mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
226 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
226 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
# Life of a request
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It can sometimes be confusing to figure out how to write a new feature,
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or debug an existing one. Let us try to follow a request through the
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Zulip codebase, and dive deep into how each part works.
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We will use as our example the creation of users through the API, but we
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will also highlight how alternative requests are handled.
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## A request is sent to the server, and handled by [nginx](https://nginx.org/en/docs/)
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When Zulip is deployed in production, all requests go through nginx.
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For the most part we don't need to know how this works, except for when
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it isn't working. nginx does the first level of routing--deciding which
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application will serve the request (or deciding to serve the request
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itself for static content).
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In development, `tools/run-dev` fills the role of nginx. Static files
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are in your Git checkout under `static`, and are served unminified.
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## Static files are [served directly][served-directly] by nginx
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[served-directly]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/puppet/zulip/files/nginx/zulip-include-frontend/app
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Static files include JavaScript, CSS, and static assets (like emoji, avatars).
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File not found errors (404) are served using a Django URL, so that we
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can use configuration variables (like whether the user is logged in)
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in the 404 error page.
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```nginx
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location /static/ {
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alias /home/zulip/prod-static/;
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# Set a nonexistent path, so we just serve the nice Django 404 page.
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error_page 404 /django_static_404.html;
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}
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```
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## nginx routes other requests [between Django and Tornado][tornado-django]
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[tornado-django]: ../overview/architecture-overview.md#django-and-tornado
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All our connected clients hold open long-polling connections so that
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they can receive events (messages, presence notifications, and so on) in
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real-time. Events are served by Zulip's `tornado` application.
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Nearly every other kind of request is served by the `zerver` Django
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application.
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[Here is the relevant nginx routing configuration.][nginx-config-link]
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[nginx-config-link]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/puppet/zulip/files/nginx/zulip-include-frontend/app
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## Django routes the request to a view in urls.py files
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There are various
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[urls.py](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/topics/http/urls/)
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files throughout the server codebase, which are covered in more detail
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in
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[the directory structure doc](../overview/directory-structure.md).
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The main Zulip Django app is `zerver`. The routes are found in
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`zproject/urls.py` and `zproject/legacy_urls.py`.
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There are HTML-serving, REST API, legacy, and webhook url patterns. We
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will look at how each of these types of requests are handled, and focus
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on how the REST API handles our user creation example.
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## Views serving HTML are internationalized by server path
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If we look in
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[zproject/urls.py](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/zproject/urls.py),
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we can see something called `i18n_urls`. These urls show up in the
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address bar of the browser, and serve HTML.
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For example, the `/features` page (preview
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[here](https://zulip.com/features/)) gets translated in Chinese at
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`zh-hans/features/` (preview
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[here](https://zulip.com/zh-hans/features/)).
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Note the `zh-hans` prefix--that url pattern gets added by `i18n_patterns`.
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## API endpoints use [REST](https://www.ics.uci.edu/~fielding/pubs/dissertation/rest_arch_style.htm)
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Our example is a REST API endpoint. It's a PUT to `/users`.
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With the exception of incoming webhooks (which we do not usually control the
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format of), legacy endpoints, and logged-out endpoints, Zulip uses REST
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for its API. This means that we use:
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- POST for creating something new where we don't have a unique
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ID. Also used as a catch-all if no other verb is appropriate.
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- PUT for creating something for which we have a unique ID.
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- DELETE for deleting something
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- PATCH for updating or editing attributes of something.
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- GET to get something (read-only)
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- HEAD to check the existence of something to GET, without getting it;
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useful to check a link without downloading a potentially large link
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- OPTIONS (handled automatically, see more below)
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Of these, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS, and GET are _idempotent_, which
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means that we can send the request multiple times and get the same
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state on the server. You might get a different response after the first
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request, as we like to give our clients an error so they know that no
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new change was made by the extra requests.
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POST is not idempotent--if I send a message multiple times, Zulip will
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show my message multiple times. PATCH is special--it can be
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idempotent, and we like to write API endpoints in an idempotent fashion,
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as much as possible.
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This [cookbook](http://restcookbook.com/) and
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[tutorial](https://www.restapitutorial.com/) can be helpful if you are
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new to REST web applications.
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### PUT is only for creating new things
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If you're used to using PUT to update or modify resources, you might
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find our convention a little strange.
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We use PUT to create resources with unique identifiers, POST to create
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resources without unique identifiers (like sending a message with the
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same content multiple times), and PATCH to modify resources.
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In our example, `create_user_backend` uses PUT, because there's a unique
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identifier, the user's email.
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### OPTIONS
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The OPTIONS method will yield the allowed methods.
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This request:
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`OPTIONS https://chat.zulip.org/api/v1/users`
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yields a response with this HTTP header:
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`Allow: PUT, GET`
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We can see this reflected in [zproject/urls.py](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/zproject/urls.py):
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```python
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rest_path('users',
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GET=get_members_backend,
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PUT=create_user_backend),
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```
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In this way, the API is partially self-documenting.
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### Legacy endpoints are used by the web client
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The endpoints from the legacy JSON API are written without REST in
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mind. They are used extensively by the web client, and use POST.
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You can see them in
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[zproject/legacy_urls.py](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/zproject/legacy_urls.py).
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### Incoming webhook integrations may not be RESTful
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Zulip endpoints that are called by other services for integrations have
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to conform to the service's request format. They are likely to use
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only POST.
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## Django calls rest_dispatch for REST endpoints, and authenticates
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For requests that correspond to a REST url pattern, Zulip configures
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its url patterns (see
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[zerver/lib/rest.py](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/main/zerver/lib/rest.py))
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so that the action called is `rest_dispatch`. This method will
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authenticate the user, either through a session token from a cookie,
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or from an `email:api-key` string given via HTTP basic auth for API
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clients.
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It will then look up what HTTP verb was used (GET, POST, etc) to make
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the request, and then figure out which view to show from that.
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In our example,
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```python
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GET=get_members_backend,
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PUT=create_user_backend
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```
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are supplied as arguments to `rest_path`, along with the
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[HTTPRequest](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/request-response/).
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The request has the HTTP verb `PUT`, which `rest_dispatch` can use to
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find the correct view to show:
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`zerver.views.users.create_user_backend`.
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## The view will authorize the user, extract request variables, and validate them
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This is covered in good detail in the [writing views doc](writing-views.md).
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## Results are given as JSON
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Our API works on JSON requests and responses. Every API endpoint should
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`raise JsonableError` in the case of an error, which gives a JSON string:
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```json
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{"result": "error", "msg": "<some error message>", "code": "BAD_REQUEST"}
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```
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in a [Django HttpResponse
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object](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/request-response/)
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with a `Content-Type` of 'application/json'.
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To pass back data from the server to the calling client, in the event of
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a successfully handled request, we use `json_success(request, data)`.
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The `request` argument is a [Django HttpRequest
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object](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/request-response/).
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The `data` argument is a Python object which can be converted to a JSON
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string and has a default value of an empty Python dictionary.
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Zulip stores additional metadata it has associated with that HTTP
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request in a `RequestNotes` object, which is primarily accessed in
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common code used in all requests (middleware, logging, rate limiting,
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etc.).
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This will result in a JSON string:
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```json
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{"result": "success", "msg": "", "data": {"var_name1": "var_value1", "var_name2": "var_value2"}}
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```
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with a HTTP 200 status and a `Content-Type` of 'application/json'.
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That's it!
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