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actix-website/content/docs/autoreload.md

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---
title: Autoreloading
menu: docs_patterns
weight: 1000
---
# Auto-Reloading Development Server
During development it can be very handy to have cargo automatically recompile
the code on change. This can be accomplished by using
[cargo-watch](https://github.com/passcod/cargo-watch). Because an actix app
will typically bind to a port for listening for incoming HTTP requests it makes
sense to combine this with the [listenfd](https://crates.io/crates/listenfd)
crate and the [systemfd](https://github.com/mitsuhiko/systemfd) utility to
ensure the socket is kept open while the app is compiling and reloading.
`systemfd` will open a socket and pass it to `cargo-watch` which will watch for
changes and then invoke the compiler and run your actix app. The actix app
will then use `listenfd` to pick up the socket that `systemfd` opened.
## Binaries Necessary
For an automatic reloading experience you need to install `cargo-watch` and
`systemfd`. Both are written in rust and can be installed with `cargo install`:
```
cargo install systemfd cargo-watch
```
## Code Changes
Additionally you need to slightly modify your actix app so that it can pick up
an external socket opened by `systemfd`. Add the listenfd dependency to your
app:
```ini
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[dependencies]
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listenfd = "0.3"
```
Then modify your server code to only invoke `bind` as a fallback:
```rust
extern crate listenfd;
use listenfd::ListenFd;
use actix_web::{server, App, HttpRequest, Responder};
fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
"Hello World!"
}
fn main() {
let mut listenfd = ListenFd::from_env();
let mut server = server::new(|| {
App::new()
.resource("/", |r| r.f(index))
});
server = if let Some(l) = listenfd.take_tcp_listener(0).unwrap() {
server.listen(l)
} else {
server.bind("127.0.0.1:3000").unwrap()
};
server.run();
}
```
## Running the Server
To now run the development server invoke this command:
```
systemfd --no-pid -s http::3000 -- cargo watch -x run
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```