| Safe Haskell | Safe |
|---|---|
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Servant.Server.Internal.Context
Contents
Synopsis
- data Context contextTypes where
- EmptyContext :: Context '[]
- (:.) :: x -> Context xs -> Context (x ': xs)
- type family (l1 :: [*]) .++ (l2 :: [*]) where ...
- (.++) :: Context l1 -> Context l2 -> Context (l1 .++ l2)
- class HasContextEntry (context :: [*]) (val :: *) where
- getContextEntry :: Context context -> val
- data NamedContext (name :: Symbol) (subContext :: [*]) = NamedContext (Context subContext)
- descendIntoNamedContext :: forall context name subContext. HasContextEntry context (NamedContext name subContext) => Proxy (name :: Symbol) -> Context context -> Context subContext
Documentation
data Context contextTypes where Source #
Contexts are used to pass values to combinators. (They are not meant to be used to pass parameters to your handlers, i.e. they should not replace any custom ReaderT-monad-stack that you're using with hoistServer.) If you don't use combinators that require any context entries, you can just use serve as always.
If you are using combinators that require a non-empty Context you have to use serveWithContext and pass it a Context that contains all the values your combinators need. A Context is essentially a heterogeneous list and accessing the elements is being done by type (see getContextEntry). The parameter of the type Context is a type-level list reflecting the types of the contained context entries. To create a Context with entries, use the operator (::.)
>>>:type True :. () :. EmptyContextTrue :. () :. EmptyContext :: Context '[Bool, ()]
Constructors
| EmptyContext :: Context '[] | |
| (:.) :: x -> Context xs -> Context (x ': xs) infixr 5 |
type family (l1 :: [*]) .++ (l2 :: [*]) where ... Source #
Append two type-level lists.
Hint: import it as
import Servant.Server (type (.++))
class HasContextEntry (context :: [*]) (val :: *) where Source #
This class is used to access context entries in Contexts. getContextEntry returns the first value where the type matches:
>>>getContextEntry (True :. False :. EmptyContext) :: BoolTrue
If the Context does not contain an entry of the requested type, you'll get an error:
>>>getContextEntry (True :. False :. EmptyContext) :: String... ...No instance for (HasContextEntry '[] [Char]) ...
Methods
getContextEntry :: Context context -> val Source #
Instances
| HasContextEntry (val ': xs) val Source # | |
Defined in Servant.Server.Internal.Context Methods getContextEntry :: Context (val ': xs) -> val Source # | |
| HasContextEntry xs val => HasContextEntry (notIt ': xs) val Source # | |
Defined in Servant.Server.Internal.Context Methods getContextEntry :: Context (notIt ': xs) -> val Source # | |
support for named subcontexts
data NamedContext (name :: Symbol) (subContext :: [*]) Source #
Normally context entries are accessed by their types. In case you need to have multiple values of the same type in your Context and need to access them, we provide NamedContext. You can think of it as sub-namespaces for Contexts.
Constructors
| NamedContext (Context subContext) |
descendIntoNamedContext :: forall context name subContext. HasContextEntry context (NamedContext name subContext) => Proxy (name :: Symbol) -> Context context -> Context subContext Source #
descendIntoNamedContext allows you to access NamedContexts. Usually you won't have to use it yourself but instead use a combinator like WithNamedContext.
This is how descendIntoNamedContext works:
>>>:set -XFlexibleContexts>>>let subContext = True :. EmptyContext>>>:type subContextsubContext :: Context '[Bool]>>>let parentContext = False :. (NamedContext subContext :: NamedContext "subContext" '[Bool]) :. EmptyContext>>>:type parentContextparentContext :: Context '[Bool, NamedContext "subContext" '[Bool]]>>>descendIntoNamedContext (Proxy :: Proxy "subContext") parentContext :: Context '[Bool]True :. EmptyContext