package dream

  1. Overview
  2. Docs

Types

Dream is built on just five types. The first two are the data types of Dream. Both are abstract, even though they appear to have definitions:

type request = client message

HTTP requests, such as GET /something HTTP/1.1. See Requests.

and response = server message

HTTP responses, such as 200 OK. See Responses.

The remaining three types are for building up Web apps.

and handler = request -> response promise

Handlers are asynchronous functions from requests to responses. Example 1-hello [playground] shows the simplest handler, an anonymous function which we pass to Dream.run. This creates a complete Web server! You can also see the Reason version in example r-hello.

let () =
  Dream.run (fun _ ->
    Dream.html "Good morning, world!")
and middleware = handler -> handler

Middlewares are functions that take a handler, and run some code before or after — producing a “bigger” handler. Example 2-middleware inserts the Dream.logger middleware into a Web app:

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.logger
  @@ fun _ -> Dream.html "Good morning, world!"

Examples 4-counter [playground] and 5-promise show user-defined middlewares:

let count_requests inner_handler request =
  count := !count + 1;
  inner_handler request

In case you are wondering why the example middleware count_requests takes two arguments, while the type says it should take only one, it's because:

middleware
  = handler -> handler
  = handler -> (request -> response promise)
  = handler -> request -> response promise
and route

Routes tell Dream.router which handler to select for each request. See Routing and example 3-router [playground]. Routes are created by helpers such as Dream.get and Dream.scope:

Dream.router [
  Dream.scope "/admin" [Dream.memory_sessions] [
    Dream.get "/" admin_handler;
    Dream.get "/logout" admin_logout_handler;
  ];
]

Algebra

The three handler-related types have a vaguely algebraic interpretation:

Dream.scope implements a left distributive law, making Dream a ring-like structure.

Helpers

and 'a message = 'a Dream_pure.Message.message

'a message, pronounced “any message,” allows some functions to take either request or response as arguments, because both are defined in terms of 'a message. For example, in Headers:

val Dream.header : string -> 'a message -> string option

Type parameters for message for request and response, respectively. These are “phantom” types. They have no meaning other than they are different from each other. Dream only ever creates client message and server message. client and server are never mentioned again in the docs.

and 'a promise = 'a Lwt.t

Dream uses Lwt for promises and asynchronous I/O. See example 5-promise [playground].

Use raise to reject promises. If you are writing a library, you may prefer using Lwt.fail in some places, in order to avoid clobbering your user's current exception backtrace — though, in most cases, you should still extend it with raise and let%lwt, instead.

Methods

type method_ = [
  1. | `GET
  2. | `POST
  3. | `PUT
  4. | `DELETE
  5. | `HEAD
  6. | `CONNECT
  7. | `OPTIONS
  8. | `TRACE
  9. | `PATCH
  10. | `Method of string
]

HTTP request methods. See RFC 7231 §4.2, RFC 5789 §2, and MDN.

val method_to_string : [< method_ ] -> string

Evaluates to a string representation of the given method. For example, `GET is converted to "GET".

val string_to_method : string -> method_

Evaluates to the method_ corresponding to the given method string.

val methods_equal : [< method_ ] -> [< method_ ] -> bool

Compares two methods, such that equal methods are detected even if one is represented as a string. For example,

Dream.methods_equal `GET (`Method "GET") = true
val normalize_method : [< method_ ] -> method_

Converts methods represented as strings to variants. Methods generated by Dream are always normalized.

Dream.normalize_method (`Method "GET") = `GET

Status codes

type informational = [
  1. | `Continue
  2. | `Switching_Protocols
]

Informational (1xx) status codes. See RFC 7231 §6.2 and MDN. 101 Switching Protocols is generated internally by Dream.websocket. It is usually not necessary to use it directly.

type successful = [
  1. | `OK
  2. | `Created
  3. | `Accepted
  4. | `Non_Authoritative_Information
  5. | `No_Content
  6. | `Reset_Content
  7. | `Partial_Content
]

Successful (2xx) status codes. See RFC 7231 §6.3, RFC 7233 §4.1 and MDN. The most common is 200 OK.

type redirection = [
  1. | `Multiple_Choices
  2. | `Moved_Permanently
  3. | `Found
  4. | `See_Other
  5. | `Not_Modified
  6. | `Temporary_Redirect
  7. | `Permanent_Redirect
]

Redirection (3xx) status codes. See RFC 7231 §6.4 and RFC 7538 §3, and MDN. Use 303 See Other to direct clients to follow up with a GET request, especially after a form submission. Use 301 Moved Permanently for permanent redirections.

type client_error = [
  1. | `Bad_Request
  2. | `Unauthorized
  3. | `Payment_Required
  4. | `Forbidden
  5. | `Not_Found
  6. | `Method_Not_Allowed
  7. | `Not_Acceptable
  8. | `Proxy_Authentication_Required
  9. | `Request_Timeout
  10. | `Conflict
  11. | `Gone
  12. | `Length_Required
  13. | `Precondition_Failed
  14. | `Payload_Too_Large
  15. | `URI_Too_Long
  16. | `Unsupported_Media_Type
  17. | `Range_Not_Satisfiable
  18. | `Expectation_Failed
  19. | `Misdirected_Request
  20. | `Too_Early
  21. | `Upgrade_Required
  22. | `Precondition_Required
  23. | `Too_Many_Requests
  24. | `Request_Header_Fields_Too_Large
]

Client error (4xx) status codes. The most common are 400 Bad Request, 401 Unauthorized, 403 Forbidden, and, of course, 404 Not Found.

See MDN, and

type server_error = [
  1. | `Internal_Server_Error
  2. | `Not_Implemented
  3. | `Bad_Gateway
  4. | `Service_Unavailable
  5. | `Gateway_Timeout
  6. | `HTTP_Version_Not_Supported
]

Server error (5xx) status codes. See RFC 7231 §6.6 and MDN. The most common of these is 500 Internal Server Error.

Sum of all the status codes declared above.

type status = [
  1. | standard_status
  2. | `Status of int
]

Status codes, including codes directly represented as integers. See the types above for the full list and references.

val status_to_string : [< status ] -> string

Evaluates to a string representation of the given status. For example, `Not_Found and `Status 404 are both converted to "Not Found". Numbers are used for unknown status codes. For example, `Status 567 is converted to "567".

val status_to_reason : [< status ] -> string option

Converts known status codes to their string representations. Evaluates to None for unknown status codes.

val status_to_int : [< status ] -> int

Evaluates to the numeric value of the given status code.

val int_to_status : int -> status

Evaluates to the symbolic representation of the status code with the given number.

val is_informational : [< status ] -> bool

Evaluates to true if the given status is either from type Dream.informational, or is in the range `Status 100`Status 199.

val is_successful : [< status ] -> bool

Like Dream.is_informational, but for type Dream.successful and numeric codes 2xx.

val is_redirection : [< status ] -> bool

Like Dream.is_informational, but for type Dream.redirection and numeric codes 3xx.

val is_client_error : [< status ] -> bool

Like Dream.is_informational, but for type Dream.client_error and numeric codes 4xx.

val is_server_error : [< status ] -> bool

Like Dream.is_informational, but for type Dream.server_error and numeric codes 5xx.

val status_codes_equal : [< status ] -> [< status ] -> bool

Compares two status codes, such that equal codes are detected even if one is represented as a number. For example,

Dream.status_codes_equal `Not_Found (`Status 404) = true
val normalize_status : [< status ] -> status

Converts status codes represented as numbers to variants. Status codes generated by Dream are always normalized.

Dream.normalize_status (`Status 404) = `Not_Found

Requests

val client : request -> string

Client sending the request. For example, "127.0.0.1:56001".

val tls : request -> bool

Whether the request was sent over a TLS connection.

val method_ : request -> method_

Request method. For example, `GET.

val target : request -> string

Request target. For example, "/foo/bar".

val set_client : request -> string -> unit

Replaces the client. See Dream.client.

val set_method_ : request -> [< method_ ] -> unit

Replaces the method. See Dream.method_.

val query : request -> string -> string option

First query parameter with the given name. See RFC 3986 §3.4 and example w-query.

val queries : request -> string -> string list

All query parameters with the given name.

val all_queries : request -> (string * string) list

Entire query string as a name-value list.

Responses

val response : ?status:[< status ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> string -> response

Creates a new response with the given string as body. ~code and ~status are two ways to specify the status code, which is 200 OK by default. The headers are empty by default.

Note that browsers may interpret lack of a Content-Type: header as if its value were application/octet-stream or text/html; charset=us-ascii, which will prevent correct interpretation of UTF-8 strings. Either add a Content-Type: header using ~headers or Dream.add_header, or use a wrapper like Dream.html. The modern Content-Type: for HTML is text/html; charset=utf-8. See Dream.text_html.

val respond : ?status:[< status ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> string -> response promise

Same as Dream.response, but the new response is wrapped in a promise.

val html : ?status:[< status ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> string -> response promise

Same as Dream.respond, but adds Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8. See Dream.text_html.

As your Web app develops, consider adding Content-Security-Policy headers, as described in example w-content-security-policy. These headers are completely optional, but they can provide an extra layer of defense for a mature app.

val json : ?status:[< status ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> string -> response promise

Same as Dream.respond, but adds Content-Type: application/json. See Dream.application_json.

val redirect : ?status:[< redirection ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> request -> string -> response promise

Creates a new response. Adds a Location: header with the given string. The default status code is 303 See Other, for a temporary redirection. Use ~status:`Moved_Permanently or ~code:301 for a permanent redirection.

If you use ~code, be sure the number follows the pattern 3xx, or most browsers and other clients won't actually perform a redirect.

The request is used for retrieving the site prefix, if the string is an absolute path. Most applications don't have a site prefix.

val empty : ?headers:(string * string) list -> status -> response promise

Same as Dream.response with the empty string for a body.

val status : response -> status

Response status. For example, `OK.

val set_status : response -> status -> unit

Sets the response status.

Headers

val header : 'a message -> string -> string option

First header with the given name. Header names are case-insensitive. See RFC 7230 §3.2 and MDN.

val headers : 'a message -> string -> string list

All headers with the given name.

val all_headers : 'a message -> (string * string) list

Entire header set as name-value list.

val has_header : 'a message -> string -> bool

Whether the message has a header with the given name.

val add_header : 'a message -> string -> string -> unit

Appends a header with the given name and value. Does not remove any existing headers with the same name.

val drop_header : 'a message -> string -> unit

Removes all headers with the given name.

val set_header : 'a message -> string -> string -> unit

Equivalent to Dream.drop_header followed by Dream.add_header.

Cookies

Dream.set_cookie and Dream.cookie are designed for round-tripping secure cookies. The most secure settings applicable to the current server are inferred automatically. See example c-cookie [playground].

Dream.set_cookie response request "my.cookie" "foo"
Dream.cookie request "my.cookie"

The Dream.cookie call evaluates to Some "foo", but the actual cookie that is exchanged may look like:

__Host-my.cookie=AL7NLA8-so3e47uy0R5E2MpEQ0TtTWztdhq5pTEUT7KSFg; \
  Path=/; Secure; HttpOnly; SameSite=Strict

Dream.set_cookie has a large number of optional arguments for tweaking the inferred security settings. If you use them, pass the same arguments to Dream.cookie to automatically undo the result.

Appends a Set-Cookie: header to the response. Infers the most secure defaults from the request.

Dream.set_cookie request response "my.cookie" "value"

Use the Dream.set_secret middleware, or the Web app will not be able to decrypt cookies from prior starts.

See example c-cookie.

Most of the optional arguments are for overriding inferred defaults. ~expires and ~max_age are independently useful. In particular, to delete a cookie, use ~expires:0.

Dream.to_set_cookie is a “raw” version of this function that does not do any inference.

Deletes the given cookie.

This function works by calling Dream.set_cookie, and setting the cookie to expire in the past. Pass all the same optional values that you would pass to Dream.set_cookie to make sure that the same cookie is deleted.

First cookie with the given name. See example c-cookie.

Dream.cookie request "my.cookie"

Pass the same optional arguments as to Dream.set_cookie for the same cookie. This will allow Dream.cookie to infer the cookie name prefix, implementing a transparent cookie round trip with the most secure attributes applicable.

val all_cookies : request -> (string * string) list

All cookies, with raw names and values.

Bodies

val body : 'a message -> string promise

Retrieves the entire body. See example 6-echo.

val set_body : 'a message -> string -> unit

Replaces the body.

Streams

type stream

Gradual reading of request bodies or gradual writing of response bodies.

val body_stream : request -> stream

A stream that can be used to gradually read the request's body.

val stream : ?status:[< status ] -> ?code:int -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> ?close:bool -> (stream -> unit promise) -> response promise

Creates a response with a stream open for writing, and passes the stream to the callback when it is ready. See example j-stream.

fun request ->
  Dream.stream (fun stream ->
    Dream.write stream "foo")

Dream.stream automatically closes the stream when the callback returns or raises an exception. Pass ~close:false to suppress this behavior.

val read : stream -> string option promise

Retrieves a body chunk. See example j-stream.

val write : stream -> string -> unit promise

Streams out the string. The promise is fulfilled when the response can accept more writes.

val flush : stream -> unit promise

Flushes the stream's write buffer. Data is sent to the client.

val close : stream -> unit promise

Closes the stream.

Low-level streaming

Note: this part of the API is still a work in progress.

Byte arrays in the C heap. See Bigarray.Array1. This type is also found in several libraries installed by Dream, so their functions can be used with Dream.buffer:

val read_stream : stream -> data:(buffer -> int -> int -> bool -> bool -> unit) -> flush:(unit -> unit) -> ping:(buffer -> int -> int -> unit) -> pong:(buffer -> int -> int -> unit) -> close:(int -> unit) -> exn:(exn -> unit) -> unit

Waits for the next stream event, and calls:

  • ~data with an offset and length, if a buffer is received, ~ ~flush if a flush request is received,
  • ~ping if a ping is received (WebSockets only),
  • ~pong if a pong is received (WebSockets only),
  • ~close if the stream is closed, and
  • ~exn to report an exception.
val write_stream : stream -> buffer -> int -> int -> bool -> bool -> close:(int -> unit) -> exn:(exn -> unit) -> (unit -> unit) -> unit

Writes a buffer into the stream:

write_stream stream buffer offset length binary fin ~close ~exn callback

write_stream calls one of its three callback functions, depending on what happens with the write:

  • ~close if the stream is closed before the write completes,
  • ~exn to report an exception during or before the write,
  • callback to report that the write has succeeded and the stream can accept another write.

binary and fin are for WebSockets only. binary marks the stream as containing binary (non-text) data, and fin sets the FIN bit, indicating the end of a message. These two parameters are ignored by non-WebSocket streams.

val flush_stream : stream -> close:(int -> unit) -> exn:(exn -> unit) -> (unit -> unit) -> unit

Requests the stream be flushed. The callbacks have the same meaning as in write_stream.

val ping_stream : stream -> buffer -> int -> int -> close:(int -> unit) -> exn:(exn -> unit) -> (unit -> unit) -> unit

Sends a ping frame on the WebSocket stream. The buffer is typically empty, but may contain up to 125 bytes of data.

val pong_stream : stream -> buffer -> int -> int -> close:(int -> unit) -> exn:(exn -> unit) -> (unit -> unit) -> unit

Like ping_stream, but sends a pong event.

val close_stream : stream -> int -> unit

Closes the stream. The integer parameter is a WebSocket close code, and is ignored by non-WebSocket streams.

val abort_stream : stream -> exn -> unit

Aborts the stream, causing all readers and writers to receive the given exception.

WebSockets

type websocket

A WebSocket connection. See RFC 6455 and MDN.

val websocket : ?headers:(string * string) list -> ?close:bool -> (websocket -> unit promise) -> response promise

Creates a fresh 101 Switching Protocols response. Once this response is returned to Dream's HTTP layer, the callback is passed a new websocket, and the application can begin using it. See example k-websocket [playground].

let my_handler = fun request ->
  Dream.websocket (fun websocket ->
    let%lwt () = Dream.send websocket "Hello, world!");

Dream.websocket automatically closes the WebSocket when the callback returns or raises an exception. Pass ~close:false to suppress this behavior.

type text_or_binary = [
  1. | `Text
  2. | `Binary
]
type end_of_message = [
  1. | `End_of_message
  2. | `Continues
]
val send : ?text_or_binary:[< text_or_binary ] -> ?end_of_message:[< end_of_message ] -> websocket -> string -> unit promise

Sends a single WebSocket message. The WebSocket is ready another message when the promise resolves.

With ~text_or_binary:`Text, the default, the message is interpreted as a UTF-8 string. The client will receive it transcoded to JavaScript's UTF-16 representation.

With ~text_or_binary:`Binary, the message will be received unmodified, as either a Blob or an ArrayBuffer. See MDN, WebSocket.binaryType.

~end_of_message is ignored for now, as the WebSocket library underlying Dream does not support sending message fragments yet.

val receive : websocket -> string option promise

Receives a message. If the WebSocket is closed before a complete message arrives, the result is None.

val receive_fragment : websocket -> (string * text_or_binary * end_of_message) option promise

Receives a single fragment of a message, streaming it.

val close_websocket : ?code:int -> websocket -> unit promise

Closes the WebSocket. ~code is usually not necessary, but is needed for some protocols based on WebSockets. See RFC 6455 §7.4.

JSON

Dream presently recommends using Yojson. See also ppx_yojson_conv for generating JSON parsers and serializers for OCaml data types.

See example e-json.

val origin_referrer_check : middleware

CSRF protection for AJAX requests. Either the method must be `GET or `HEAD, or:

  • Origin: or Referer: must be present, and
  • their value must match Host:

Responds with 400 Bad Request if the check fails. See example e-json.

Implements the OWASP Verifying Origin With Standard Headers CSRF defense-in-depth technique, which is good enough for basic usage. Do not allow `GET or `HEAD requests to trigger important side effects if relying only on Dream.origin_referrer_check.

Future extensions to this function may use X-Forwarded-Host or host whitelists.

For more thorough protection, generate CSRF tokens with Dream.csrf_token, send them to the client (for instance, in <meta> tags of a single-page application), and require their presence in an X-CSRF-Token: header.

Forms

Dream.csrf_tag and Dream.form round-trip secure forms. Dream.csrf_tag is used inside a form template to generate a hidden field with a CSRF token:

<form method="POST" action="/">
  <%s! Dream.csrf_tag request %>
  <input name="my.field">
</form>

Dream.form recieves the form and checks the CSRF token:

match%lwt Dream.form request with
| `Ok ["my.field", value] -> (* ... *)
| _ -> Dream.empty `Bad_Request

See example d-form [playground].

type 'a form_result = [
  1. | `Ok of 'a
  2. | `Expired of 'a * float
  3. | `Wrong_session of 'a
  4. | `Invalid_token of 'a
  5. | `Missing_token of 'a
  6. | `Many_tokens of 'a
  7. | `Wrong_content_type
]

Form CSRF checking results, in order from least to most severe. See Dream.form and example d-form.

The first three constructors, `Ok, `Expired, and `Wrong_session can occur in regular usage.

The remaining constructors, `Invalid_token, `Missing_token, `Many_tokens, `Wrong_content_type correspond to bugs, suspicious activity, or tokens so old that decryption keys have since been rotated on the server.

val form : ?csrf:bool -> request -> (string * string) list form_result promise

Parses the request body as a form. Performs CSRF checks. Use Dream.csrf_tag in a form template to transparently generate forms that will pass these checks. See Templates and example d-form.

The call must be done under a session middleware, since each CSRF token is scoped to a session. See Sessions.

The returned form fields are sorted in alphabetical order for reliable pattern matching. This is because browsers can transmit the form fields in a different order from how they appear in the HTML:

match%lwt Dream.form request with
| `Ok ["email", email; "name", name] -> (* ... *)
| _ -> Dream.empty `Bad_Request

To recover from conditions like expired forms, add extra cases:

match%lwt Dream.form request with
| `Ok      ["email", email; "name", name] -> (* ... *)
| `Expired (["email", email; "name", name], _) -> (* ... *)
| _ -> Dream.empty `Bad_Request

It is recommended not to mutate state or send back sensitive data in the `Expired and `Wrong_session cases, as they may indicate an attack against a client.

The remaining cases, including unexpected field sets and the remaining constructors of Dream.form_result, usually indicate either bugs or attacks. It's usually fine to respond to all of them with 400 Bad Request.

Upload

type multipart_form = (string * (string option * string) list) list

Submitted file upload forms, <form enctype="multipart/form-data">. For example, if a form

<input name="files" type="file" multiple>
<input name="text">

is submitted with two files and a text value, it will be received by Dream.multipart as

[
  "files", [
    Some "file1.ext", "file1-content";
    Some "file2.ext", "file2-content";
  ];
  "text", [
    None, "text-value"
  ];
]

See example g-upload [playground] and RFC 7578.

Note that clients such as curl can send files with no filename (None), though most browsers seem to insert at least an empty filename (Some ""). Don't use use the presence of a filename to determine if the field value is a file. Use the field name and knowledge about the form instead.

If a file field has zero files when submitted, browsers send "field-name", [Some ""; ""]. Dream.multipart replaces this with "field-name", []. Use the advanced interface, Dream.upload, for the raw behavior.

Non-file fields always have one value, which might be the empty string.

See OWASP File Upload Cheat Sheet for security precautions for upload forms.

val multipart : ?csrf:bool -> request -> multipart_form form_result promise

Like Dream.form, but also reads files, and Content-Type: must be multipart/form-data. The CSRF token can be generated in a template with

<form method="POST" action="/" enctype="multipart/form-data">
  <%s! Dream.csrf_tag request %>

See section Templates, and example g-upload.

Note that, like Dream.form, this function sorts form fields by field name.

Dream.multipart reads entire files into memory, so it is only suitable for prototyping, or with yet-to-be-added file size and count limits. See Dream.upload below for a streaming version.

Streaming uploads

type part = string option * string option * (string * string) list

Upload form parts.

A value Some (name, filename, headers) received by Dream.upload begins a part in the stream. A part represents either a form field, or a single, complete file.

Note that, in the general case, filename and headers are not reliable. name is the form field name.

val upload : request -> part option promise

Retrieves the next upload part.

Upon getting Some (name, filename, headers) from this function, the user should call Dream.upload_part to stream chunks of the part's data, until that function returns None. The user should then call Dream.upload again. None from Dream.upload indicates that all parts have been received.

Dream.upload does not verify a CSRF token. There are several ways to add CSRF protection for an upload stream, including:

val upload_part : request -> string option promise

Retrieves a part chunk.

CSRF tokens

It's usually not necessary to handle CSRF tokens directly.

CSRF functions are exposed for creating custom schemes, and for defense-in-depth purposes. See OWASP Cross-Site Request Forgery Prevention Cheat Sheet.

type csrf_result = [
  1. | `Ok
  2. | `Expired of float
  3. | `Wrong_session
  4. | `Invalid
]

CSRF token verification outcomes.

`Expired and `Wrong_session can occur in normal usage, when a user's form or session expire, respectively. However, they can also indicate attacks, including stolen tokens, stolen tokens from other sessions, or attempts to use a token from an invalidated pre-session after login.

`Invalid indicates a token with a bad signature, a payload that was not generated by Dream, or other serious errors that cannot usually be triggered by normal users. `Invalid usually corresponds to bugs or attacks. `Invalid can also occur for very old tokens after old keys are no longer in use on the server.

val csrf_token : ?valid_for:float -> request -> string

Returns a fresh CSRF token bound to the given request's and signed with the secret given to Dream.set_secret. ~valid_for is the token's lifetime, in seconds. The default value is one hour (3600.). Dream uses signed tokens that are not stored server-side.

val verify_csrf_token : request -> string -> csrf_result promise

Checks that the CSRF token is valid for the request's session.

Templates

Dream includes a template preprocessor that allows interleaving OCaml and HTML in the same file:

let render message =
  <html>
    <body>
      <p>The message is <b><%s message %></b>!</p>
    </body>
  </html>

See examples 7-template [playground] and r-template [playground].

There is also a typed alternative, provided by an external library, TyXML. It is shown in example w-tyxml [playground]. If you are using Reason syntax, TyXML can be used with server-side JSX. See example r-tyxml [playground].

To use the built-in templates, add this to dune:

(rule
 (targets template.ml)
 (deps template.eml.ml)
 (action (run dream_eml %{deps} --workspace %{workspace_root})))

A template begins...

  • Implicitly on a line that starts with <, perhaps with leading whitespace. The line is part of the template.
  • Explicitly after a line that starts with %%. The %% line is not part of the template.

A %% line can also be used to set template options. The only option supported presently is %% response for streaming the template using Dream.write, to a response that is in scope. This is shown in examples w-template-stream and r-template-stream.

A template ends...

  • Implicitly, when the indentation level is less than that of the beginning line.
  • Explicitly on a line that starts with another %%.

Everything outside a template is ordinary OCaml code.

OCaml code can also be inserted into a template:

  • <%s code %> expects code to evaluate to a string, and inserts the string into the template.
  • A line that begins with % in the first column is OCaml code inside the template. Its value is not inserted into the template. Indeed, it can be fragments of control-flow constructs.
  • <% code %> is a variant of % that can be used for short snippets within template lines.

The s in <%s code %> is actually a Printf-style format specification. So, for example, one can print two hex digits using <%02X code %>.

<%s code %> automatically escapes the result of code using Dream.html_escape. This can be suppressed with !. <%s! code %> prints the result of code literally. Dream.html_escape is only safe for use in HTML text and quoted attribute values. It does not offer XSS protection in unquoted attribute values, CSS in <style> tags, or literal JavaScript in <script> tags.

val csrf_tag : request -> string

Generates an <input> tag with a CSRF token, suitable for use with Dream.form and Dream.multipart. For example, in a template,

<form method="POST" action="/">
  <%s! Dream.csrf_tag request %>
  <input name="my.field">
</form>

expands to

<form method="POST" action="/">
  <input name="dream.csrf" type="hidden" value="j8vjZ6...">
  <input name="my.field">
</form>

It is recommended to put the CSRF tag immediately after the starting <form> tag, to prevent certain kinds of DOM manipulation-based attacks.

Middleware

Interesting built-in middlewares are scattered throughout the various sections of these docs, according to where they are relevant. This section contains only generic middleware combinators.

val no_middleware : middleware

Does nothing but call its inner handler. Useful for disabling middleware conditionally during application startup:

if development then
  my_middleware
else
  Dream.no_middleware
val pipeline : middleware list -> middleware

Combines a sequence of middlewares into one, such that these two lines are equivalent:

Dream.pipeline [middleware_1; middleware_2] @@ handler
               middleware_1 @@ middleware_2 @@ handler

Stream transformers

When writing a middleware that transforms a request body stream, use server_stream to retrieve the server's view of the body stream. Create a new transformed stream (note: a function for doing this is not yet exposed), and replace the request's server stream by your transformed stream with set_server_stream.

When transforming a response stream, replace the client stream instead.

val client_stream : 'a message -> stream

The stream that clients interact with.

val server_stream : 'a message -> stream

The stream that servers interact with.

val set_client_stream : response -> stream -> unit

Replaces the stream that the client will use when it receives the response.

val set_server_stream : request -> stream -> unit

Replaces the stream that the server will use when it receives the request.

Routing

val router : route list -> handler

Creates a router. If none of the routes match the request, the router returns Dream.not_found. Route components starting with : are parameters, which can be retrieved with Dream.param. See example 3-router [playground].

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.router [
    Dream.get "/echo/:word" @@ fun request ->
      Dream.html (Dream.param "word" request);
  ]

Dream.scope is the main form of site composition. However, Dream also supports full subsites with **:

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.router [
    Dream.get "/static/**" @@ Dream.static "www/static";
  ]

** causes the request's path to be trimmed by the route prefix, and the request's prefix to be extended by it. It is mainly useful for “mounting” Dream.static as a subsite.

It can also be used as an escape hatch to convert a handler, which may include its own router, into a subsite. However, it is better to compose sites with routes and Dream.scope rather than opaque handlers and **, because, in the future, it may be possible to query routes for site structure metadata.

val get : string -> handler -> route

Forwards `GET requests for the given path to the handler.

Dream.get "/home" home_template
val post : string -> handler -> route
val put : string -> handler -> route
val delete : string -> handler -> route
val head : string -> handler -> route
val connect : string -> handler -> route
val options : string -> handler -> route
val trace : string -> handler -> route
val patch : string -> handler -> route

Like Dream.get, but for each of the other methods.

val any : string -> handler -> route

Like Dream.get, but does not check the method.

val not_found : handler

Always responds with 404 Not Found.

val param : request -> string -> string

Retrieves the path parameter. If it is missing, Dream.param raises an exception — the program is buggy.

val scope : string -> middleware list -> route list -> route

Groups routes under a common path prefix and middlewares. Middlewares are run only if a route matches.

Dream.scope "/api" [Dream.origin_referrer_check] [
  Dream.get  "/widget" get_widget_handler;
  Dream.post "/widget" set_widget_handler;
]

To prefix routes without applying any more middleware, use the empty list:

Dream.scope "/api" [] [
  (* ...routes... *)
]

To apply middleware without prefixing the routes, use "/":

Dream.scope "/" [Dream.origin_referrer_check] [
  (* ...routes... *)
]

Scopes can be nested.

val no_route : route

A dummy value of type route that is completely ignored by the router. Useful for disabling routes conditionally during application start:

Dream.router [
  if development then
    Dream.get "/graphiql" (Dream.graphiql "/graphql")
  else
    Dream.no_route;
]

Static files

val static : ?loader:(string -> string -> handler) -> string -> handler

Serves static files from a local directory. See example f-static.

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.router {
    Dream.get "/static/**" @@ Dream.static "www/static";
  }

Dream.static local_directory validates the path substituted for ** by checking that it is (1) relative, (2) does not contain parent directory references (..), and (3) does not contain separators (/) within components. If these checks fail, Dream.static responds with 404 Not Found.

If the checks succeed, Dream.static calls ~loader local_directory path request, where

  • local_directory is the same directory that was passed to Dream.static.
  • path is what was substituted for **.

The default loader is Dream.from_filesystem. See example w-one-binary for a loader that serves files from memory instead.

val from_filesystem : string -> string -> handler

Dream.from_filesystem local_directory path request responds with a file from the file system found at local_directory ^ "/" ^ path. If such a file does not exist, it responds with 404 Not Found.

To serve single files like sitemap.xml from the file system, use routes like

Dream.get "/sitemap.xml" (Dream.from_filesystem "assets" "sitemap.xml")

Dream.from_filesystem calls Dream.mime_lookup to guess a Content-Type: based on the file's extension.

val mime_lookup : string -> (string * string) list

Returns a Content-Type: header based on the given filename. This is mostly a wrapper around magic-mime. However, if the result is text/html, Dream.mime_lookup replaces it with text/html; charset=utf-8, so as to match Dream.html.

Sessions

Dream's default sessions contain string-to-string dictionaries for application data. For example, a logged-in session might have

[
  "user", "someone";
  "lang", "ut-OP";
]

Sessions also have three pieces of metadata:

There are several back ends, which decide where the sessions are stored:

All requests passing through session middleware are assigned a session, either an existing one, or a new empty session, known as a pre-session.

When a session is at least half-expired, it is automatically refreshed by the next request that it is assigned to.

See example b-session [playground].

val session_field : request -> string -> string option

Value from the request's session.

val set_session_field : request -> string -> string -> unit promise

Mutates a value in the request's session. The back end may commit the value to storage immediately, so this function returns a promise.

val all_session_fields : request -> (string * string) list

Full session dictionary.

val invalidate_session : request -> unit promise

Invalidates the request's session, replacing it with a fresh, empty pre-session.

Back ends

val memory_sessions : ?lifetime:float -> middleware

Stores sessions in server memory. Passes session IDs to clients in cookies. Session data is lost when the server process exits.

Stores sessions in encrypted cookies. Use Dream.set_secret to be able to decrypt cookies from previous server runs.

val sql_sessions : ?lifetime:float -> middleware

Stores sessions in an SQL database. Passes session IDs to clients in cookies. Must be used under Dream.sql_pool. Expects a table

CREATE TABLE dream_session (
  id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
  label TEXT NOT NULL,
  expires_at REAL NOT NULL,
  payload TEXT NOT NULL
)

Metadata

val session_id : request -> string

Secret value used to identify a client.

val session_label : request -> string

Tracing label suitable for printing to logs.

val session_expires_at : request -> float

Time at which the session will expire.

Flash messages

Flash messages are short strings which are stored in cookies during one request, to be made available for the next request. The typical use case is to provide form feedback across a redirect. See example w-flash [playground].

val flash : middleware

Implements storing flash messages in cookies.

val flash_messages : request -> (string * string) list

The request's flash messages.

val add_flash_message : request -> string -> string -> unit

Adds a flash message to the request.

GraphQL

Dream integrates ocaml-graphql-server. See examples:

If you are also writing a client in a flavor of OCaml, consider graphql-ppx for generating GraphQL queries.

See OWASP GraphQL Cheat Sheet for an overview of security topics related to GraphQL.

val graphql : (request -> 'a promise) -> 'a Graphql_lwt.Schema.schema -> handler

Dream.graphql make_context schema serves the GraphQL schema.

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.router [
    Dream.any "/graphql"  (Dream.graphql Lwt.return schema);
    Dream.get "/graphiql" (Dream.graphiql "/graphql");
  ]

make_context is called by Dream.graphql on every request to create the context, a value that is passed to each resolver from the schema. Passing Lwt.return, the same as

fun request -> Lwt.return request

causes the request itself to be used as the context:

field "name"
  ~doc:"User name"
  ~typ:(non_null string)
  ~args:Arg.[]
  ~resolve:(fun info user ->
    (* The context is in info.ctx *)
    user.name);
val graphiql : ?default_query:string -> string -> handler

Serves GraphiQL, a GraphQL query editor. The string gives the GraphQL endpoint that the editor will work with.

~default_query sets the query that appears upon the first visit to the endpoint. It is empty by default. The string is pasted literally into the content of a JavaScript string, between its quotes, so it must be escaped manually.

Dream's build of GraphiQL is found in the src/graphiql directory. If you have the need, you can use it as the starting point for your own customized GraphiQL.

Use Dream.no_route to disable GraphiQL conditionally outside of development.

SQL

Dream provides thin convenience functions over Caqti, an SQL interface with several back ends. See example h-sql [playground].

Dream installs the core caqti package, but you should also install at least one of:

They are separated because each has its own system library dependencies. Regardless of which you install, usage on the OCaml level is the same. The differences are in SQL syntax, and in external SQL server or file setup. See

For an introductory overview of database security, see OWASP Database Security Cheat Sheet.

val sql_pool : ?size:int -> string -> middleware

Makes an SQL connection pool available to its inner handler.

val sql : request -> (Caqti_lwt.connection -> 'a promise) -> 'a promise

Runs the callback with a connection from the SQL pool. See example h-sql.

let () =
  Dream.run
  @@ Dream.sql_pool "sqlite3:db.sqlite"
  @@ fun request ->
    Dream.sql request (fun db ->
      (* ... *) |> Dream.html)

Logging

Dream uses the Logs library internally, and integrates with all other libraries in your project that are also using it. Dream provides a slightly simplified interface to Logs.

All log output is written to stderr.

See OWASP Logging Cheat Sheet for a survey of security topics related to logging.

val logger : middleware

Logs and times requests. Time spent logging is included. See example 2-middleware [playground].

val log : ('a, Format.formatter, unit, unit) format4 -> 'a

Formats a message and logs it. Disregard the obfuscated type: the first argument is a format string as described in the standard library modules Printf and Format. The rest of the arguments are determined by the format string. See example a-log [playground].

Dream.log "Counter is now: %i" counter;
Dream.log "Client: %s" (Dream.client request);
type ('a, 'b) conditional_log = ((?request:request -> ('a, Format.formatter, unit, 'b) format4 -> 'a) -> 'b) -> unit

Loggers. This type is difficult to read — instead, see Dream.error for usage.

type log_level = [
  1. | `Error
  2. | `Warning
  3. | `Info
  4. | `Debug
]

Log levels, in order from most urgent to least.

val error : ('a, unit) conditional_log

Formats a message and writes it to the log at level `Error. The inner formatting function is called only if the current log level is `Error or higher. See example a-log.

Dream.error (fun log ->
  log ~request "My message, details: %s" details);

Pass the optional argument ~request to Dream.error to associate the message with a specific request. If not passed, Dream.error will try to guess the request. This usually works, but not always.

val warning : ('a, unit) conditional_log
val info : ('a, unit) conditional_log
val debug : ('a, unit) conditional_log

Like Dream.error, but for each of the other log levels.

type sub_log = {
  1. error : 'a. ('a, unit) conditional_log;
  2. warning : 'a. ('a, unit) conditional_log;
  3. info : 'a. ('a, unit) conditional_log;
  4. debug : 'a. ('a, unit) conditional_log;
}

Sub-logs. See Dream.sub_log right below.

val sub_log : ?level:[< log_level ] -> string -> sub_log

Creates a new sub-log with the given name. For example,

let log = Dream.sub_log "myapp.ajax"

...creates a logger that can be used like Dream.error and the other default loggers, but prefixes "myapp.ajax" to each log message.

log.error (fun log -> log ~request "Validation failed")

?level sets the log level threshold for this sub-log only. If not provided, falls back to the global log level set by Dream.initialize_log, unless Dream.set_log_level is used.

See README of example a-log.

val initialize_log : ?backtraces:bool -> ?async_exception_hook:bool -> ?level:[< log_level ] -> ?enable:bool -> unit -> unit

Initializes Dream's log with the given settings.

Dream initializes its logging back end lazily. This is so that if a Dream Web app is linked into a larger binary, it does not affect that binary's runtime unless the Web app runs.

This also allows the Web app to give logging settings explicitly by calling Dream.initialize_log early in program execution.

  • ~async_exception_hook:true, the default, causes Dream to set Lwt.async_exception_hook so as to forward all asynchronous exceptions to the logger, and not terminate the process.
  • ~level sets the log level threshold for the entire binary. The default is `Info.
  • ~enable:false disables Dream logging completely. This can help sanitize output during testing.
val set_log_level : string -> [< log_level ] -> unit

Set the log level threshold of the given sub-log.

Errors

Dream passes all errors to a single error handler, including...

  • exceptions and rejected promises from the application,
  • 4xx and 5xx responses from the application, and
  • lower-level errors, such as TLS handshake failures and malformed HTTP requests.

This allows customizing error handling in one place. Including low-level errors prevents leakage of strings in automatic responses not under the application's control, for full internationalization.

Use Dream.error_template and pass the result to Dream.run ~error_handler to customize the error template.

The default error handler logs errors and its template generates completely empty responses, to avoid internationalization issues. In addition, this conforms to the recommendations in OWASP Error Handling Cheat Sheet.

For full control over error handling, including logging, you can define an error_handler directly.

type error = {
  1. condition : [ `Response of response | `String of string | `Exn of exn ];
  2. layer : [ `App | `HTTP | `HTTP2 | `TLS | `WebSocket ];
  3. caused_by : [ `Server | `Client ];
  4. request : request option;
  5. response : response option;
  6. client : string option;
  7. severity : log_level;
  8. will_send_response : bool;
}

Detailed errors. Ignore this type if only using Dream.error_template.

  • condition describes the error itself.

    • `Response is a 4xx or 5xx response.
    • `String is an error that has only an English-language description.
    • `Exn is a caught exception.

    The default error handler logs `Exn and `Strings, but not `Response. `Response is assumed to be deliberate, and already logged by Dream.logger.

  • layer is which part of the Dream stack detected the error.

    • `App is for application exceptions, rejections, and 4xx, 5xx responses.
    • `HTTP and `HTTP2 are for low-level HTTP protocol errors.
    • `TLS is for low-level TLS errors.
    • `WebSocket is for WebSocket errors.

    The default error handler uses this to just prepend a prefix to its log messages.

  • caused_by is the party likely to have caused the error.

    • `Server errors suggest bugs, and correspond to 5xx responses.
    • `Client errors suggest user errors, network failure, buggy clients, and sometimes attacks. They correspond to 4xx responses.
  • request is a request associated with the error, if there is one.

    As examples, a request might not be available if the error is a failure to parse an HTTP/1.1 request at all, or failure to perform a TLS handshake.

    In case of a `WebSocket error, the request is the client's original request to establish the WebSocket connection.

  • response is a response that was either generated by the application, or suggested by the error context.

    In case of a `WebSocket error, the response is the application's original connection agreement response created by Dream.websocket.

    See Dream.error_template.

  • client is the client's address, if available. For example, 127.0.0.1:56001.
  • Suggested log level for the error. Usually `Error for `Server errors and `Warning for client errors.
  • will_send_response is true in error contexts where Dream will still send a response.

    The default handler calls the error template only if will_send_response is true.

type error_handler = error -> response option promise

Error handlers log errors and convert them into responses. Ignore if using Dream.error_template.

If the error has will_send_response = true, the error handler must return a response. Otherwise, it should return None.

If an error handler raises an exception or rejects, Dream logs this secondary failure. If the error context needs a response, Dream responds with an empty 500 Internal Server Error.

The behavior of Dream's default error handler is described at Dream.error.

val error_template : (error -> string -> response -> response promise) -> error_handler

Builds an error_handler from a template. See example 9-error [playground].

let my_error_handler =
  Dream.error_template (fun _error debug_dump suggested_response ->
    let body =
      match debug_dump with
      | Some string -> Dream.html_escape string
      | None -> Dream.status_to_string (Dream.status suggested_response)
    in

    suggested_response
    |> Dream.with_body body
    |> Lwt.return)

The error's context suggests a response. Usually, its only valid field is Dream.status.

  • If the error is an exception or rejection from the application, the status is usually 500 Internal Server Error.
  • In case of a 4xx or 5xx response from the application, that response itself is passed to the template.
  • For low-level errors, the status is typically either 400 Bad Request if the error was likely caused by the client, and 500 Internal Server Error if the error was likely caused by the server.

~debug_dump is a multi-line string containing an error description, stack trace, request state, and other information.

When an error occurs in a context where a response is not possible, the template is not called. In some contexts where the template is called, the status code is hardcoded, but the headers and body from the template's response will still be used.

If the template itself raises an exception or rejects, an empty 500 Internal Server Error will be sent in contexts that require a response.

val debug_error_handler : error_handler

An error_handler for showing extra information about requests and exceptions, for use during development.

val catch : (error -> response promise) -> middleware

Forwards exceptions, rejections, and 4xx, 5xx responses from the application to the error handler. See Errors.

Servers

val run : ?interface:string -> ?port:int -> ?stop:unit promise -> ?error_handler:error_handler -> ?tls:bool -> ?certificate_file:string -> ?key_file:string -> ?builtins:bool -> ?greeting:bool -> ?adjust_terminal:bool -> handler -> unit

Runs the Web application represented by the handler, by default at http://localhost:8080.

This function calls Lwt_main.run internally, so it is intended to be the main loop of a program. Dream.serve is a version that does not call Lwt_main.run.

  • ~interface is the network interface to listen on. Defaults to "localhost". Use "0.0.0.0" to listen on all interfaces.
  • ~port is the port to listen on. Defaults to 8080.
  • ~stop is a promise that causes the server to stop accepting new requests, and Dream.run to return. Requests that have already entered the Web application continue to be processed. The default value is a promise that never resolves. However, see also ~stop_on_input.
  • ~debug:true enables debug information in error templates. See Dream.error_template. The default is false, to prevent accidental deployment with debug output turned on. See example 8-debug [playground].
  • ~error_handler handles all errors, both from the application, and low-level errors. See Errors and example 9-error [playground].
  • ~tls:true enables TLS. You should also specify ~certificate_file and ~key_file. However, for development, Dream includes an insecure compiled-in localhost certificate. Enabling HTTPS also enables transparent upgrading of connections to HTTP/2. See example l-https.
  • ~certificate_file and ~key_file specify the certificate and key file, respectively, when using ~tls. They are not required for development, but are required for production. Dream will write a warning to the log if you are using ~tls, don't provide ~certificate_file and ~key_file, and ~interface is not "localhost".
  • ~builtins:false disables Built-in middleware.

The remaining arguments can be used to gradually disable convenience features of Dream.run. Once both are disabled, you may want to switch to using Dream.serve.

  • ~greeting:false disables the start-up log message that prints a link to the Web application.
  • ~adjust_terminal:false disables adjusting the terminal to disable echo and line wrapping.
val serve : ?interface:string -> ?port:int -> ?stop:unit promise -> ?error_handler:error_handler -> ?tls:bool -> ?certificate_file:string -> ?key_file:string -> ?builtins:bool -> handler -> unit promise

Like Dream.run, but returns a promise that does not resolve until the server stops listening, instead of calling Lwt_main.run.

This function is meant for integrating Dream applications into larger programs that have their own procedures for starting and stopping the Web server.

All arguments have the same meanings as they have in Dream.run.

Built-in middleware

Built-in middleware is Dream functionality that is implemented as middleware for maintainability reasons. It is necessary for Dream to work correctly. However, because it is middleware, Dream allows replacing it with Dream.run ~builtins:false. The middleware is applied in documented order, so

Dream.run my_app

is the same as

Dream.run ~builtins:false
@@ Dream.catch ~error_handler
@@ my_app

The middleware can be replaced with work-alikes, or omitted to use Dream as a fairly raw abstraction layer over low-level HTTP libraries.

val with_site_prefix : string -> middleware

Removes the given prefix from the path in each request, and adds it to the request prefix. Responds with 502 Bad Gateway if the path does not have the expected prefix.

This is for applications that are not running at the root (/) of their domain. The default is "/", for no prefix. After with_site_prefix, routing is done relative to the prefix, and the prefix is also necessary for emitting secure cookies.

Web formats

val html_escape : string -> string

Escapes a string so that it is suitable for use as text inside HTML elements and quoted attribute values. Implements OWASP Cross-Site Scripting Prevention Cheat Sheet RULE #1.

This function is not suitable for use with unquoted attributes, inline scripts, or inline CSS. See Security in example 7-template.

val to_base64url : string -> string

Converts the given string its base64url encoding, as specified in RFC 4648 §5, using a Web-safe alphabet and no padding. The resulting string can be used without escaping in URLs, form data, cookies, HTML content, attributes, and JavaScript code. For more options, see the Base64 library.

val from_base64url : string -> string option

Inverse of Dream.to_base64url.

val to_percent_encoded : ?international:bool -> string -> string

Percent-encodes a string for use inside a URL.

~international is true by default, and causes non-ASCII bytes to be preserved. This is suitable for display to users, including in <a href=""> attributes, which are displayed in browser status lines. See RFC 3987.

Use ~international:false for compatibility with legacy systems, or when constructing URL fragments from untrusted input that may not match the interface language(s) the user expects. In the latter case, similar letters from different writing scripts can be used to mislead users about the targets of links.

val from_percent_encoded : string -> string
val to_form_urlencoded : (string * string) list -> string

Inverse of Dream.from_form_urlencoded. Percent-encodes names and values.

val from_form_urlencoded : string -> (string * string) list

Converts form data or a query string from application/x-www-form-urlencoded format to a list of name-value pairs. See RFC 1866 §8.2.1. Reverses the percent-encoding of names and values.

Converts a Cookie: header value to key-value pairs. See RFC 6265bis §4.2.1. Does not apply any decoding to names and values.

Dream.to_set_cookie name value formats a Set-Cookie: header value. The optional arguments correspond to the attributes specified in RFC 6265bis §5.3, and are documented at Dream.set_cookie.

Does not apply any encoding to names and values. Be sure to encode so that names and values cannot contain `=`, `;`, or newline characters.

val split_target : string -> string * string

Splits a request target into a path and a query string.

val from_path : string -> string list

Splits the string into components on / and percent-decodes each component. Empty components are dropped, except for the last. This function does not distinguish between absolute and relative paths, and is only meant for routes and request targets. So,

  • Dream.from_path "" becomes [].
  • Dream.from_path "/" becomes [""].
  • Dream.from_path "abc" becomes ["abc"].
  • Dream.from_path "/abc" becomes ["abc"].
  • Dream.from_path "abc/" becomes ["abc"; ""].
  • Dream.from_path "a%2Fb" becomes ["a/b"].
  • Dream.from_path "a//b" becomes ["a"; "b"].

This function is not for use on full targets, because they may incldue query strings (?), and Dream.from_path does not treat them specially. Split query strings off with Dream.split_target first.

val to_path : ?relative:bool -> ?international:bool -> string list -> string

Percent-encodes a list of path components and joins them with / into a path. Empty components, except for the last, are removed. The path is absolute by default. Use ~relative:true for a relative path. Dream.to_path uses an IRI-friendly percent encoder, which preserves UTF-8 bytes in unencoded form. Use ~international:false to percent-encode those bytes as well, for legacy protocols that require ASCII URLs.

val drop_trailing_slash : string list -> string list

Changes the representation of path abc/ to the representation of abc by checking if the last element in the list is "", and, if it is, dropping it.

val text_html : string

The string "text/html; charset=utf-8" for Content-Type: headers.

val application_json : string

The string "application/json" for Content-Type: headers.

Cryptography

val set_secret : ?old_secrets:string list -> string -> middleware

Sets a key to be used for cryptographic operations, such as signing CSRF tokens and encrypting cookies.

If this middleware is not used, a random secret is generated the first time a secret is needed. The random secret persists for the lifetime of the process. This is useful for quick testing and prototyping, but it means that restarts of the server will not be able to verify tokens or decrypt cookies generated by earlier runs, and multiple servers in a load-balancing arrangement will not accept each others' tokens and cookies.

For production, generate a 256-bit key with

Dream.to_base64url (Dream.random 32)

~old_secrets is a list of previous secrets that will not be used for encryption or signing, but will still be tried for decryption and verification. This is intended for key rotation. A medium-sized Web app serving 1000 fresh encrypted cookies per second should rotate keys about once a year.

val random : int -> string

Generates the requested number of bytes using a cryptographically secure random number generator.

val encrypt : ?associated_data:string -> request -> string -> string

Signs and encrypts the string using the secret set by Dream.set_secret.

~associated_data is included when computing the signature, but not included in the ciphertext. It can be used like a “salt,” to force ciphertexts from different contexts to be distinct, and dependent on the context.

For example, when Dream.set_cookie encrypts cookie values, it internally passes the cookie names in the associated data. This makes it impossible (or impractical) to use the ciphertext from one cookie as the value of another. The associated data will not match, and the value will be recognized as invalid.

The cipher presently used by Dream is AEAD_AES_256_GCM. It will be replaced by AEAD_AES_256_GCM_SIV as soon as the latter is available. The upgrade will be transparent, because Dream includes a cipher rotation scheme.

The cipher is suitable for encrypted transmissions and storing data other than credentials. For password or other credential storage, see package argon2. See OWASP Cryptographic Storage Cheat Sheet and OWASP Password Storage Cheat Sheet.

val decrypt : ?associated_data:string -> request -> string -> string option

Reverses Dream.encrypt.

To support secret rotation, this function first tries to decrypt the string using the main secret set by Dream.set_secret, and then each of the old secrets passed to Dream.set_secret in ~old_secrets.

Variables

Dream supports user-defined per-message variables for use by middlewares.

type 'a field

Per-message variable.

val new_field : ?name:string -> ?show_value:('a -> string) -> unit -> 'a field

Declares a variable of type 'a in all messages. The variable is initially unset in each message. The optional ~name and ~show_value are used by Dream.run ~debug to show the variable in debug dumps.

val field : 'b message -> 'a field -> 'a option

Retrieves the value of the per-message variable.

val set_field : 'b message -> 'a field -> 'a -> unit

Sets the per-message variable to the value.

Testing

val request : ?method_:[< method_ ] -> ?target:string -> ?headers:(string * string) list -> string -> request

Dream.request body creates a fresh request with the given body for testing. The optional arguments set the corresponding request fields.

val test : ?prefix:string -> handler -> request -> response

Dream.test handler runs a handler the same way the HTTP server (Dream.run) would — assigning it a request id and noting the site root prefix, which is used by routers. Dream.test calls Lwt_main.run internally to await the response, which is why the response returned from the test is not wrapped in a promise. If you don't need these facilities, you can test handler by calling it directly with a request.

val sort_headers : (string * string) list -> (string * string) list

Sorts headers by name. Headers with the same name are not sorted by value or otherwise reordered, because order is significant for some headers. See RFC 7230 §3.2.2 on header order. This function can help sanitize output before comparison.

val echo : handler

Responds with the request body.

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