A Laravel/Lumen Inspired Web Framework for Swift that works on iOS, OS X, and Ubuntu.
- Insanely fast
- Beautiful syntax
- Type safe
Clone the Example project to start making your application or check out the live demo running on Ubuntu. This repository is for the framework module.
You can also download the alpha Vapor Installer, which allows you to create a new project at the command line e.g. vapor new MyProject
You must have Swift 2.2 or later installed. You can learn more about Swift 2.2 at Swift.org
Want to make a pull request? You can learn how from this free series How to Contribute to an Open Source Project on GitHub
This is a work in progress, so don't rely on this for anything important. And pull requests are welcome!
Starting the server takes two lines.
main.swift
import Vapor
let server = Server()
server.run()
You can also choose which port the server runs on.
server.run(port: 8080)
If you are having trouble connecting, make sure your ports are open. Check out apt-get ufw
for simple port management.
Routing in Vapor is simple and very similar to Laravel.
main.swift
Route.get("welcome") { request in
return "Hello"
}
//...start server
Here we will respond to all requests to http://example.com/welcome
with the string "Hello"
.
Responding with JSON is easy.
Route.get("version") { request in
return ["version": "1.0"]
}
This responds to all requests to http://example.com/version
with the JSON dictionary {"version": "1.0"}
and Content-Type: application/json
.
You can also respond with HTML pages.
Route.get("/") { request in
return View(path: "index.html")
}
Or Stencil templates.
index.stencil
<html>
<h1>{{ message }}</h1>
</html>
Route.get("/") { request in
return View(path: "index.stencil", context: ["message": "Hello"])
}
If you have VaporStencil
added, just put the View file in the Resources
folder at the root of your project and it will be served.
To add VaporStencil
, add the following package to your Package.swift
.
Package.swift
.Package(url: "https://github.com/tannernelson/vapor-stencil.git", majorVersion: 0)
Then set the StencilRenderer()
on your View.renderers
for whatever file extensions you would like to be rendered as Stencil
templates.
main.swift
import VaporStencil
//set the stencil renderer
//for all .stencil files
View.renderers[".stencil"] = StencilRenderer()
A manual response can be returned if you want to set something like cookies
.
Route.get("cookie") { request in
let response = Response(status: .OK, text: "Cookie was set")
response.cookies["test"] = "123"
return response
}
The Status enum above (.OK
) can be one of the following.
public enum Status {
case OK, Created, Accepted
case MovedPermanently
case BadRequest, Unauthorized, Forbidden, NotFound
case ServerError
case Unknown
case Custom(Int)
}
Or something custom.
let status: Status = .Custom(420) //https://dev.twitter.com/overview/api/response-codes
All files put in the Public
folder at the root of your project will be available at the root of your domain. This is a great place to put your assets (.css
, .js
, .png
, etc).
Every route call gets passed a Request
object. This can be used to grab query and path parameters.
This is a list of the properties available on the request object.
let method: Method
var parameters: [String: String] //URL parameters like id in user/:id
var data: [String: String] //GET or POST data
var cookies: [String: String]
var session: Session
Sessions will be kept track of using the vapor-session
cookie. The default (and currently only) session driver is .Memory
.
if let name = request.session.data["name"] {
//name was in session
}
//store name in session
request.session.data["name"] = "Vapor"
Vapor was designed alongside Fluent, an Eloquent inspired ORM that empowers simple and expressive database management.
import Fluent
if let user = User.find(5) {
print("Found \(user.name)")
user.name = "New Name"
user.save()
}
Underlying Fluent is a powerful Query builder.
let user = Query<User>().filter("id", notIn: [1, 2, 3]).filter("age", .GreaterThan, 21).first
Controllers are great for keeping your code organized. Route
directives can take whole controllers or controller methods as arguments instead of closures.
main.swift
Route.get("heartbeat", closure: HeartbeatController().index)
To pass a function name as a closure like above, the closure must have the function signature
func index(request: Request) -> ResponseConvertible
Here is an example of a controller for returning an API heartbeat.
HearbeatController.swift
import Vapor
class HeartbeatController: Controller {
override func index(request: Request) -> AnyObject {
return ["lub": "dub"]
}
}
Here the HeartbeatControllers
's index method will be called when http://example.com/heartbeat/alternate
is visited.
Resource controllers take advantage of CRUD-like index
, show
, store
, update
, destroy
methods to make setting up REST APIs easy.
Route.resource("user", controller: UserController())
This will create the appropriate GET
, POST
, DELETE
, etc methods for individual and groups of users.
Create a class conforming to Middleware
to hook into server requests and responses. Append your classes to the server.middleware
array in the order you want them to run..
class MyMiddleware: Middleware {
func handle(handler: Request -> Response) -> (Request -> Response) {
return { request in
print("Incoming request from \(request.address)")
let response = handler(request)
print("Responding with status \(response.status)")
return response
}
}
}
server.middleware.append(MyMiddleware())
Use the AsyncResponse
to send custom, asynchronous responses. You have full control over the response here, meaning you are responsible for writing all required headers and releasing the Socket
when done. (Thanks @elliottminns)
Route.get("async") { request in
return AsyncResponse() { socket in
try socket.writeUTF8("HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n")
try socket.writeUTF8("Content-Type: application/json\r\n\r\n")
try socket.writeUTF8("{\"hello\": \"world\"}")
socket.release()
}
}
Vapor currently supports SHA1
hashes.
let hello = Hash.make("world")
For added security, set a custom applicationKey
on the Hash
class.
Hash.applicationKey = "my-secret-key"
Vapor has been successfully tested on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (DigitalOcean) and Ubuntu 15.10 (VirtualBox).
To deploy to DigitalOcean, simply
- Install Swift 2.2
wget
the .tar.gz from Apple- Set the
export PATH
in your~/.bashrc
- (you may need to install
binutils
as well if you seear not found
)
- Clone your fork of the
vapor-example
repository to the server cd
into the repository- Run
swift build
- Run
.build/debug/MyApp
- (you may need to run as
sudo
to use certain ports) - (you may need to install
ufw
to set appropriate ports)
- Run
To start your Vapor
site automatically when the server is booted, add this file to your server.
/etc/init/vapor-example.conf
description "Vapor Example"
start on startup
exec /home/<user_name>/vapor-example/.build/release/VaporApp --workDir=/home/<user_name>/vapor-example
You additionally have access to the following commands for starting and stopping your server.
sudo stop vapor-example
sudo start vapor-example
The following script is useful for upgrading your website.
git pull
swift build --configuration release
sudo stop vapor-example
sudo start vapor-example
To deploy on Heroku, one can use Kyle Fuller's Heroku buildpack which works out of the box with the vapor-example
.
My website http://tanner.xyz
is currently running using Vapor.
This project is based on Swifter by Damian Kołakowski. It uses compatibilty code from NSLinux by johnno1962.
Go checkout and star their repos.