Middlewares customization
In Strapi, 2 middleware concepts coexist:
Global middlewares are configured and enabled for the entire Strapi server application. These middlewares can be applied at the application level or at the API level.
The present documentation describes how to implement them.
Plugins can also add global middlewares (see Server API documentation).Route middlewares have a more limited scope and are configured and used as middlewares at the route level. They are described in the routes documentation.
Implementationβ
A new application-level or API-level middleware can be implemented:
- with the interactive CLI command
strapi generate
- or manually by creating a JavaScript file in the appropriate folder (see project structure):
./src/middlewares/
for application-level middlewares./src/api/[api-name]/middlewares/
for API-level middlewares./src/plugins/[plugin-name]/middlewares/
for plugin middlewares
Middlewares working with the REST API are functions like the following:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
module.exports = (config, { strapi })=> {
return (context, next) => {};
};
export default (config, { strapi })=> {
return (context, next) => {};
};
Globally scoped custom middlewares should be added to the middlewares configuration file or Strapi won't load them.
API level and plugin middlewares can be added into the specific router that they are relevant to like the following:
module.exports = {
routes: [
{
method: "GET",
path: "/[collection-name]",
handler: "[controller].find",
config: {
middlewares: ["[middleware-name]"],
// See the usage section below for middleware naming conventions
},
},
],
};
Example of a custom timer middleware
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
module.exports = () => {
return async (ctx, next) => {
const start = Date.now();
await next();
const delta = Math.ceil(Date.now() - start);
ctx.set('X-Response-Time', delta + 'ms');
};
};
export default () => {
return async (ctx, next) => {
const start = Date.now();
await next();
const delta = Math.ceil(Date.now() - start);
ctx.set('X-Response-Time', delta + 'ms');
};
};
The GraphQL plugin also allows implementing custom middlewares, with a different syntax.
To see a possible advanced usage for custom global middlewares, read the middlewares page of the backend customization examples cookbook.
Usageβ
Middlewares are called different ways depending on their scope:
- use
global::middleware-name
for application-level middlewares - use
api::api-name.middleware-name
for API-level middlewares - use
plugin::plugin-name.middleware-name
for plugin middlewares
To list all the registered middlewares, run yarn strapi middlewares:list
.
Restricting content access with an "is-owner policy"β
It is often required that the author of an entry is the only user allowed to edit or delete the entry. In previous versions of Strapi, this was known as an "is-owner policy". With Strapi v4, the recommended way to achieve this behavior is to use a middleware.
Proper implementation largely depends on your project's needs and custom code, but the most basic implementation could be achieved with the following procedure:
From your project's folder, create a middleware with the Strapi CLI generator, by running the
yarn strapi generate
(ornpm run strapi generate
) command in the terminal.Select
middleware
from the list, using keyboard arrows, and press Enter.Give the middleware a name, for instance
isOwner
.Choose
Add middleware to an existing API
from the list.Select which API you want the middleware to apply.
Replace the code in the
/src/api/[your-api-name]/middlewares/isOwner.js
file with the following, replacingapi::restaurant.restaurant
in line 22 with the identifier corresponding to the API you choose at step 5 (e.g.,api::blog-post.blog-post
if your API name isblog-post
):src/api/blog-post/middlewares/isOwner.js"use strict";
/**
* `isOwner` middleware
*/
module.exports = (config, { strapi }) => {
// Add your own logic here.
return async (ctx, next) => {
const user = ctx.state.user;
const entryId = ctx.params.id ? ctx.params.id : undefined;
let entry = {};
/**
* Gets all information about a given entry,
* populating every relations to ensure
* the response includes author-related information
*/
if (entryId) {
entry = await strapi.entityService.findOne(
// replace the next line with your proper content-type identifier
"api::restaurant.restaurant",
entryId,
{ populate: "*" }
);
}
/**
* Compares user id and entry author id
* to decide whether the request can be fulfilled
* by going forward in the Strapi backend server
*/
if (user.id !== entry.author.id) {
return ctx.unauthorized("This action is unauthorized.");
} else {
return next();
}
};
};Ensure the middleware is configured to apply on some routes. In the
config
object found in thesrc/api/[your-apiβname]/routes/[your-content-type-name].js
file, define the methods (create
,read
,update
,delete
) for which you would like the middleware to apply, and declare theisOwner
middleware for these routes.
For instance, if you wish to allow GET (i.e.,read
method) and POST (i.e.,create
method) requests to any user for therestaurant
content-type in therestaurant
API, but would like to restrict PUT (i.e.,update
method) and DELETE requests only to the user who created the entry, you could use the following code in thesrc/api/restaurant/routes/restaurant.js
file:src/api/restaurant/routes/restaurant.js
/**
* restaurant router
*/
const { createCoreRouter } = require("@strapi/strapi").factories;
module.exports = createCoreRouter("api::restaurant.restaurant", {
config: {
update: {
middlewares: ["api::restaurant.is-owner"],
},
delete: {
middlewares: ["api::restaurant.is-owner"],
},
},
});
You can find more information about route middlewares in the routes documentation.