route
Evaluates a group of directives literally and as a single unit.
Directives contained in a route block will not be reordered internally. Only HTTP handler directives (directives which add handlers or middleware to the chain) can be used in a route block.
This directive is a special case in that its subdirectives are also regular directives.
Syntax
route [<matcher>] { <directives...> }
- <directives...> is a list of directives or directive blocks, one per line, just like outside of a route block; except these directives will not be reordered. Only HTTP handler directives can be used.
Utility
The route
directive is helpful in certain advanced use cases or edge cases to take absolute control over parts of the HTTP handler chain.
Because the order of HTTP middleware evaluation is significant, the Caddyfile will normally reorder directives after parsing to make the Caddyfile easier to use; you don't have to worry about what order you type things.
While the built-in order is compatible with most sites, sometimes you need to take manual control over the order, either for the whole site or just a part of it. That's what the route
directive is for.
To illustrate, consider the case of two terminating handlers: redir
and file_server
. Both write the response to the client and do not call the next handler in the chain, so only one of these will be executed for a certain request. Which comes first? Normally, redir
is executed before file_server
because usually you would want to issue a redirect only in specific cases and serve files in the general case.
However, there may be occasions where the second directive (redir
) has a more specific matcher than the second (file_server
). In other words, you want to redirect in the general case, and serve only a specific file.
So you might try a Caddyfile like this (but this will not work as expected!):
example.com file_server /specific.html redir https://anothersite.com{uri}
The problem is that, internally, redir
comes before file_server
, but in this case the matcher for redir
is a superset of the matcher for file_server
(*
is a superset of /specific.html
).
Fortunately, the solution is easy: just wrap those two directives in a route
block:
example.com route { file_server /specific.html redir https://anothersite.com{uri} }
And now file_server
will be chained in before redir
because the order is taken literally.
Similar directives
There are other directives that can wrap HTTP handler directives, but each has its use depending on the behavior you want to convey:
handle
wraps other directives likeroute
does, but with two distinctions: 1) handle blocks are mutually exclusive to each other, and 2) directives with a handle are [re-ordered](directive order normally.handle_path
does the same ashandle
, but it strips a prefix from the request before running its handlers.handle_errors
is likehandle
, but is only invoked when Caddy encounters an error during request handling.
Examples
Strip /api
prefix from request path just before proxying all API requests to a backend:
route /api/* { uri strip_prefix /api reverse_proxy localhost:9000 }