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authorRobin Dupret <robin.dupret@gmail.com>2015-06-14 21:03:13 +0200
committerRobin Dupret <robin.dupret@gmail.com>2015-06-15 11:41:52 +0200
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A pass over the API application guide [ci skip]
* Fix a few remaining typos * Wrap lines to 80 chars * Fix the conversion from Textile to Markdown * Update the part about `Rack::Cache` which isn't included anymore and speak about Active Support's provided middleware * Remove references to out-of-date methods and middlewares (e.g. respond_with) and update the list of modules and middlewares to match the actual code-base. * Remove the middleware's description and links to the Rack guide
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@@ -1,435 +1,408 @@
-Using Rails for API-only Apps
-=============================
+**DO NOT READ THIS FILE ON GITHUB, GUIDES ARE PUBLISHED ON http://guides.rubyonrails.org.**
+
+
+Using Rails for API-only Applications
+=====================================
In this guide you will learn:
-- What Rails provides for API-only applications
-- How to configure Rails to start without any browser features
-- How to decide which middlewares you will want to include
-- How to decide which modules to use in your controller
+* What Rails provides for API-only applications
+* How to configure Rails to start without any browser features
+* How to decide which middlewares you will want to include
+* How to decide which modules to use in your controller
-endprologue.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-### What is an API app?
+What is an API app?
+-------------------
-Traditionally, when people said that they used Rails as an “API”, they
-meant providing a programmatically accessible API alongside their web
-application.\
-For example, GitHub provides [an API](http://developer.github.com) that
-you can use from your own custom clients.
+Traditionally, when people said that they used Rails as an "API", they meant
+providing a programmatically accessible API alongside their web application.
+For example, GitHub provides [an API](http://developer.github.com) that you
+can use from your own custom clients.
-With the advent of client-side frameworks, more developers are using
-Rails to build a backend that is shared between their web application
-and other native applications.
+With the advent of client-side frameworks, more developers are using Rails to
+build a back-end that is shared between their web application and other native
+applications.
-For example, Twitter uses its [public API](https://dev.twitter.com) in
-its web application, which is built as a static site that consumes JSON
-resources.
+For example, Twitter uses its [public API](https://dev.twitter.com) in its web
+application, which is built as a static site that consumes JSON resources.
-Instead of using Rails to generate dynamic HTML that will communicate
-with the server through forms and links, many developers are treating
-their web application as just another client, delivered as static HTML,
-CSS and JavaScript, and consuming a simple JSON API
+Instead of using Rails to generate dynamic HTML that will communicate with the
+server through forms and links, many developers are treating their web application
+as just another client, delivered as static HTML, CSS and JavaScript consuming
+a simple JSON API.
-This guide covers building a Rails application that serves JSON
-resources to an API client **or** client-side framework.
+This guide covers building a Rails application that serves JSON resources to an
+API client **or** a client-side framework.
-### Why use Rails for JSON APIs?
+Why use Rails for JSON APIs?
+----------------------------
-The first question a lot of people have when thinking about building a
-JSON API using Rails is: “isn’t using Rails to spit out some JSON
-overkill? Shouldn’t I just use something like Sinatra?”
+The first question a lot of people have when thinking about building a JSON API
+using Rails is: "isn't using Rails to spit out some JSON overkill? Shouldn't I
+just use something like Sinatra?".
For very simple APIs, this may be true. However, even in very HTML-heavy
-applications, most of an application’s logic is actually outside of the
-view layer.
+applications, most of an application's logic is actually outside of the view
+layer.
-The reason most people use Rails is that it provides a set of defaults
-that allows us to get up and running quickly without having to make a
-lot of trivial decisions.
+The reason most people use Rails is that it provides a set of defaults that
+allows us to get up and running quickly without having to make a lot of trivial
+decisions.
-Let’s take a look at some of the things that Rails provides out of the
-box that are still applicable to API applications.
+Let's take a look at some of the things that Rails provides out of the box that are
+still applicable to API applications.
Handled at the middleware layer:
-- Reloading: Rails applications support transparent reloading. This
- works even if your application gets big and restarting the server
- for every request becomes non-viable.
-- Development Mode: Rails application come with smart defaults for
- development, making development pleasant without compromising
- production-time performance.
-- Test Mode: Ditto test mode.
-- Logging: Rails applications log every request, with a level of
- verbosity appropriate for the current mode. Rails logs in
- development include information about the request environment,
- database queries, and basic performance information.
-- Security: Rails detects and thwarts [IP spoofing
- attacks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_address_spoofing) and
- handles cryptographic signatures in a [timing
- attack](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timing_attack) aware way. Don’t
- know what an IP spoofing attack or a timing attack is? Exactly.
-- Parameter Parsing: Want to specify your parameters as JSON instead
- of as a URL-encoded String? No problem. Rails will decode the JSON
- for you and make it available in *params*. Want to use nested
- URL-encoded params? That works too.
-- Conditional GETs: Rails handles conditional *GET*, (*ETag* and
- *Last-Modified*), processing request headers and returning the
- correct response headers and status code. All you need to do is use
- the
- [stale?](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionController/ConditionalGet.html#method-i-stale-3F)
- check in your controller, and Rails will handle all of the HTTP
- details for you.
-- Caching: If you use *dirty?* with public cache control, Rails will
- automatically cache your responses. You can easily configure the
- cache store.
-- HEAD requests: Rails will transparently convert *HEAD* requests into
- *GET* requests, and return just the headers on the way out. This
- makes *HEAD* work reliably in all Rails APIs.
-
-While you could obviously build these up in terms of existing Rack
-middlewares, I think this list demonstrates that the default Rails
-middleware stack provides a lot of value, even if you’re “just
-generating JSON”.
-
-Handled at the ActionPack layer:
-
-- Resourceful Routing: If you’re building a RESTful JSON API, you want
- to be using the Rails router. Clean and conventional mapping from
- HTTP to controllers means not having to spend time thinking about
- how to model your API in terms of HTTP.
-- URL Generation: The flip side of routing is URL generation. A good
- API based on HTTP includes URLs (see [the GitHub gist
- API](http://developer.github.com/v3/gists/) for an example).
-- Header and Redirection Responses: *head :no\_content* and
- *redirect\_to user\_url(current\_user)* come in handy. Sure, you
- could manually add the response headers, but why?
-- Caching: Rails provides page, action and fragment caching. Fragment
- caching is especially helpful when building up a nested JSON object.
-- Basic, Digest and Token Authentication: Rails comes with
- out-of-the-box support for three kinds of HTTP authentication.
-- Instrumentation: Rails 3.0 added an instrumentation API that will
- trigger registered handlers for a variety of events, such as action
- processing, sending a file or data, redirection, and database
- queries. The payload of each event comes with relevant information
- (for the action processing event, the payload includes the
- controller, action, params, request format, request method and the
- request’s full path).
-- Generators: This may be passé for advanced Rails users, but it can
- be nice to generate a resource and get your model, controller, test
- stubs, and routes created for you in a single command.
-- Plugins: Many third-party libraries come with support for Rails that
- reduces or eliminates the cost of setting up and gluing together the
- library and the web framework. This includes things like overriding
- default generators, adding rake tasks, and honoring Rails choices
- (like the logger and cache backend).
-
-Of course, the Rails boot process also glues together all registered
-components. For example, the Rails boot process is what uses your
-*config/database.yml* file when configuring ActiveRecord.
-
-**The short version is**: you may not have thought about which parts of
-Rails are still applicable even if you remove the view layer, but the
-answer turns out to be “most of it”.
-
-### The Basic Configuration
-
-If you’re building a Rails application that will be an API server first
-and foremost, you can start with a more limited subset of Rails and add
-in features as needed.
+- Reloading: Rails applications support transparent reloading. This works even if
+ your application gets big and restarting the server for every request becomes
+ non-viable.
+- Development Mode: Rails applications come with smart defaults for development,
+ making development pleasant without compromising production-time performance.
+- Test Mode: Ditto development mode.
+- Logging: Rails applications log every request, with a level of verbosity
+ appropriate for the current mode. Rails logs in development include information
+ about the request environment, database queries, and basic performance
+ information.
+- Security: Rails detects and thwarts [IP spoofing
+ attacks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_address_spoofing) and handles
+ cryptographic signatures in a [timing
+ attack](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timing_attack) aware way. Don't know what
+ an IP spoofing attack or a timing attack is? Exactly.
+- Parameter Parsing: Want to specify your parameters as JSON instead of as a
+ URL-encoded String? No problem. Rails will decode the JSON for you and make
+ it available in `params`. Want to use nested URL-encoded parameters? That
+ works too.
+- Conditional GETs: Rails handles conditional `GET`, (`ETag` and `Last-Modified`),
+ processing request headers and returning the correct response headers and status
+ code. All you need to do is use the
+ [`stale?`](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionController/ConditionalGet.html#method-i-stale-3F)
+ check in your controller, and Rails will handle all of the HTTP details for you.
+- Caching: If you use `dirty?` with public cache control, Rails will automatically
+ cache your responses. You can easily configure the cache store.
+- HEAD requests: Rails will transparently convert `HEAD` requests into `GET` ones,
+ and return just the headers on the way out. This makes `HEAD` work reliably in
+ all Rails APIs.
+
+While you could obviously build these up in terms of existing Rack middlewares,
+this list demonstrates that the default Rails middleware stack provides a lot
+of value, even if you're "just generating JSON".
+
+Handled at the Action Pack layer:
+
+- Resourceful Routing: If you're building a RESTful JSON API, you want to be
+ using the Rails router. Clean and conventional mapping from HTTP to controllers
+ means not having to spend time thinking about how to model your API in terms
+ of HTTP.
+- URL Generation: The flip side of routing is URL generation. A good API based
+ on HTTP includes URLs (see [the GitHub gist API](http://developer.github.com/v3/gists/)
+ for an example).
+- Header and Redirection Responses: `head :no_content` and
+ `redirect_to user_url(current_user)` come in handy. Sure, you could manually
+ add the response headers, but why?
+- Caching: Rails provides page, action and fragment caching. Fragment caching
+ is especially helpful when building up a nested JSON object.
+- Basic, Digest and Token Authentication: Rails comes with out-of-the-box support
+ for three kinds of HTTP authentication.
+- Instrumentation: Rails has an instrumentation API that will trigger registered
+ handlers for a variety of events, such as action processing, sending a file or
+ data, redirection, and database queries. The payload of each event comes with
+ relevant information (for the action processing event, the payload includes
+ the controller, action, parameters, request format, request method and the
+ request's full path).
+- Generators: This may be passé for advanced Rails users, but it can be nice to
+ generate a resource and get your model, controller, test stubs, and routes
+ created for you in a single command.
+- Plugins: Many third-party libraries come with support for Rails that reduce
+ or eliminate the cost of setting up and gluing together the library and the
+ web framework. This includes things like overriding default generators, adding
+ rake tasks, and honoring Rails choices (like the logger and cache back-end).
+
+Of course, the Rails boot process also glues together all registered components.
+For example, the Rails boot process is what uses your `config/database.yml` file
+when configuring Active Record.
+
+**The short version is**: you may not have thought about which parts of Rails
+are still applicable even if you remove the view layer, but the answer turns out
+to be "most of it".
+
+The Basic Configuration
+-----------------------
+
+If you're building a Rails application that will be an API server first and
+foremost, you can start with a more limited subset of Rails and add in features
+as needed.
You can generate a new api Rails app:
-<shell>\
-\$ rails new my\_api --api\
-</shell>
+```bash
+$ rails new my_api --api
+```
This will do three main things for you:
-- Configure your application to start with a more limited set of
- middleware than normal. Specifically, it will not include any
- middleware primarily useful for browser applications (like cookie
- support) by default.
-- Make *ApplicationController* inherit from *ActionController::API*
- instead of *ActionController::Base*. As with middleware, this will
- leave out any *ActionController* modules that provide functionality
- primarily used by browser applications.
-- Configure the generators to skip generating views, helpers and
- assets when you generate a new resource.
-
-If you want to take an existing app and make it an API app, follow the
+- Configure your application to start with a more limited set of middlewares
+ than normal. Specifically, it will not include any middleware primarily useful
+ for browser applications (like cookies support) by default.
+- Make `ApplicationController` inherit from `ActionController::API` instead of
+ `ActionController::Base`. As with middlewares, this will leave out any Action
+ Controller modules that provide functionalities primarily used by browser
+ applications.
+- Configure the generators to skip generating views, helpers and assets when
+ you generate a new resource.
+
+If you want to take an existing application and make it an API one, read the
following steps.
-In *config/application.rb* add the following line at the top of the
-*Application* class:
-
-<ruby>\
-config.api\_only!\
-</ruby>
-
-Change *app/controllers/application\_controller.rb*:
-
-<ruby>
-
-1. instead of\
- class ApplicationController \< ActionController::Base\
- end
-
-<!-- -->
-
-1. do\
- class ApplicationController \< ActionController::API\
- end\
- </ruby>
-
-### Choosing Middlewares
-
-An API application comes with the following middlewares by default.
-
-- *Rack::Cache*: Caches responses with public *Cache-Control* headers
- using HTTP caching semantics. See below for more information.
-- *Rack::Sendfile*: Uses a front-end server’s file serving support
- from your Rails application.
-- *Rack::Lock*: If your application is not marked as threadsafe
- (*config.threadsafe!*), this middleware will add a mutex around your
- requests.
-- *ActionDispatch::RequestId*:
-- *Rails::Rack::Logger*:
-- *Rack::Runtime*: Adds a header to the response listing the total
- runtime of the request.
-- *ActionDispatch::ShowExceptions*: Rescue exceptions and re-dispatch
- them to an exception handling application
-- *ActionDispatch::DebugExceptions*: Log exceptions
-- *ActionDispatch::RemoteIp*: Protect against IP spoofing attacks
-- *ActionDispatch::Reloader*: In development mode, support code
- reloading.
-- *ActionDispatch::ParamsParser*: Parse XML, YAML and JSON parameters
- when the request’s *Content-Type* is one of those.
-- *ActionDispatch::Head*: Dispatch *HEAD* requests as *GET* requests,
- and return only the status code and headers.
-- *Rack::ConditionalGet*: Supports the *stale?* feature in Rails
- controllers.
-- *Rack::ETag*: Automatically set an *ETag* on all string responses.
- This means that if the same response is returned from a controller
- for the same URL, the server will return a *304 Not Modified*, even
- if no additional caching steps are taken. This is primarily a
- client-side optimization; it reduces bandwidth costs but not server
- processing time.
-
-Other plugins, including *ActiveRecord*, may add additional middlewares.
-In general, these middlewares are agnostic to the type of app you are
+In `config/application.rb` add the following line at the top of the `Application`
+class definition:
+
+```ruby
+config.api_only = true
+```
+
+Finally, inside `app/controllers/application_controller.rb`, instead of:
+
+```ruby
+class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
+end
+```
+
+do:
+
+```ruby
+class ApplicationController < ActionController::API
+end
+```
+
+Choosing Middlewares
+--------------------
+
+An API application comes with the following middlewares by default:
+
+- `Rack::Sendfile`
+- `ActionDispatch::Static`
+- `Rack::Lock`
+- `ActiveSupport::Cache::Strategy::LocalCache::Middleware`
+- `ActionDispatch::RequestId`
+- `Rails::Rack::Logger`
+- `Rack::Runtime`
+- `ActionDispatch::ShowExceptions`
+- `ActionDispatch::DebugExceptions`
+- `ActionDispatch::RemoteIp`
+- `ActionDispatch::Reloader`
+- `ActionDispatch::Callbacks`
+- `ActionDispatch::ParamsParser`
+- `Rack::Head`
+- `Rack::ConditionalGet`
+- `Rack::ETag`
+
+See the [internal middlewares](rails_on_rack.html#internal-middleware-stack)
+section of the Rack guide for further information on them.
+
+Other plugins, including Active Record, may add additional middlewares. In
+general, these middlewares are agnostic to the type of application you are
building, and make sense in an API-only Rails application.
You can get a list of all middlewares in your application via:
-<shell>\
-\$ rake middleware\
-</shell>
+```bash
+$ rake middleware
+```
-#### Using Rack::Cache
+### Using the Cache Middleware
-When used with Rails, *Rack::Cache* uses the Rails cache store for its
-entity and meta stores. This means that if you use memcache, for your
-Rails app, for instance, the built-in HTTP cache will use memcache.
+By default, Rails will add a middleware that provides a cache store based on
+the configuration of your application (memcache by default). This means that
+the built-in HTTP cache will rely on it.
-To make use of *Rack::Cache*, you will want to use *stale?* in your
-controller. Here’s an example of *stale?* in use.
+For instance, using the `stale?` method:
-<ruby>\
-def show\
+```ruby
+def show
@post = Post.find(params[:id])
-if stale?(:last\_modified =\> `post.updated_at)
- render json: `post\
- end\
-end\
-</ruby>
+ if stale?(last_modified: @post.updated_at)
+ render json: @post
+ end
+end
+```
-The call to *stale?* will compare the *If-Modified-Since* header in the
-request with *@post.updated\_at*. If the header is newer than the last
-modified, this action will return a *304 Not Modified* response.
-Otherwise, it will render the response and include a *Last-Modified*
-header with the response.
+The call to `stale?` will compare the `If-Modified-Since` header in the request
+with `@post.updated_at`. If the header is newer than the last modified, this
+action will return a "304 Not Modified" response. Otherwise, it will render the
+response and include a `Last-Modified` header in it.
-Normally, this mechanism is used on a per-client basis. *Rack::Cache*
+Normally, this mechanism is used on a per-client basis. The cache middleware
allows us to share this caching mechanism across clients. We can enable
-cross-client caching in the call to *stale?*
+cross-client caching in the call to `stale?`:
-<ruby>\
-def show\
+```ruby
+def show
@post = Post.find(params[:id])
-if stale?(:last\_modified =\> `post.updated_at, :public => true)
- render json: `post\
- end\
-end\
-</ruby>
+ if stale?(last_modified: @post.updated_at, public: true)
+ render json: @post
+ end
+end
+```
-This means that *Rack::Cache* will store off *Last-Modified* value for a
-URL in the Rails cache, and add an *If-Modified-Since* header to any
+This means that the cache middleware will store off the `Last-Modified` value
+for a URL in the Rails cache, and add an `If-Modified-Since` header to any
subsequent inbound requests for the same URL.
Think of it as page caching using HTTP semantics.
-NOTE: The *Rack::Cache* middleware is always outside of the *Rack::Lock*
-mutex, even in single-threaded apps.
+NOTE: This middleware is always outside of the `Rack::Lock` mutex, even in
+single-threaded applications.
-#### Using Rack::Sendfile
+### Using Rack::Sendfile
-When you use the *send\_file* method in a Rails controller, it sets the
-*X-Sendfile* header. *Rack::Sendfile* is responsible for actually
-sending the file.
+When you use the `send_file` method inside a Rails controller, it sets the
+`X-Sendfile` header. `Rack::Sendfile` is responsible for actually sending the
+file.
-If your front-end server supports accelerated file sending,
-*Rack::Sendfile* will offload the actual file sending work to the
-front-end server.
+If your front-end server supports accelerated file sending, `Rack::Sendfile`
+will offload the actual file sending work to the front-end server.
-You can configure the name of the header that your front-end server uses
-for this purposes using *config.action\_dispatch.x\_sendfile\_header* in
-the appropriate environment config file.
+You can configure the name of the header that your front-end server uses for
+this purpose using `config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header` in the appropriate
+environment's configuration file.
-You can learn more about how to use *Rack::Sendfile* with popular
+You can learn more about how to use `Rack::Sendfile` with popular
front-ends in [the Rack::Sendfile
-documentation](http://rubydoc.info/github/rack/rack/master/Rack/Sendfile)
+documentation](http://rubydoc.info/github/rack/rack/master/Rack/Sendfile).
-The values for popular servers once they are configured to support
+Here are some values for popular servers, once they are configured, to support
accelerated file sending:
-<ruby>
-
-1. Apache and lighttpd\
- config.action\_dispatch.x\_sendfile\_header = “X-Sendfile”
-
-<!-- -->
-
-1. nginx\
- config.action\_dispatch.x\_sendfile\_header = “X-Accel-Redirect”\
- </ruby>
-
-Make sure to configure your server to support these options following
-the instructions in the *Rack::Sendfile* documentation.
-
-NOTE: The *Rack::Sendfile* middleware is always outside of the
-*Rack::Lock* mutex, even in single-threaded apps.
-
-#### Using ActionDispatch::ParamsParser
-
-*ActionDispatch::ParamsParser* will take parameters from the client in
-JSON and make them available in your controller as *params*.
-
-To use this, your client will need to make a request with JSON-encoded
-parameters and specify the *Content-Type* as *application/json*.
-
-Here’s an example in jQuery:
-
-<plain>\
-jQuery.ajax({\
- type: ‘POST’,\
- url: ‘/people’\
- dataType: ‘json’,\
- contentType: ‘application/json’,\
- data: JSON.stringify({ person: { firstName: “Yehuda”, lastName: “Katz”
-} }),
-
-success: function(json) { }\
-});\
-</plain>
-
-*ActionDispatch::ParamsParser* will see the *Content-Type* and your
-params will be *{ :person =\> { :firstName =\> “Yehuda”, :lastName =\>
-“Katz” } }*.
-
-#### Other Middlewares
-
-Rails ships with a number of other middlewares that you might want to
-use in an API app, especially if one of your API clients is the browser:
-
-- *Rack::MethodOverride*: Allows the use of the *\_method* hack to
- route POST requests to other verbs.
-- *ActionDispatch::Cookies*: Supports the *cookie* method in
- *ActionController*, including support for signed and encrypted
- cookies.
-- *ActionDispatch::Flash*: Supports the *flash* mechanism in
- *ActionController*.
-- *ActionDispatch::BestStandards*: Tells Internet Explorer to use the
- most standards-compliant available renderer. In production mode, if
- ChromeFrame is available, use ChromeFrame.
-- Session Management: If a *config.session\_store* is supplied, this
- middleware makes the session available as the *session* method in
- *ActionController*.
-
-Any of these middlewares can be adding via:
-
-<ruby>\
-config.middleware.use Rack::MethodOverride\
-</ruby>
-
-#### Removing Middlewares
-
-If you don’t want to use a middleware that is included by default in the
-API-only middleware set, you can remove it using
-*config.middleware.delete*:
-
-<ruby>\
-config.middleware.delete ::Rack::Sendfile\
-</ruby>
-
-Keep in mind that removing these features may remove support for certain
-features in *ActionController*.
-
-### Choosing Controller Modules
-
-An API application (using *ActionController::API*) comes with the
-following controller modules by default:
-
-- *ActionController::UrlFor*: Makes *url\_for* and friends available
-- *ActionController::Redirecting*: Support for *redirect\_to*
-- *ActionController::Rendering*: Basic support for rendering
-- *ActionController::Renderers::All*: Support for *render :json* and
- friends
-- *ActionController::ConditionalGet*: Support for *stale?*
-- *ActionController::ForceSSL*: Support for *force\_ssl*
-- *ActionController::RackDelegation*: Support for the *request* and
- *response* methods returning *ActionDispatch::Request* and
- *ActionDispatch::Response* objects.
-- *ActionController::DataStreaming*: Support for *send\_file* and
- *send\_data*
-- *AbstractController::Callbacks*: Support for *before\_filter* and
- friends
-- *ActionController::Instrumentation*: Support for the instrumentation
- hooks defined by *ActionController* (see [the
- source](https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/instrumentation.rb)
- for more).
-- *ActionController::Rescue*: Support for *rescue\_from*.
-
-Other plugins may add additional modules. You can get a list of all
-modules included into *ActionController::API* in the rails console:
-
-<shell>\
-\$ irb\
-\>\> ActionController::API.ancestors -
-ActionController::Metal.ancestors\
-</shell>
-
-#### Adding Other Modules
-
-All ActionController modules know about their dependent modules, so you
-can feel free to include any modules into your controllers, and all
-dependencies will be included and set up as well.
+```ruby
+# Apache and lighttpd
+config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header = "X-Sendfile"
+
+# Nginx
+config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header = "X-Accel-Redirect"
+```
+
+Make sure to configure your server to support these options following the
+instructions in the `Rack::Sendfile` documentation.
+
+NOTE: The `Rack::Sendfile` middleware is always outside of the `Rack::Lock`
+mutex, even in single-threaded applications.
+
+### Using ActionDispatch::ParamsParser
+
+`ActionDispatch::ParamsParser` will take parameters from the client in the JSON
+format and make them available in your controller inside `params`.
+
+To use this, your client will need to make a request with JSON-encoded parameters
+and specify the `Content-Type` as `application/json`.
+
+Here's an example in jQuery:
+
+```javascript
+jQuery.ajax({
+ type: 'POST',
+ url: '/people',
+ dataType: 'json',
+ contentType: 'application/json',
+ data: JSON.stringify({ person: { firstName: "Yehuda", lastName: "Katz" } }),
+ success: function(json) { }
+});
+```
+
+`ActionDispatch::ParamsParser` will see the `Content-Type` and your parameters
+will be:
+
+```ruby
+{ :person => { :firstName => "Yehuda", :lastName => "Katz" } }
+```
+
+### Other Middlewares
+
+Rails ships with a number of other middlewares that you might want to use in an
+API application, especially if one of your API clients is the browser:
+
+- `Rack::MethodOverride`
+- `ActionDispatch::Cookies`
+- `ActionDispatch::Flash`
+- For sessions management
+ * `ActionDispatch::Session::CacheStore`
+ * `ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore`
+ * `ActionDispatch::Session::MemCacheStore`
+
+Any of these middlewares can be added via:
+
+```ruby
+config.middleware.use Rack::MethodOverride
+```
+
+### Removing Middlewares
+
+If you don't want to use a middleware that is included by default in the API-only
+middleware set, you can remove it with:
+
+```ruby
+config.middleware.delete ::Rack::Sendfile
+```
+
+Keep in mind that removing these middlewares will remove support for certain
+features in Action Controller.
+
+Choosing Controller Modules
+---------------------------
+
+An API application (using `ActionController::API`) comes with the following
+controller modules by default:
+
+- `ActionController::UrlFor`: Makes `url_for` and friends available.
+- `ActionController::Redirecting`: Support for `redirect_to`.
+- `ActionController::Rendering`: Basic support for rendering.
+- `ActionController::Renderers::All`: Support for `render :json` and friends.
+- `ActionController::ConditionalGet`: Support for `stale?`.
+- `ActionController::ForceSSL`: Support for `force_ssl`.
+- `ActionController::RackDelegation`: Support for the `request` and `response`
+ methods returning `ActionDispatch::Request` and `ActionDispatch::Response`
+ objects.
+- `ActionController::DataStreaming`: Support for `send_file` and `send_data`.
+- `AbstractController::Callbacks`: Support for `before_filter` and friends.
+- `ActionController::Instrumentation`: Support for the instrumentation
+ hooks defined by Action Controller (see [the instrumentation
+ guide](active_support_instrumentation.html#action-controller)).
+- `ActionController::Rescue`: Support for `rescue_from`.
+- `ActionController::BasicImplicitRender`: Makes sure to return an empty response
+ if there's not an explicit one.
+- `ActionController::StrongParameters`: Support for parameters white-listing in
+ combination with Active Model mass assignment.
+- `ActionController::ParamsWrapper`: Wraps the parameters hash into a nested hash
+ so you don't have to specify root elements sending POST requests for instance.
+
+Other plugins may add additional modules. You can get a list of all modules
+included into `ActionController::API` in the rails console:
+
+```bash
+$ bin/rails c
+>> ActionController::API.ancestors - ActionController::Metal.ancestors
+```
+
+### Adding Other Modules
+
+All Action Controller modules know about their dependent modules, so you can feel
+free to include any modules into your controllers, and all dependencies will be
+included and set up as well.
Some common modules you might want to add:
-- *AbstractController::Translation*: Support for the *l* and *t*
- localization and translation methods. These delegate to
- *I18n.translate* and *I18n.localize*.
-- *ActionController::HTTPAuthentication::Basic* (or *Digest*
- or +Token): Support for basic, digest or token HTTP authentication.
-- *AbstractController::Layouts*: Support for layouts when rendering.
-- *ActionController::MimeResponds*: Support for content negotiation
- (*respond\_to*, *respond\_with*).
-- *ActionController::Cookies*: Support for *cookies*, which includes
- support for signed and encrypted cookies. This requires the cookie
- middleware.
-
-The best place to add a module is in your *ApplicationController*. You
-can also add modules to individual controllers.
+- `AbstractController::Translation`: Support for the `l` and `t` localization
+ and translation methods.
+- `ActionController::HTTPAuthentication::Basic` (or `Digest` or `Token`): Support
+ for basic, digest or token HTTP authentication.
+- `AbstractController::Layouts`: Support for layouts when rendering.
+- `ActionController::MimeResponds`: Support for `respond_to`.
+- `ActionController::Cookies`: Support for `cookies`, which includes
+ support for signed and encrypted cookies. This requires the cookies middleware.
+
+The best place to add a module is in your `ApplicationController` but you can
+also add modules to individual controllers.