The "Earl Middleware Layer" refers to a suite of APIs that enable the composition of code into a series of operations performed against a url during a crawl.
Earl's Middleware pattern is strongly inlfuenced by ASP.NET Core's Middleware pattern, it is strongly recommended to review ASP.NET Core's Middleware documentation
Middleware accepts a CrawlUrlResult and a CrawlUrlDelegate, the former of which represents the current state of the crawl against the current url; the latter being a reference to the next operation in the pipeline. This behaviour is captured in the ICrawlerMiddleware and is analgous to ASP.NET Core's IMiddleware contract.
Middleware is configured for a crawl using the Use extension methods, which allow 3 means of implementing middlware:
- Typed Middleware
- Typed Middleware with Options
- Delegate Middleware
"Typed Middleware" refers to a class that implements the ICrawlerMiddleware contract, for example:
public class CustomMiddleware : ICrawlerMiddleware
{
public Task InvokeAsync( CrawlUrlContext context, CrawlUrlDelegate next )
{
Console.WriteLine( $"Executing typed middleware while crawling {context.Url}" );
return next( context );
}
}
// ...
var options = CrawlerOptionsBuilder.CreateDefault()
.Use<CustomMiddleware>()
.Build();
await crawler.CrawlAsync( new Uri(...), options );If you wish to allow consumers of Middleware to specify an object to configure the functionality of the Middleware, the ICrawlerMiddleware<TOptions> contract may be used.
When using the ICrawlerMiddleware<TOptions> contract, specify a constructor dependency on an instance of TOptions, and invoke the Use<TMiddleware, TOptions>( this ICrawlerOptionsBuilder builder, TOptions options ) extension method to configure the desired TOptions for a crawl:
public record CustomMiddlewareOptions( string Value );
public class CustomMiddleware : ICrawlerMiddleware<CustomMiddlewareOptions>
{
private readonly CustomMiddlewareOptions options;
// Accept options as ctor dependency
public CustomMiddleware( CustomMiddlewareOptions options )
=> this.options = options;
public Task InvokeAsync( CrawlUrlContext context, CrawlUrlDelegate next )
{
Console.WriteLine( $"Executing typed middleware with option '{options.Value}' while crawling {context.Url}" );
return next( context );
}
}
// ...
var options = CrawlerOptionsBuilder.CreateDefault()
.Use<CustomMiddleware, CustomMiddlewareOptions>( new( "Hello, World!" ) )
.Build();
await crawler.CrawlAsync( new Uri(...), options );The final method of implementing a Middleware is a "Delegate Middleware", which allows an inline delegate method to be used:
var options = CrawlerOptionsBuilder.CreateDefault()
.Use(
( CrawlUrlContext context, CrawlUrlDelegate next ) =>
{
Console.WriteLine( $"Executing delegate middleware while crawling {context.Url}" );
return next( context );
}
)
.Build();
await crawler.CrawlAsync( new Uri(...), options );Delegate Middleware is especially useful for debugging & testing other Middleware in the crawl.