Web/Frameworks: Difference between revisions
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! Package & repositories | ! Package & repositories | ||
| [http://hackage.haskell.org/package/Spock Hackage] - [https://github.com/agrafix/Spock Git] | | [http://hackage.haskell.org/package/Spock Hackage] - [https://github.com/agrafix/Spock Git] | ||
|} | |||
== Wheb == | |||
Wheb's a WAI framework for building robust, high-concurrency web applications simply and effectively. Its primary goal is to extend the functionality of the base WAI library and to provide an easy entry point into Haskell web servers. The only prerequisite is "Learn you a Haskell" or another introductory Haskell course. It comes with lots of examples on the github page. | |||
* The core datatype will let you build anything from a read-only server to a fully interactive web application with basic Haskell. | |||
* Minimal boilerplate to start your application. | |||
* Session, Auth and Cache interfaces are built in. Just drop in a backend. | |||
* Choice between type-safe web-routes or simpler pattern-based named-routes. | |||
* Easy to use for REST APIs | |||
* WebSockets | |||
* Fully database and template agnostic | |||
* Easy handler debugging. | |||
* Middleware | |||
Wheb makes it easy to write plugins. Plugins can add routes, middleware, settings and even handle resource cleanup on server shutdown. Named routes allow plugins to dynamically generate their routes at runtime based on settings. | |||
* Sessions | |||
* Auth | |||
* Cache | |||
* [http://hackage.haskell.org/package/wheb-mongo Wheb-Mongo] | |||
* [http://hackage.haskell.org/package/wheb-redis Wheb-Redis] | |||
* [http://hackage.haskell.org/package/wheb-strapped Wheb-Strapped] | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! License: | |||
| BSD3 | |||
|- | |||
! Author: | |||
| Kyle Hanson | |||
|- | |||
! Maintainer: | |||
| Kyle Hanson | |||
|- | |||
! Home page: | |||
| https://github.com/hansonkd/Wheb-Framework | |||
|- | |||
! Documentation: | |||
| http://hackage.haskell.org/package/Wheb | |||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 14:27, 3 September 2014
Content from Web should be merged here.
Below is a list of known to be active Haskell web frameworks. Rather than one framework to rule them all, Haskell provides several options. You can view the Web/Deploy page to get an idea of how you might deploy an application written in some of these frameworks.
See also: there are also many inactive web frameworks to draw inspiration from
Happstack
Happstack is a Haskell web framework. Happstack is designed so that developers can prototype quickly, deploy painlessly, scale massively, operate reliably, and change easily. It supports GNU/Linux, OS X, FreeBSD, and Windows environments.
License | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Happstack team, HAppS LLC |
Maintainer: | Happstack team <happs@googlegroups.com> |
Home page: | http://happstack.com/ |
Documentation: | http://www.happstack.com/c/view-page-slug/3/documentation/ |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Darcs |
Happstack is a complete web framework. The main component is happstack-server: an integrated HTTP server, routing combinators, fileserving, etc. In addition, a number of packages that used to be coupled to Happstack have now been decoupled from it, but remain promoted and documented for use with Happstack:
- safecopy: datatype serialization and migration support
- acid-state: a powerful NoSQL ACID storage system with native support for Haskell types
It also includes integration with many 3rd party libraries including:
- templating: Blaze HTML, Hamlet, HSP, HStringTemplate, Heist, and more
- forms: reform
- routing: web-routes type-safe urls and routing
- databases: can be used with most Database interfaces with no special support required
See the Happstack Home Page for more information and to learn how to get support via IRC and mailing lists.
Snap
Snap is a simple web development framework for unix systems, written in the Haskell programming language.
Snap is well-documented and has a test suite with a high level of code coverage, but it is early-stage software with still-evolving interfaces. Snap is therefore likely to be most appropriate for early adopters and potential contributors.
- A fast HTTP server library with an optional high-concurrency backend using the libev event loop library
- A sensible and clean monad for web programming
- An XML-based templating system for generating HTML
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | James Sanders, Gregory Collins, Doug Beardsley |
Maintainer: | snap@snapframework.com |
Home page: | http://snapframework.com/ |
Documentation: | http://snapframework.com/docs |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Git |
Yesod
Yesod is designed for RESTful, type-safe, performant web apps. By leveraging quasi-quotation for the more boilerplate tasks, we get concise web apps with high levels of type safety. Its Hamlet templates are compile-time checked for correctness, and the controller (web-routes-quasi) uses type-safe URLs to make certain you are only generating valid URLs. It loosely follows Model/View/Controller principles.
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> |
Maintainer: | Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> |
Announcement: | http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-cafe/2010-March/074271.html |
Home page: | http://www.yesodweb.com/ |
Documentation: | http://www.yesodweb.com/book |
Screencast: | http://www.yesodweb.com/page/screencasts |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Github |
Yesod is a full-featured web framework. It takes a modular approach to development, so many parts of the framework such as Hamlet and Persistent are available as standalone packages. However, put together, Yesod provides you with solutions for templating, routing, persistence, sessions, JSON, authentication/authorization, and more. Yesod's major guiding principle is type safety: if your application compiles, it works.
Yesod is very well documented through a combination of haddocks and the Yesod book.
Yesod is built on WAI, or the Web Application Interface. This is similar to WSGI in Python or Rack in Ruby. It provides a single interface that all applications can target and work on multiple backends. Backends exist for CGI, FastCGI, SCGI, development server (auto-recompile) and even a Webkit-powered desktop version.
But the premier backend is Warp: a very simple web server which, at the time of writing, is the fastest Haskell has to offer. You can read more in its release announcement and see some followup benchmarks. Warp is already powering Yesod; some other major players that are planning a move are Hoogle and Happstack.
You can see a list of Yesod-powered sites and packages, or check out the source code for Haskellers. Most discussions for Yesod take place on the yesodweb list, so feel free to join in and ask any questions you have, the Yesod community is very beginner-friendly.
miku
A simple library for fast web prototyping in Haskell, inspired by Ruby's Rack and Sinatra.
License | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author | Wang, Jinjing |
Maintainer | Wang, Jinjing <nfjinjing@gmail.com> |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Github |
Lemmachine
Lemmachine is a REST'ful web framework that makes it easy to get HTTP right by exposing users to overridable hooks with sane defaults. The main architecture is a copy of Erlang-based Webmachine, which is currently the best documentation reference (for hooks & general design).
Lemmachine stands out from the dynamically typed Webmachine by being written in dependently typed Agda. The goal of the project is to show the advantages gained from compositional testing by taking advantage of proofs being inherently compositional. See proofs for examples of universally quantified proofs (tests over all possible input values) written against the default resource, which does not override any hooks.
Author | Larry Diehl |
---|---|
Packages & repositories | Github |
mohws
A web server with a module system and support for CGI. Based on Simon Marlow's original Haskell Web Server.
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Copyright: | Simon Marlow, Bjorn Bringert |
Author: | Simon Marlow, Bjorn Bringert <bjorn@bringert.net> |
Maintainer: | Henning Thielemann <webserver@henning-thielemann.de> |
Packages & repositories | Hackage - Darcs |
Salvia
Salvia is a feature rich modular web server and web application framework that can be used to write dynamic websites in Haskell. From the lower level protocol code up to the high level application code, everything is written as a Salvia handler. This approach makes the server extremely extensible. To see a demo of a Salvia website, please see the salvia-demo package.
All the low level protocol code can be found in the salvia-protocol package, which exposes the datatypes, parsers and pretty-printers for the URI, HTTP, Cookie and MIME protocols.
This Salvia package itself can be separated into three different parts: the interface, the handlers and the implementation. The interface module defines a number of type classes that the user can build the web application against. Reading the request object, writing to the response, or gaining direct access to the socket, all of these actions are reflected using one type class aspect in the interface. The handlers are self contained modules that implement a single aspect of the Salvia web server. The handlers expose their interface requirements in their type context. Salvia can have multiple implementations which can be switched by using different instances for the interface type classes. This package has only one implementation, a simple accepting socket loop server. The salvia-extras package has two additional implementations. Keeping a clear distinction between the abstract server aspects and the actual implementation makes it very easy to migrate existing web application to different back-ends.
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Sebastiaan Visser |
Maintainer: | sfvisser@cs.uu.nl |
Announcement: | http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-cafe/2010-March/074870.html |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Git |
Scotty
A Haskell web framework inspired by Ruby's Sinatra, using WAI and Warp. Sinatra + Warp = Scotty.
Scotty is the cheap and cheerful way to write RESTful, declarative web applications.
- A page is as simple as defining the verb, url pattern, and Text content.
- It is template-language agnostic. Anything that returns a Text value will do.
- Conforms to WAI Application interface.
- Uses very fast Warp webserver by default.
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Andrew Farmer |
Maintainer: | Andrew Farmer |
Home page: | https://github.com/scotty-web/scotty |
Documentation: | http://hackage.haskell.org/package/scotty |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Git |
MFlow
A Haskell application server ++ Web Framework. MFlow is a shorthand for "Message Flow". It is a continuation-based framework without continuations. Instead of other continuation based frameworks like Ocsigen(Ocaml), Coccoon (javascript) or Seaside (Smalltalk), it is based on a backtracking monad that keep the synchornization of the execution state with the user navigation. Since the discontinuation of WASH, MFlow is the only continuation-style framework written in Haskell to date.
Unlike real continuations, the state in MFlow applications is pretty small and serializable, so it is horizontally scalable. The navigation in a MFlow application is safe at compilation time, since even the internal HTML links are checked by the compiler. The code is very short and has little configuration. Routes in MFlow are defined and typechecked in pure haskell code, just like in the case of the menus in a console application. Each page has its own URL so it is RESTful to a certain extent. It is planned to have REST-style URLs in the future (done in the head of the github repo).
It uses standard Haskell web libraries and/or techniques: WAI, Warp, Blaze HTML, HSP. Its core is server and rendering independent. A kind of extended formlets are used to create self contained components, called widgets. They have formatting, Ajax, and server code. They can be composed to create the user interface.
A MFlow application resembles a console application. This is an example of a complete application with three pages. It ask for two numbers and return the sum. At any time, even if the user press the back button, the state is synchronized with the navigation.
module Main where import MFlow.Wai.Blaze.Html.All
main= do addMessageFlows [("sum", transient . runFlow $ sumIt )] wait $ run 8081 waiMessageFlow
sumIt= do setHeader $ html . body n1 <- ask $ p << "give me the first number" ++> getInt Nothing <** submitButton "send"
n2 <- ask $ p << "give me the second number" ++> getInt Nothing <** submitButton "send"
ask $ p << ("the result is " ++ show (n1 + n2)) ++> wlink () << p << "click here"
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Alberto Gómez Corona |
Maintainer: | Alberto Gómez Corona |
Home page: | http://haskell-web.blogspot.com |
Documentation: | http://hackage.haskell.org/package/MFlow
MFlow paper |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Git |
Spock
Another Haskell web framework for rapid development: This toolbox provides everything you need to get a quick start into web hacking with haskell: routing, middleware, json, blaze, sessions, cookies, database helper, csrf-protection, global state
- Simple API
- Adds lots of useful features for rapid web development
- Fast tree based routing
- Plugins like Spock-auth and Spock-worker
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Alexander Thiemann |
Maintainer: | Alexander Thiemann |
Home page: | https://github.com/agrafix/Spock |
Documentation: | http://hackage.haskell.org/package/Spock |
Package & repositories | Hackage - Git |
Wheb
Wheb's a WAI framework for building robust, high-concurrency web applications simply and effectively. Its primary goal is to extend the functionality of the base WAI library and to provide an easy entry point into Haskell web servers. The only prerequisite is "Learn you a Haskell" or another introductory Haskell course. It comes with lots of examples on the github page.
- The core datatype will let you build anything from a read-only server to a fully interactive web application with basic Haskell.
- Minimal boilerplate to start your application.
- Session, Auth and Cache interfaces are built in. Just drop in a backend.
- Choice between type-safe web-routes or simpler pattern-based named-routes.
- Easy to use for REST APIs
- WebSockets
- Fully database and template agnostic
- Easy handler debugging.
- Middleware
Wheb makes it easy to write plugins. Plugins can add routes, middleware, settings and even handle resource cleanup on server shutdown. Named routes allow plugins to dynamically generate their routes at runtime based on settings.
- Sessions
- Auth
- Cache
- Wheb-Mongo
- Wheb-Redis
- Wheb-Strapped
License: | BSD3 |
---|---|
Author: | Kyle Hanson |
Maintainer: | Kyle Hanson |
Home page: | https://github.com/hansonkd/Wheb-Framework |
Documentation: | http://hackage.haskell.org/package/Wheb |