Oban.Web.Router (Oban Web v2.10.0-rc.3)
Provides mount points for the Web dashboard with customization.
Customizing with a Resolver Callback Module
Implementing a Oban.Web.Resolver
callback module allows you to customize the dashboard
per-user, i.e. setting access controls or the default refresh rate.
As a simple example, let's define a module that makes the dashboard read only:
defmodule MyApp.Resolver do
@behaviour Oban.Web.Resolver
@impl true
def resolve_access(_user), do: :read_only
end
Then specify MyApp.Resolver
as your resolver:
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
oban_dashboard "/oban", resolver: MyApp.Resolver
end
See the Oban.Web.Resolver
docs for more details.
Running Multiple Dashboards
Applications that run multiple Oban instances can mount a dashboard for each instance. Set the
mounted dashboard's :oban_name
to match the corresponding supervision tree's name. For
example, given two configured Oban instances, Oban
and MyAdmin.Oban
:
config :my_app, Oban,
repo: MyApp.Repo,
name: Oban,
...
config :my_admin, Oban,
repo: MyAdmin.Repo,
name: MyAdmin.Oban,
...
You can then mount both dashboards in your router:
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
oban_dashboard "/oban", oban_name: Oban, as: :oban_dashboard
oban_dashboard "/admin/oban", oban_name: MyAdmin.Oban, as: :oban_admin_dashboard
end
Note that the default name is Oban
, setting oban_name: Oban
in the example above was purely
for demonstration purposes.
Customizing the Socket Connection
Applications that use a live socket other than "/live" can override the default socket path in
the router. For example, if your live socket is hosted at /oban_live
:
socket "/oban_live", Phoenix.LiveView.Socket
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
oban_dashboard "/oban", socket_path: "/oban_live"
end
If your application is hosted in an environment that doesn't support websockets you can use longpolling as an alternate transport. To start, make sure that your live socket is configured for longpolling:
socket "/live", Phoenix.LiveView.Socket,
longpoll: [connect_info: [session: @session_options], log: false]
Then specify "longpoll" as your transport:
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
oban_dashboard "/oban", transport: "longpoll"
end
Content Security Policy
To secure the dashboard, or comply with an existing CSP within your application, you can specify nonce keys for images, scripts and styles.
You'll configure the CSP nonce assign key in your router, where the dashboard is mounted. For example, to use a single nonce for all three asset types:
oban_dashboard("/oban", csp_nonce_assign_key: :my_csp_nonce)
That instructs the dashboard to extract a generated nonce from the assigns
map on the plug
connection, at the :my_csp_nonce
key.
Instead, you can specify different keys for each asset type:
oban_dashboard("/oban",
csp_nonce_assign_key: %{
img: :img_csp_nonce,
style: :style_csp_nonce,
script: :script_csp_nonce
}
)
Summary
Functions
Defines an oban dashboard route.
Functions
Defines an oban dashboard route.
It requires a path where to mount the dashboard at and allows options to customize routing.
Options
:oban_name
— name of the Oban instance the dashboard will use for configuration and notifications, defaults toOban
:resolver
— anOban.Web.Resolver
implementation used to customize the dashboard's functionality.:socket_path
— a phoenix socket path for live communication, defaults to"/live"
.:transport
— a phoenix socket transport, either"websocket"
or"longpoll"
, defaults to"websocket"
.:csp_nonce_assign_key
— CSP (Content Security Policy) keys used to authenticate image, style, and script assets by pulling a generated nonce out of the connection'sassigns
map. May benil
, a single atom, or a map of atoms. Defaults tonil
.
Examples
Mount an oban
dashboard at the path "/oban":
defmodule MyAppWeb.Router do
use Phoenix.Router
import Oban.Web.Router
scope "/", MyAppWeb do
pipe_through [:browser]
oban_dashboard "/oban"
end
end