Quickly terminate an HTTP request with a 404 Not Found
response for static resources.
phpwatch/fast404
is a library/middleware that you can to quickly terminate an HTTP request with a 404 Not Found
response. The use case is a framework that handles all HTTP requests via a router, and returning a quick 404 message to static resources such as .jpg
or .png
. This prevents the framework from initializing rendering engines, database connections, etc to serve these types of requests.
The use case is a framework that handles all HTTP requests via a router, and returning a quick 404 message to static resources such as .jpg
or .png
. This prevents the framework from initializing rendering engines, database connections, etc to serve these types of requests.
It is common that PHP frameworks use a router to handle incoming HTTP requests. Web server forwards all requests to the PHP framework (often to the index.php
file). This has the side-effect of static resources such as .jpg
or .png
requests being routed to the PHP framework as well.
Frameworks can generate a nice 404 Not Found error page, it is a waste of resources to generate nice error pages for images, videos, and other embeded content that are not the main URL the user accessed.
This package comes with configurable but sensible defaults, and when added as a middleware, it is executed early in the request, and short-circuits the rest of the bootstrap process and returns a quick and dirty "Not Found" page with the proper HTTP header. This can reduce the overhead by not having to connect to the database or fire up a rendering engine.
Note that the rest of the execution will be terminated with a PHP die()
call. If you want to log the error messages via the framework events or other middleware, this package is not for you.
composer require phpwatch/fast404
You need to execute the provided middleware within your framework. Here is an example for Slim v3:
1. Add Fast404Middleware
class to the Container
<?php
$container[Fast404Middleware::class] = static function (Container $container) {
return new Fast404Middleware();
};
2. Use the middleware in individual routes/groups, or for the whole application
<?php
use PHPWatch\Fast404\Fast404Middleware;
$app->add(Fast404Middleware::class); // For whole app
$app->get/users/{username},...)->add(Fast404Middleware::class); // Or, for individual routes
You can declare settings when the Fast404Middleware
is instantiated:
<?php
new Fast404Middleware(string $error_message = 'Not found', string $regex = null, ?string $exclude_regex = null)
$error_message
: Text for the error message. You can use anything here, including HTML content. Note that this library does not set acontent-type
header.$regex
: A valid regular expression including the delimiters. The default (below) is fast-404 a list of pre-configured file extensions.$exclude_regex
: A regular expression that is run if provided, and if it matches, the request is allowed. You can combine this regular expression as a negative lookahead/behind match in$regex
too, but that would make the regular expression a bit difficult to read.
Default match
By default, the following regular expression is used. It matches a list of pre-configured common extensions.
/\.(?:js|css|jpg|jpeg|gif|png|ico|exe|bin|dmg)$/i
Configure it to your hearts desire; Just make sure that you absolutely don't want the framework to continue the requests for these types of extensions.
As of now, there is a __invoke
method that accepts PSR-7 ServerRequestInterface
object. This makes this library immediately compatible with Slim v3. Proper PSR-15 support is in the works, and will be compatible with Slim v4 and any other compatible dispatcher.
This library immediately terminates the request with a configurable error message and an HTTP 404 error. There will be no logging. If you want your web server to log these same errors, it should not have handed over the request to the framework.
No. Get out and implement this yourself. This is a 40 LOC package. This README is four times larger than the code.