--- id: hooks title: 🎣 Hooks description: >- Hooks are used to manipulate the request/response process of the Fiber client. sidebar_position: 4 --- Hooks allow you to intercept and modify the request or response flow of the Fiber client. They are particularly useful for: - Changing request parameters (e.g., URL, headers) before sending the request. - Logging request and response details. - Integrating complex tracing or monitoring tools. - Handling authentication, retries, or other custom logic. There are two kinds of hooks: ## Request Hooks **Request hooks** are functions executed before the HTTP request is sent. They follow the signature: ```go type RequestHook func(*Client, *Request) error ``` A request hook receives both the `Client` and the `Request` objects, allowing you to modify the request before it leaves your application. For example, you could: - Change the host URL. - Log request details (method, URL, headers). - Add or modify headers or query parameters. - Intercept and apply custom authentication logic. **Example:** ```go type Repository struct { Name string `json:"name"` FullName string `json:"full_name"` Description string `json:"description"` Homepage string `json:"homepage"` Owner struct { Login string `json:"login"` } `json:"owner"` } func main() { cc := client.New() // Add a request hook that modifies the request URL before sending. cc.AddRequestHook(func(c *client.Client, r *client.Request) error { r.SetURL("https://api.github.com/" + r.URL()) return nil }) resp, err := cc.Get("repos/gofiber/fiber") if err != nil { panic(err) } var repo Repository if err := resp.JSON(&repo); err != nil { panic(err) } fmt.Printf("Status code: %d\n", resp.StatusCode()) fmt.Printf("Repository: %s\n", repo.FullName) fmt.Printf("Description: %s\n", repo.Description) fmt.Printf("Homepage: %s\n", repo.Homepage) fmt.Printf("Owner: %s\n", repo.Owner.Login) fmt.Printf("Name: %s\n", repo.Name) fmt.Printf("Full Name: %s\n", repo.FullName) } ```
Click here to see the result ```plaintext Status code: 200 Repository: gofiber/fiber Description: ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go Homepage: https://gofiber.io Owner: gofiber Name: fiber Full Name: gofiber/fiber ```
### Built-in Request Hooks Fiber provides some built-in request hooks: - **parserRequestURL**: Normalizes and customizes the URL based on path and query parameters. Required for `PathParam` and `QueryParam` methods. - **parserRequestHeader**: Sets request headers, cookies, content type, referer, and user agent based on client and request properties. - **parserRequestBody**: Automatically serializes the request body (JSON, XML, form, file uploads, etc.). :::info If any request hook returns an error, the request is interrupted and the error is returned immediately. ::: **Example with Multiple Hooks:** ```go func main() { cc := client.New() cc.AddRequestHook(func(c *client.Client, r *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 1") return errors.New("error") }) cc.AddRequestHook(func(c *client.Client, r *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 2") return nil }) _, err := cc.Get("https://example.com/") if err != nil { panic(err) } } ```
Click here to see the result ```shell Hook 1. panic: error goroutine 1 [running]: main.main() main.go:25 +0xaa exit status 2 ```
## Response Hooks **Response hooks** are functions executed after the HTTP response is received. They follow the signature: ```go type ResponseHook func(*Client, *Response, *Request) error ``` A response hook receives the `Client`, `Response`, and `Request` objects, allowing you to inspect and modify the response or perform additional actions such as logging, tracing, or processing response data. **Example:** ```go func main() { cc := client.New() cc.AddResponseHook(func(c *client.Client, resp *client.Response, req *client.Request) error { fmt.Printf("Response Status Code: %d\n", resp.StatusCode()) fmt.Printf("HTTP protocol: %s\n\n", resp.Protocol()) fmt.Println("Response Headers:") resp.RawResponse.Header.VisitAll(func(key, value []byte) { fmt.Printf("%s: %s\n", key, value) }) return nil }) _, err := cc.Get("https://example.com/") if err != nil { panic(err) } } ```
Click here to see the result ```plaintext Response Status Code: 200 HTTP protocol: HTTP/1.1 Response Headers: Content-Length: 1256 Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 Server: ECAcc (dcd/7D5A) Age: 216114 Cache-Control: max-age=604800 Date: Fri, 10 May 2024 10:49:10 GMT Etag: "3147526947+gzip+ident" Expires: Fri, 17 May 2024 10:49:10 GMT Last-Modified: Thu, 17 Oct 2019 07:18:26 GMT Vary: Accept-Encoding X-Cache: HIT ```
### Built-in Response Hooks Fiber provides built-in response hooks: - **parserResponseCookie**: Parses cookies from the response and stores them in the response object and cookie jar if available. - **logger**: Logs information about the raw request and response. It uses the `log.CommonLogger` interface. :::info If a response hook returns an error, it stops executing any further hooks and returns the error. ::: **Example with Multiple Response Hooks:** ```go func main() { cc := client.New() cc.AddResponseHook(func(c *client.Client, r1 *client.Response, r2 *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 1") return nil }) cc.AddResponseHook(func(c *client.Client, r1 *client.Response, r2 *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 2") return errors.New("error") }) cc.AddResponseHook(func(c *client.Client, r1 *client.Response, r2 *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 3") return nil }) _, err := cc.Get("https://example.com/") if err != nil { panic(err) } } ```
Click here to see the result ```shell Hook 1 Hook 2 panic: error goroutine 1 [running]: main.main() main.go:30 +0xd6 exit status 2 ```
## Hook Execution Order Hooks run in FIFO order (First-In-First-Out). That means hooks are executed in the order they were added. Keep this in mind when adding multiple hooks, as the order can affect the outcome. **Example:** ```go func main() { cc := client.New() cc.AddRequestHook(func(c *client.Client, r *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 1") return nil }) cc.AddRequestHook(func(c *client.Client, r *client.Request) error { fmt.Println("Hook 2") return nil }) _, err := cc.Get("https://example.com/") if err != nil { panic(err) } } ```
Click here to see the result ```plaintext Hook 1 Hook 2 ```