.

In layman words, It is basically just a set of guidelines for how a server and a Rails app (or any other Ruby web app) should talk to each other.

To use Rack, provide an "app": an object that responds to the call method, taking the environment hash as a parameter, and returning an Array with three elements:

  • The HTTP response code
  • A Hash of headers
  • The response body, which must respond to each request.

For more explanation, you can follow the below links.

1. https://rack.github.io/
2. https://redpanthers.co/rack-middleware/
3. https://blog.engineyard.com/2015/understanding-rack-apps-and-middleware
4. https://guides.rubyonrails.org/rails_on_rack.html#resources

In rails, we have config.ru as a rack file, you can run any rack file with rackup command. And the default port for this is 9292. To test this, you can simply run rackup in your rails directory and see the result. You can also assign port on which you want to run it. Command to run rack file on any specific port is

rackup -p PORT_NUMBER
Figurate answered 4/4, 2019 at 19:30 Comment(0)

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