pathSuffixTest
Description
Checks whether the unmatched path of the RequestContext
RequestContext
has a suffix matched by the given PathMatcher
. Potentially extracts one or more values (depending on the type of the argument) but doesn’t consume its match from the unmatched path.
This directive is very similar to the pathSuffix directive with the one difference that the path suffix it matched (if it matched) is not consumed. The unmatched path of the RequestContext
RequestContext
is therefore left as is even in the case that the directive successfully matched and the request is passed on to its inner route.
As opposed to pathPrefixTest this directive matches and consumes the unmatched path from the right, i.e. the end.
For efficiency reasons, the given PathMatcher
must match the desired suffix in reversed-segment order, i.e. pathSuffixTest("baz" / "bar")
would match /foo/bar/baz
! The order within a segment match is not reversed.
Depending on the type of its PathMatcher
argument the pathSuffixTest
directive extracts zero or more values from the URI. If the match fails the request is rejected with an empty rejection set.
Example
- Scala
-
source
val completeWithUnmatchedPath = extractUnmatchedPath { p => complete(p.toString) } val route = concat( pathSuffixTest(Slash) { complete("slashed") }, complete("unslashed")) // tests: Get("/foo/") ~> route ~> check { responseAs[String] shouldEqual "slashed" } Get("/foo") ~> route ~> check { responseAs[String] shouldEqual "unslashed" }
- Java
-
source
import static org.apache.pekko.http.javadsl.server.Directives.complete; import static org.apache.pekko.http.javadsl.server.Directives.pathSuffixTest; final Route route = concat(pathSuffixTest(slash(), () -> complete("slashed")), complete("unslashed")); // tests: testRoute(route).run(HttpRequest.GET("/foo/")).assertEntity("slashed"); testRoute(route).run(HttpRequest.GET("/foo")).assertEntity("unslashed");