BedSheetUser Guide

Overview

BedSheet is a platform for delivering web applications written in Fantom.

Built on top of IoC and Wisp, BedSheet provides a rich middleware mechanism for the routing and delivery of content over HTTP.

BedSheet is inspired by Java's Tapestry5, Ruby's Sinatra and Fantom's Draft.

Install

Install BedSheet with the Fantom Repository Manager ( fanr ):

C:\> fanr install -r http://repo.status302.com/fanr/ afBedSheet

To use in a Fantom project, add a dependency to build.fan:

depends = ["sys 1.0", ..., "afBedSheet 1.4"]

Documentation

Full API & fandocs are available on the Status302 repository.

Quick Start

1). Create a text file called Example.fan:

using afIoc
using afBedSheet

class HelloPage {
  Text hello(Str name, Int iq := 666) {
    return Text.fromPlain("Hello! I'm $name and I have an IQ of $iq!")
  }
}

class AppModule {
  @Contribute { serviceType=Routes# }
  static Void contributeRoutes(Configuration conf) {
    conf.add(Route(`/index`, Text.fromPlain("Welcome to BedSheet!")))
    conf.add(Route(`/hello/**`, HelloPage#hello))
  }
}

class Example {
  Int main() {
    afBedSheet::Main().main([AppModule#.qname, "8080"])
  }
}

2). Run Example.fan as a Fantom script from the command line:

C:\> fan Example.fan -env development
...
BedSheet v1.2 started up in 323ms

C:\> curl http://localhost:8080/index
Welcome to BedSheet!

C:\> curl http://localhost:8080/hello/Traci/69
Hello! I'm Traci and I have an IQ of 69!

C:\> curl http://localhost:8080/hello/Luci
Hello! I'm Luci and I have an IQ of 666!

Wow! That's awesome! But what just happened!?

Every BedSheet application has an AppModule that configures IoC services. Here we told the Routes service to return some plain text in response to /index and to call the HelloPage#hello method for all requests that start with /hello. Route converts URL path segments into method arguments, or in our case, to Str name and to an optional Int iq.

Route handlers are typically what we, the application developers, write. They perform logic processing and render responses. Our HelloPage route handler simply returns a plain Text response, which BedSheet sends to the client via an appropriate ResponseProcessor.

Starting BedSheet

Every Bed App (BedSheet Application) has an AppModule class that defines and configures your IoC services. It is an IoC concept that allows you centralise your application's configuration in one place. It is the AppModule that defines your Bed App and is central everything it does.

To start BedSheet from the command line, you need to tell it where to find the AppModule and which port to run on:

C:\> fan afBedSheet -env development <fully-qualified-app-module-name> <port-number>

For example:

C:\> fan afBedSheet -env development myWebApp::AppModule 8069

TIP: Should your AppModule grow too big, break logical chunks out into their own classes using the @SubModule facet.

<fully-qualified-app-module-name> may be replaced with just <pod-name> as long as your pod's build.fan defines the following meta:

meta = [
    ...
    ...
    "afIoc.module" : "<fully-qualified-app-module-name>"
]

This allows BedSheet to look up your AppModule from the pod. Example:

C:\> fan afBedSheet -env development myWebApp 8069

Note that AppModule is named so out of convention but the class may be called anything you like.

Request Routing

The Routes service maps HTTP request URLs to response objects and handler methods. It is where you would typically define how requests are handled. You configure the Routes service by contributing instances of Route. Example:

using afIoc
using afBedSheet

class AppModule {

    @Contribute { serviceType=Routes# }
    static Void contributeRoutes(Configuration conf) {

        conf.add(Route(`/home`,  Redirect.movedTemporarily(`/index`)))
        conf.add(Route(`/index`, IndexPage#service))
    }
}

Route objects take a matching glob and a response object. A response object is any object that BedSheet knows how to process or a Method to be called. If a method is given, then request URL path segments are matched to the method parameters. See Route for more details.

Routing lesson over.

(...you Aussies may stop giggling now.)

Route Handling

Route Handler is the name given to a class or method that is processed by a Route. They process logic and generally don't pipe anything to the HTTP response stream. Instead they return a Response Object for further processing. For example, the Quick Start HelloPage route handler returns a Text response object.

Route handlers are usually written by the application developer, but a couple of common use-cases are bundled with BedSheet:

  • FileHandler: Maps request URLs to files on file system.
  • PodHandler : Maps request URLs to pod file resources.

Response Objects

Response Objects are returned from Route Handlers. It is then the job of Response Processors to process these objects, converting them into data to be sent to the client. Response Processors may themselves return Response Objects, which will be handled by another Response Processor.

You can define Response Processors and process Response Objects yourself; but by default, BedSheet handles the following:

  • Void / null / false : Processing should fall through to the next Route match.
  • true : No further processing is required.
  • Err : An appropriate response object is selected from contributed Err responses. (See Error Processing.)
  • File : The file is streamed to the client.
  • FileAsset : The file is streamed to the client.
  • Func : The function is called, using IoC to inject the parameters. The return value is treated as reposonse object for further processing.
  • HttpStatus : An appropriate response object is selected from contributed HTTP status responses. (See HTTP Status Processing.)
  • InStream : The InStream is piped to the client. The InStream is guaranteed to be closed.
  • MethodCall : The method is called and the return value used for further processing.
  • Redirect : Sends a 3xx redirect response to the client.
  • Text : The text (be it plain, json, xml, etc...) is sent to the client with a corresponding Content-Type.

Because of the nature of response object processing it is possible, nay normal, to chain multiple response objects together. Example:

  1. If a Route returns or throws an Err,
  2. ErrProcessor looks up its responses and returns a Func,
  3. FuncProcessor calls a handler method which returns a Text,
  4. TextProcessor serves content to the client and returns true.

Note that response object processing is extensible, just contribute your own Response Processor.

Template Rendering

Templating, or formatting text (HTML or otherwise) is left for other 3rd party libraries and is not a conern of BedSheet. That said, there a couple templating libraries out there and integrating them into BedSheet is relatively simple. For instance, Alien-Factory provides the following libraries:

  • efan for basic templating,
  • Slim for concise HTML templating, and
  • Pillow for integrating efanXtra components (may be used with Slim!)

Taking Slim as an example, simply inject the Slim service into your Route Handler and use it to return a Text response object:

using afIoc::Inject
using afBedSheet::Text
using afSlim::Slim

class IndexPage {
    @Inject Slim? slim

    Text render() {
        html := slim.renderFromFile(`xmas.html.slim`.toFile)
        return Text.fromHtml(html)
    }
}

BedSheet Middleware

When a HTTP request is received, it is passed through a pipeline of BedSheet Middleware; this is a similar to Java Servlet Filters. If the request reaches the end of the pipeline without being processed, a 404 is returned.

Middleware bundled with BedSheet include:

You can define your own middleware to address cross cutting concerns such as authentication and authorisation. See the FantomFactory article Basic HTTP Authentication With BedSheet for working examples.

Error Processing

When BedSheet catches an Err it scans through a list of contributed response objects to find one that can handle the Err. If no matching response object is found then the default err response object is used. This default response object displays BedSheet's extremely verbose Error 500 page. It displays (a shed load of) debugging information and is highly customisable:

BedSheet's Verbose Err500 Page

The BedSheet Err page is great for development, but not so great for production - stack traces tend to scare Joe Public! So note that in a production environment (see IocEnv) a simple HTTP status page is displayed instead.

ALIEN-AID: BedSheet defaults to production mode, so to see the verbose error page you must switch to development mode. The easiest way to do this is to set an environment variable called ENV with the value development. See IocEnv details.

To handle a specific Err, contribute a response object to ErrResponses:

@Contribute { serviceType=ErrResponses# }
static Void contributeErrResponses(Configuration config) {
    config[ArgErr#] = MethodCall(MyErrHandler#process).toImmutableFunc
}

Note that in the above example, ArgErr and all subclasses of ArgErr will be processed by MyErrHandler.process(). A contribute for just Err will act as a capture all and be used should a more precise match not be found. You could also replace the default err response object:

@Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
static Void contributeApplicationDefaults(Configuration config) {
    config[BedSheetConfigIds.defaultErrResponse] = Text.fromHtml("<html><b>Oops!</b></html>")
}

Err objects are stored in the HttpRequest.stash map and may be retrieved by handlers with the following:

err := (Err) httpRequest.stash["afBedSheet.err"]

HTTP Status Processing

HttpStatus objects are handled by a ResponseProcessor that selects a contributed response object that corresponds to the HTTP status code. If no specific response object is found then the default http status response object is used. This default response object displays BedSheet's HTTP Status Code page. This is what you see when you receive a 404 Not Found error.

BedSheet's 404 Status Page

To set your own 404 Not Found page contribute a response object to HttpStatusResponses service with the status code 404:

@Contribute { serviceType=HttpStatusResponses# }
static Void contribute404Response(Configuration config) {
    conf[404] = MethodCall(Error404Page#process).toImmutableFunc
}

In the above example, all 404 status codes will be processed by Error404Page.process().

To replace all status code responses, replace the default HTTP status response object:

@Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
static Void contributeApplicationDefaults(Configuration config) {
    config[BedSheetConfigIds.defaultHttpStatusResponse] = Text.fromHtml("<html>Error</html>")
}

HttpStatus objects are stored in the HttpRequest.stash map and may be retrieved by handlers with the following:

httpStatus := (HttpStatus) httpRequest.stash["afBedSheet.httpStatus"]

Config Injection

BedSheet uses IoC Config to give injectable @Config values. @Config values are essentially a map of Str to immutable / constant values that may be set and overriden at application start up. (Consider config values to be immutable once the app has started).

BedSheet sets the initial config values by contributing to the FactoryDefaults service. An application may then override these values by contributing to the ApplicationDefaults service.

@Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
static Void contributeApplicationDefaults(Configuration conf) {
    ...
    conf["afBedSheet.errPrinter.noOfStackFrames"] = 100
    ...
}

All BedSheet config keys are listed in BedSheetConfigIds meaning the above can be more safely rewriten as:

conf[BedSheetConfigIds.noOfStackFrames] = 100

To inject config values in your services, use the @Config facet with conjunction with IoC's @Inject:

@Inject @Config { id="afBedSheet.errPrinter.noOfStackFrames" }
Int noOfStackFrames

The config mechanism is not just for BedSheet, you can use it too when creating 3rd Party libraries! Contributing initial values to FactoryDefaults gives users of your library an easy way to override your values.

Request Logging

BedSheet can generate standard HTTP request logs in the W3C Extended Log File Format.

To enable, just configure the directory where the logs should be written and (optionally) set the log filename, or filename pattern for log rotation:

@Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
static Void contributeApplicationDefaults(Configuration conf) {

    conf[BedSheetConfigIds.requestLogDir]             = `/my/log/dir/`
    conf[BedSheetConfigIds.requestLogFilenamePattern] = "bedSheet-{YYYY-MM}.log"
}

Ensure the log dir ends in a trailing /slash/.

The fields writen to the logs may be set by configuring BedSheetConfigIds.requestLogFields, but default to looking like:

2013-02-22 13:13:13 127.0.0.1 - GET /doc - 200 222 "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US) etc" "http://localhost/index"

Development Proxy

Never (manually) restart your app again!

Use the -proxy option when starting BedSheet to create a Development Proxy and your app will auto re-start when a pod is updated:

C:\> fan afBedSheet -proxy <mypod> <port>

The proxy sits on <port> and starts your real app on <port>+1, forwarding all requests to it.

Client <--> Proxy (port) <--> Web App (port+1)

A problem other (Fantom) web development proxies suffer from is that, when the proxy dies, your real web app is left hanging around; requiring you to manually kill it.

Client <-->   ????????   <--> Web App (port+1)

BedSheet applications go a step further and, should it be started in proxy mode, it pings the proxy every second to stay alive. Should the proxy not respond, the web app kills itself.

See proxyPingInterval for more details.

Gzip

By default, BedSheet compresses HTTP responses with gzip where it can, for optimisation. But it doesn't do this willy nilly, oh no! There are many hurdles to overcome...

Disable All

Gzip, although enabled by default, can be disabled for the entire web app by setting the following config property:

config[BedSheetConfigIds.gzipDisabled] = true

Gzip'able Mime Types

Text files gzip very well and yield high compression rates, but not everything should be gzipped. For example, JPG images are already compressed when gzip'ed often end up larger than the original! For this reason only Mime Types contributed to the GzipCompressible service will be gzipped:

config["text/funky"] = true

(Note: The GzipCompressible contrib type is actually sys::MimeType - IoC kindly coerces the Str to MimeType for us.)

By default BedSheet will compress html, css, javascript, json, xml and other text responses.

Disable per Response

Gzip can be disabled on a per request / response basis by calling the following:

httpResponse.disableGzip()

Gzip only when asked

Guaranteed that someone, somewhere is still using Internet Explorer 3.0 and they can't handle gzipped content. As such, and as per RFC 2616 HTTP1.1 Sec14.3, the response is only gzipped if the appropriate HTTP request header was set.

Min content threshold

Gzip is great when compressing large files, but if you've only got a few bytes to squash... the compressed version is going to be bigger, which kinda defeats the point compression! For that reason the response data must reach a minimum size / threshold before it gets gzipped.

See GzipOutStream and gzipThreshold for more details.

Phew! Made it!

If (and only if!) the request passed all the tests above, will it then be lovingly gzipped and sent to the client.

Buffered Response

By default, BedSheet attempts to set the Content-Length HTTP response header. It does this by buffering HttpResponse.out. When the stream is closed, it writes the Content-Length and pipes the buffer to the real HTTP response.

Response buffering can be disabled on a per HTTP response basis.

A threshold can be set, whereby if the buffer exeeds that value, all content is streamed directly to the client.

See BufferedOutStream and responseBufferThreshold for more details.

Wisp Integration

To some, BedSheet may look like a behemoth web framework, but it is in fact just a standard Fantom WebMod. This means it can be plugged into a Wisp application along side other all the other standard webmods. Just create an instance of BedSheetWebMod and pass it to Wisp like any other.

For example, the following Wisp application places BedSheet under the path poo/.

using concurrent
using wisp
using webmod
using afIoc
using afBedSheet

class Example {    
    Void main() {
        mod := RouteMod { it.routes = [
            "poo" : BedSheetWebMod(TinyBedAppModule#.qname, 8069)
        ]}
        
        WispService { it.port=8069; it.root=mod }.install.start

        Actor.sleep(Duration.maxVal)    
    }
}

** A tiny BedSheet app that returns 'Hello Mum!' for every request.
class TinyBedAppModule {
    @Contribute { serviceType=Routes# }
    static Void contributeRoutes(Configuration conf) {
        conf.add(Route(`/***`, Text.fromPlain("Hello Mum!")))
    }    
}

When run, a request to http://localhost:8069/ will return a Wisp 404 and any request to http://localhost:8069/poo/* will invoke BedSheet and return Hello Mum!.

When running BedSheet under a non-root path, be sure to transform all link hrefs with BedSheetServer.toClientUrl() to ensure the extra path info is added. Similarly, ensure asset URLs are retrieved from the FileHandler service.

Note that each BedSheetWebMod holds a reference to it's own IoC registry so you can run mulitple BedSheet instances side by side in the same Wisp application.

Go Live with Heroku

In a hurry to go live? Use Heroku!

Heroku and the heroku-fantom-buildpack makes it ridiculously to deploy your web app to a live server. Just check in your code and Heroku will build your web app from source and deploy it to a live environment!

To have Heroku run your BedSheet web app you have 2 options:

1) Create a Heroku text file called Procfile at the same level as your build.fan with the following line:

web: fan afBedSheet <fully-qualified-app-module-name> $PORT

substituting <fully-qualified-app-module-name> with, err, your fully qualified app module name! Example, MyPod::AppModule. Type $PORT verbatim, as it is.

2) Create a Main class in your app:

using util

class Main : AbstractMain {

  @Arg { help="The HTTP port to run the app on" }
  private Int port

  override Int run() {
    return afBedSheet::Main().main("<fully-qualified-app-module-name> $port".split)
  }
}

Main classes have the advantage of being easy to run from an IDE or cmd line.

See heroku-fantom-buildpack for more details.

Tips

All route handlers and processors are built by IoC so feel free to @Inject DAOs and other services.

BedSheet itself is built with IoC so look at the BedSheet Source for IoC examples.

Even if your route handlers aren't services, if they're const classes, they're cached by BedSheet and reused on every request.

Release Notes

v1.4.4

  • Bug: Startup Errs thrown by FileHandler (and middleware in general) ended up in limbo and weren't reported.

v1.4.2

  • Chg: HTTP requests received when BedSheet is starting up are given a 500 status code and a starting up message. Previous behaviour was to queue up the requests, but that can cause issues under heavy load.
  • Chg: HttpRequest.form throws a HttpStatusErr (400 - Bad Request) should the form data be invalid - see sys::Uri.decodeQuery. SpamBots send you all sorts of crap!
  • Bug: BedSheet welcome page had the 404 page appended to it - Firefox reported the page as junk!

v1.4.0

  • New: Errs and Funcs may be used as response objects - new ResponseProcessors added.
  • New: Added HttpRequest.parseMultiPartForm().
  • New: Added Wisp Integration section to the docs.
  • Chg: Err processing updated; gone are bespoke ErrProcessors, contribute generic repsonse objects instead. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: HTTP Status processing updated; gone are bespoke HTTPStatusProcessors, contribute generic repsonse objects instead. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Replaced the HttpFlash class with HttpSession.flash(). (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Converted Route to a mixin so users can contribute their own implementations.
  • Chg: Route matches against the entire HttpRequest, not just the URL and HTTP Method.
  • Chg: Deprecated Route methods: routeRegex, httpMethod, response.
  • Chg: Overhauled the Route matching, argument conversion and documentation. (Possible breaking change.)
  • Chg: Nullability within ValueEncoders has now been property addressed. (Breaking change in ValueEncoder mixin.)
  • Chg: Middleware now returns Void not Bool. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Removed deprecated methods. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: BedSheetServer.toAbsoluteUrl() now takes a client URL, not a local URL.
  • Chg: HttpResponse.saveAsAttachment() also sets the Content-Type HTTP response header.
  • Chg: Gave FileAsset a public ctor.
  • Chg: All BedSheet services have qualified names.
  • Chg: .csv files are gzip compressible.
  • Bug: Route method params are now correctly URL decoded - see URI Encoding / Decoding.
  • Bug: Logs were overly spammed with repeated warning msgs should the client close its socket connection early.
  • Bug: MethodCall responses could not call static methods.
  • Bug: Route HTTP methods were not case-insenstive.
  • Bug: FileAsset.toStr() sometimes threw an Err.
  • Bug: HTTP Flash objects no longer need to be immutable, just serialisable.

v1.3.16

v1.3.14

  • New: SafeOutStream doesn't throw an IOErr should the client close the connection early.
  • New: PodHandler has a whitelist of files allowed to be served.
  • Chg: Revamped PodHandler, now contains fromLocalUrl() and fromPodResource() to parallel FileHandler.
  • Chg: Deleted BedSheetMetaData; not that you should have been using it anyway!
  • Chg: BedSheetWebMod no longer takes a BedSheet options map, all values have been merged with Registry options.
  • Bug: Development Proxy process did not work on Mac OS-X - Thanks to LightDye for Reporting.

v1.3.12

  • New: Static files are served with a default Cache-Control HTTP response header, change via Ioc Config.
  • New: Added BedSheetServer to replace BedSheetMetaData, contains methods for generating absolute URLs.
  • New: Added toClientUrl() and toAbsoluteUrl() to BedSheetServer.
  • New: Added HttpResponseHeaders.vary to responses that could be gzipped.
  • Chg: Updated to use IoC 1.7.2.
  • Chg: Renamed HttpRequest.modRel -> HttpRequest.url.], deprecated absUri, modBase, modRel and uri.
  • Chg: HttpSession fails fast on attempts to store non-serialisable values.
  • Chg: Gzip responses also set a HTTP header of Vary: Accept-Encoding.
  • Chg: Added the Cache-Control HTTP response header to error pages to ensure they're never cached.
  • Chg: Renamed Text.fromMimeType() -> Text.fromContentType().
  • Chg: HttpRequestHeaders.host is now a Str.

v1.3.10

  • New: FileAsset objects are generated by the FileHandler service and contain clientUrls for your web page.
  • Chg: ValueEncoders service now lets ReProcessErrs pass through un-hindered.
  • Chg: Overhauled FileHandler API. (Breaking change)
  • Chg: Renamed Text.mimeType -> Text.contentType.

v1.3.8

  • New: Set response headers X-BedSheet-errMsg, X-BedSheet-errType and X-BedSheet-errStackTrace when processing an Err. (Dev mode only)
  • New: Boring stack frames on the Err500 page are muted (greyed) and may be toggled on and off completely via a checkbox.
  • New: FileHandler now responds to HEAD requests.
  • New: Introduced a FileMetaCache to prevent excessive hits on the file system.
  • Chg: Updated to use IoC 1.6.2 and Bean Utils.
  • Chg: BedSheet pages (404, 500 & Welcome) are served up as XHTML.
  • Chg: ReProcessErr may now re-process non-const response objects.
  • Bug: FlashMiddleware needlessly created http sessions.

v1.3.6

  • New: Added ActorPools section to Err500 page.
  • Chg: Updated to use IoC 1.6.0 and Concurrent.
  • Chg: Routes now perform some basic validation to catch cases where the Uri would never match the method handler.
  • Chg: Atom (RSS) feeds application/atom+xml are now GZip compressible.
  • Chg: Not found requests for HTTP methods other than GET or POST return a 501, not 404.
  • Chg: All BedSheet pages render as valid XML.
  • Bug: If 2 Routes had the same Regex, only 1 was shown on the 404 page.
  • Bug: HttpFlash data could leak into concurrent web requests.

v1.3.4

  • New: Added fromClientUri() and fromServerFile() to FileHandler.
  • New: IocConfig values, BedSheet Routes and Fantom Pods are now printed on the standard Err page.
  • Chg: Added some handy toStr methods to Route and response objects.
  • Chg: Pretty printed the Str maps that get logged on Err.

v1.3.2

  • New: Added appName to BedSheetMetaData that returns the proj.name from the application's pod meta.
  • Chg: Added matchesMethod() and matchesParams() helper methods to RouteResponseFactory.
  • Chg: Made ErrPrinterStr and ErrPrinterHtml public, but @NoDoc, as they're useful for emails et al.
  • Chg: Made HttpRequestHeaders and HttpResponsetHeaders const classes, backed by WebReq and WebRes.
  • Bug: Ensured HttpRequest.modRel always returns a path absolute uri - see Inconsistent WebReq::modRel()
  • Bug: Application could NPE on startup if an AppModule could not be found.

v1.3.0

  • New: Added HttpCookies service, removed corresponding cookie methods from HttpRequest and HttpResponse. (Breaking change)
  • New: Added stash() to HttpRequest
  • New: Added fromXhtml(...) to Text
  • New: Added contentLength() and cookie() to HttpRequestHeaders
  • New: MethodCallResponseProcessor uses IoC to call methods so that it may inject any dependencies / services as method arguments.
  • New: Added StackFrameFilter to filter out lines in stack traces.
  • New: Added host to BedSheetConfigIds, mainly for use by 3rd party libraries.
  • Chg: Upgraded to IoC 1.5.2.
  • Chg: Removed BedServer and BedClient, they have been moved to Bounce. (Breaking change)
  • Chg: Removed @Config, use @afIocConfig::Config instead. (Breaking change)
  • Chg: Renamed HttpPipelineFilter -> Middleware and updated the corresponding services. Hardcoded the default BedSheet filters / middleware to the start of the pipeline. (Breaking change)
  • Chg: Renamed HttpRequestLogFilter -> RequestLogMiddleware and updated the @Config values. (Breaking change)
  • Chg: @NoDoced some services as they're only referenced by @Contribute methods: ErrProcessors, HttpStatusProcessors, ResponseProcessor, ValueEncoders.
  • Chg: QualityValues are nullable from HttpRequestHeaders

v1.2.4

v1.2.2

  • New: Added gzip compression for web fonts.
  • New: BedSheet connection details printed on startup.
  • Chg: FileHandler now lets non-existant files fall through.
  • Chg: FileHandler auto adds Route mappings to the Routes service.
  • Chg: Added more info to the BedSheet 404 page in dev.
  • Chg: Gave more control over the verbose rendering of the standard BedSheet pages.
  • Bug: BedServer generated the wrong info for BedSheetMetaData - required when testing Pillow web apps.

v1.2.0

  • New: Route objects may take any response result - not just Methods!
  • New: BedSheet now has a dependency on IoC Env
  • Chg: HttpRequestLogFilter is now in the Http Pipeline by default - it just needs enabling.
  • Chg: The detailed BedSheet Err500 page is disabled in production environments.
  • Chg: Rejigged how the default ErrProcessor is used, making it easier to plug in your own. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: BedSheetConfigIds renamed from ConfigIds. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Removed Route Matching - Routes now only take Route objects. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Removed IeAjaxCacheBustingFilter with no replacement. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Removed CorsHandler with no replacement. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Massaged a lot of the documentation.

v1.1.4

  • New: The cause of startup Errs are printed before service shutdown - see this topic.
  • Chg: Better Err msg if AppModule type not found on startup.
  • Chg: Disabled afIoc service list on startup.
  • Bug: BedServer would crash if the app required BedSheetMetaData.

v1.1.2

  • New: Added Causes section to Err500 page.
  • Chg: Faster startup times when using a proxy
  • Chg: Better Err handling on app startup
  • Bug: Transitive dependencies have been re-instated.
  • Bug: The -noTransDeps startup option now propogates through the proxy.

v1.1.0

  • New: Added BedSheetMetaData with information on which AppModule afbedSheet was started with.
  • Chg: Renamed RouteHandler -> MethodInvoker. (Breaking change.)
  • Chg: Injectable services are now documented with (Service).
  • Chg: Moved internal proxy options in Main to their own class.
  • Chg: Enabled multi-line quotes.
  • Bug: IoC Config was not always added as a transitive dependency. (Thanks to LightDye for reporting.)

v1.0.16

  • New: Added Available Values section to Err500 page, from afIoc::NotFoundErr.
  • Chg: Broke @Config code out into its own module: IoC Config.
  • Chg: Added a skull logo to the Err500 page.
  • Chg: Rejigged the Err500 section layout and tweaked the source code styling.

v1.0.14

  • New: SrcCodeErrs from afPlastic / efan are printed in the default Err500 pages.
  • New: Added ConfigSource.getCoerced() method.
  • New: Added Template Rendering to fandoc.

v1.0.12

  • New: Added IoC Operation Trace section to Err500 page.
  • New: Added Moustache Compilation Err section to Err500 page.
  • Chg: Moved Moustache out into it's own project.
  • Chg: Anyone may now contribute sections to the default verbose Err500 page.
  • Bug: Module name was not always found correctly on startup.

v1.0.10

  • Bug: This documentation page didn't render.

v1.0.8

  • Chg: Updated to use afIoc-1.4.x
  • Chg: Overhauled Route to match null values. Thanks go to LightDye.
  • Chg: Warnings on startup if an AppModule could not be found - see Issue #1. Thanks go to Jorge Ortiz.
  • Chg: Better Err handling when a dir is not mapped to FileHandler
  • Chg: Transferred VCS ownership to AlienFactory
  • Chg: Test code is no longer distributed with the afBedSheet.pod.

v1.0.6

  • Chg: HttpResponse.statusCode is now a field.
  • Chg: HttpResponse.disableGzip is now a field.
  • Chg: HttpResponse.disableBuffering is now a field.

v1.0.4

  • New: Added BedServer and BedClient to test BedSheet apps without using a real web server.

v1.0.2

  • New: Initial release