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{{ partial "header" . }}
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< div id = "act-home" >
< div class = "jumbotron" >
< div class = "actix-jumbotron" >
< img src = "/img/logo-large.png" class = "align-middle actix-logo" alt = "" >
< p class = "lead" > rust's powerful actor system and most fun web framework< / p >
< / div >
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< / div >
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< div class = "container actix-home" >
< div class = "row" >
< div class = "col-md-4" >
< div class = "actix-features" >
< h2 >
< i class = "fa fa-fw fa-shield" aria-hidden = "true" > < / i >
Type Safe
< / h2 >
< p > Forget about stringly typed objects, from request to response, everything has types.< / p >
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< h2 >
< i class = "fa fa-fw fa-battery-full" aria-hidden = "true" > < / i >
Feature Rich
< / h2 >
< p > Actix provides a lot of features out of box. WebSockets, HTTP/2, pipelining etc.< / p >
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< h2 >
< i class = "fa fa-fw fa-puzzle-piece" aria-hidden = "true" > < / i >
Extensible
< / h2 >
< p > Easily create your own libraries that any Actix application can use.< / p >
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< h2 >
< i class = "fa fa-fw fa-dashboard" aria-hidden = "true" > < / i >
Blazingly Fast
< / h2 >
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< p > Actix is blazingly fast. Don't take our word for it -- < a href = "https://www.techempower.com/benchmarks/#section=data-r16&hw=ph&test=plaintext" > see for yourself!< / a > < / p >
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< / div >
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< / div >
< div class = "col-md-8" >
< div class = "actix-content" >
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{{ highlight `use actix_web::{web, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, HttpServer};
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fn greet(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
let name = req.match_info().get("name").unwrap_or("World");
HttpResponse::Ok().body(format!("Hello {}!", & name))
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}
fn main() {
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HttpServer::new(|| {
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App::new()
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.service(web::resource("/").to(greet))
.service(web::resource("/{name}").to(greet))
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})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")
.expect("Can not bind to port 8000")
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.run()
.unwrap();
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}` "rust" "" }}
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< / div >
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< / div >
< / div >
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< div class = "actix-showcase" >
< div class = "col-md-9" >
< div class = "actix-feature" id = "responders" >
< h2 > Flexible Responders< / h2 >
< p >
Handler functions in actix can return a wide range of objects that
implement the < code > Responder< / code > trait. This makes it a breeze
to return consistent responses from your APIs.
< / p >
{{ highlight `#[derive(Serialize)]
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struct Measurement {
temperature: f32,
}
fn hello_world() -> impl Responder {
"Hello World!"
}
fn current_temperature(_req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
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web::Json(Measurement { temperature: 42.3 })
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}` "rust" "" }}
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< / div >
< div class = "actix-feature" id = "extractors" >
< h2 > Powerful Extractors< / h2 >
< p >
Actix comes with a powerful extractor system that extracts data
from the incoming HTTP request and passes it to your view functions.
Not only does this make for a convenient API but it also means that
your view functions can be synchronous code and still benefit
from asynchronous IO handling.
< / p >
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{{ highlight `#[derive(Deserialize, Serialize)]
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struct Event {
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id: Option< i32 > ,
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timestamp: f64,
kind: String,
tags: Vec< String > ,
}
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fn capture_event(evt: web::Json< Event > ) -> actix_web::Result< HttpResponse > {
let new_event = store_event_in_db(evt.timestamp,
evt.kind.clone(),
evt.tags.clone());
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok().json(new_event))
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}` "rust" "" }}
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< / div >
< div class = "actix-feature" id = "forms" >
< h2 > Easy Form Handling< / h2 >
< p >
Handling multipart/urlencoded form data is easy. Just define
a structure that can be deserialized and actix will handle
the rest.
< / p >
{{ highlight `#[derive(Deserialize)]
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struct Register {
username: String,
country: String,
}
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fn register(params: web::Form< Register > ) -> actix_web::Result< HttpResponse > {
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok().body(format!(
"Hello {} from {}!",
params.username, params.country
)))
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}` "rust" "" }}
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< / div >
< div class = "actix-feature" id = "routing" >
< h2 > Request Routing< / h2 >
< p >
An actix app comes with a URL routing system that lets you match on
URLs and invoke individual handlers. For extra flexibility, scopes
can be used.
< / p >
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{{ highlight `fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().body("Hello from the index page!")
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}
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fn hello(path: web::Path< String > ) -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().body(format!("Hello {}!", & path))
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}
fn main() {
App::new()
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.route("/", web::get().to(index))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(hello));
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}` "rust" "" }}
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< / div >
< / div >
< div class = "col-md-3 actix-feature-selectors" >
< ul >
< li class = "actix-feature-selector" > < a href = "#responders" > flexible responders< / label >
< li class = "actix-feature-selector" > < a href = "#extractors" > powerful extractors< / label >
< li class = "actix-feature-selector" > < a href = "#forms" > easy form handling< / label >
< li class = "actix-feature-selector" > < a href = "#routing" > request routing< / label >
< / ul >
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< / div >
< / div >
< / div >
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< / div >
{{ partial "footer" . }}