.. _middleware: Middleware ========== Middleware components provide a way to execute logic before the framework routes each request, after each request is routed but before the target responder is called, or just before the response is returned for each request. Components are registered with the `middleware` kwarg when instantiating Falcon's :ref:`API class `. .. Note:: Unlike hooks, middleware methods apply globally to the entire API. Falcon's middleware interface is defined as follows: .. code:: python class ExampleComponent(object): def process_request(self, req, resp): """Process the request before routing it. Args: req: Request object that will eventually be routed to an on_* responder method. resp: Response object that will be routed to the on_* responder. """ def process_resource(self, req, resp, resource, params): """Process the request after routing. Note: This method is only called when the request matches a route to a resource. Args: req: Request object that will be passed to the routed responder. resp: Response object that will be passed to the responder. resource: Resource object to which the request was routed. params: A dict-like object representing any additional params derived from the route's URI template fields, that will be passed to the resource's responder method as keyword arguments. """ def process_response(self, req, resp, resource, req_succeeded): """Post-processing of the response (after routing). Args: req: Request object. resp: Response object. resource: Resource object to which the request was routed. May be None if no route was found for the request. req_succeeded: True if no exceptions were raised while the framework processed and routed the request; otherwise False. """ .. Tip:: Because *process_request* executes before routing has occurred, if a component modifies ``req.path`` in its *process_request* method, the framework will use the modified value to route the request. .. Tip:: The *process_resource* method is only called when the request matches a route to a resource. To take action when a route is not found, a :py:meth:`sink ` may be used instead. Each component's *process_request*, *process_resource*, and *process_response* methods are executed hierarchically, as a stack, following the ordering of the list passed via the `middleware` kwarg of :ref:`falcon.API`. For example, if a list of middleware objects are passed as ``[mob1, mob2, mob3]``, the order of execution is as follows:: mob1.process_request mob2.process_request mob3.process_request mob1.process_resource mob2.process_resource mob3.process_resource mob3.process_response mob2.process_response mob1.process_response Note that each component need not implement all `process_*` methods; in the case that one of the three methods is missing, it is treated as a noop in the stack. For example, if ``mob2`` did not implement *process_request* and ``mob3`` did not implement *process_response*, the execution order would look like this:: mob1.process_request _ mob3.process_request mob1.process_resource mob2.process_resource mob3.process_resource _ mob2.process_response mob1.process_response If one of the *process_request* middleware methods raises an error, it will be processed according to the error type. If the type matches a registered error handler, that handler will be invoked and then the framework will begin to unwind the stack, skipping any lower layers. The error handler may itself raise an instance of HTTPError, in which case the framework will use the latter exception to update the *resp* object. Regardless, the framework will continue unwinding the middleware stack. For example, if *mob2.process_request* were to raise an error, the framework would execute the stack as follows:: mob1.process_request mob2.process_request mob2.process_response mob1.process_response Finally, if one of the *process_response* methods raises an error, or the routed on_* responder method itself raises an error, the exception will be handled in a similar manner as above. Then, the framework will execute any remaining middleware on the stack.