messua
A collection of convenience types and functions that might amount to a small
web framework sitting atop mist.

Messua is a genus of spider,
which apparently was itself named after a character from The Jungle
Book.
Please do not take this as any sort of endorsement of any orientalist or
colonialist themes that may appear in Kipling’s work; I just wanted a
name vaguely related to webs that probably wouldn’t already be taken.
Introduction
When a piece of technology focuses on a particular solution or style in
the face of many alternatives, it is in fashion these days to refer to that
piece of technology as being “opinionated”, particularly when describing
a programming language, framework, or library. I wouldn’t say that Messua
is opinionated so much as I’d say it sees the point of doing things a
certain way, and is willing to give that a go. It is based largely on a
couple of convenient patterns I have found myself using when implementing
backends in Rust and Gleam:
- A common
Result(Response, Error) type returned by handlers, for which
the Error variant gets automatically converted to a response.
- A common
Request type (injected with some server state),
passed “down” through layers of middleware, with the aforementioned
Result type bubbling back up.
- Functions that couple this
Result type with Gleam’s use sugar to
mimic early returns of Error variants that then get handled with a
minimum of ceremony, permitting focus on business logic and an
uncluttered happy path.
Approach
Messua provides a sort of mist harness into which it hooks your handler
function (and any Layers you might have on top of it). It provides your
stack with an Incoming (request + server state handle) and expects it to
return an Outgoing (which is just an alias for a Result whose Ok
variant is a gleam/http/response.Response, and whose Error variant
is messua/fail.Failure, which gets turned into an actual HTTP response
by the harness). It then provides you with a slew of convenience functions
for extracting parts of requests, routing, and generating responses.
Messua also provides wrappers around some key things from mist and
gleam_http; the idea here is that it’s easier and more convenient to
import and use a single package, rather than having to mess around in the
guts of three separate packages, wondering which one has the functionality
you want.
Examples
There is not an examples/ directory yet (like Version 1 had), but one is
planned. Here’s the simplest possible thing:
import messua
import messua/minc.{Incoming}
import messua/mout.{Outgoing}
fn handler(_req: Incoming(Nil)) -> Outgoing {
mout.ok()
|> mout.with_string_body("Hello, Web!\n")
}
pub fn main() {
messua.default()
|> messua.start(handler)
}
And now a gleam run will have you listening on local port 8080:
$ curl localhost:8080
Hello, Web!