2018-05-22 23:15:08 +02:00
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---
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title: Handlers
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menu: docs_basics
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weight: 160
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---
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# Request Handlers
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A request handler can be any object that implements
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[*Handler*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/trait.Handler.html) trait.
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Request handling happens in two stages. First the handler object is called,
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returning any object that implements the
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[*Responder*](../../actix-web/actix_web/trait.Responder.html#foreign-impls) trait.
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Then, `respond_to()` is called on the returned object, converting itself to a `AsyncResult` or `Error`.
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By default actix provides `Responder` implementations for some standard types,
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such as `&'static str`, `String`, etc.
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> For a complete list of implementations, check
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> [*Responder documentation*](../../actix-web/actix_web/trait.Responder.html#foreign-impls).
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Examples of valid handlers:
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```rust
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> &'static str {
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"Hello world!"
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}
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```
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```rust
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> String {
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"Hello world!".to_owned()
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}
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```
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You can also change the signature to return `impl Responder` which works well if more
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complex types are involved.
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```rust
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
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Bytes::from_static("Hello world!")
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}
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```
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```rust,ignore
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> Box<Future<Item=HttpResponse, Error=Error>> {
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...
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}
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```
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*Handler* trait is generic over *S*, which defines the application state's type.
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Application state is accessible from the handler with the `HttpRequest::state()` method;
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however, state is accessible as a read-only reference. If you need mutable access to state,
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it must be implemented.
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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> **Note**: Alternatively, the handler can use interior mutably to access its own
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> state. **Beware**, actix creates multiple copies
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2018-05-22 23:15:08 +02:00
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> of the application state and the handlers, unique for each thread. If you run your
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> application in several threads, actix will create the same amount as number of threads
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> of application state objects and handler objects.
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Here is an example of a handler that stores the number of processed requests:
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```rust
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use actix_web::{App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, dev::Handler};
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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struct MyHandler(Cell<usize>);
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impl<S> Handler<S> for MyHandler {
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type Result = HttpResponse;
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/// Handle request
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fn handle(&self, req: &HttpRequest<S>) -> Self::Result {
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let i = self.0.get();
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self.0.set(i + 1);
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HttpResponse::Ok().into()
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}
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}
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2018-10-07 10:46:13 +02:00
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fn main(){
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server::new(|| App::new()
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.resource("/", |r| r.h(MyHandler(Cell::new(0))))) //use r.h() to bind handler, not the r.f()
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.bind("127.0.0.1:8080")
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.unwrap()
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.run();
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}
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2018-05-22 23:15:08 +02:00
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```
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Although this handler will work, `self.0` will be different depending on the number of threads and
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number of requests processed per thread. A proper implementation would use `Arc` and `AtomicUsize`.
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```rust
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use actix_web::{server, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, dev::Handler};
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use std::sync::Arc;
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use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering};
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struct MyHandler(Arc<AtomicUsize>);
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impl<S> Handler<S> for MyHandler {
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type Result = HttpResponse;
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/// Handle request
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fn handle(&self, req: &HttpRequest<S>) -> Self::Result {
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self.0.fetch_add(1, Ordering::Relaxed);
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HttpResponse::Ok().into()
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}
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}
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fn main() {
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let sys = actix::System::new("example");
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let inc = Arc::new(AtomicUsize::new(0));
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server::new(
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move || {
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let cloned = inc.clone();
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App::new()
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.resource("/", move |r| r.h(MyHandler(cloned)))
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})
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.bind("127.0.0.1:8088").unwrap()
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.start();
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println!("Started http server: 127.0.0.1:8088");
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let _ = sys.run();
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}
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```
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> Be careful with synchronization primitives like `Mutex` or `RwLock`. The `actix-web` framework
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> handles requests asynchronously. By blocking thread execution, all concurrent
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> request handling processes would block. If you need to share or update some state
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> from multiple threads, consider using the [actix](https://actix.github.io/actix/actix/) actor system.
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## Response with custom type
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To return a custom type directly from a handler function, the type needs to implement the `Responder` trait.
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Let's create a response for a custom type that serializes to an `application/json` response:
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```rust
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# extern crate actix;
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# extern crate actix_web;
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extern crate serde;
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extern crate serde_json;
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#[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive;
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use actix_web::{server, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, Error, Responder, http};
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#[derive(Serialize)]
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struct MyObj {
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name: &'static str,
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}
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/// Responder
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impl Responder for MyObj {
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type Item = HttpResponse;
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type Error = Error;
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fn respond_to<S>(self, req: &HttpRequest<S>) -> Result<HttpResponse, Error> {
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let body = serde_json::to_string(&self)?;
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// Create response and set content type
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Ok(HttpResponse::Ok()
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.content_type("application/json")
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.body(body))
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}
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}
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
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MyObj { name: "user" }
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}
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fn main() {
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let sys = actix::System::new("example");
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server::new(
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|| App::new()
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.resource("/", |r| r.method(http::Method::GET).f(index)))
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.bind("127.0.0.1:8088").unwrap()
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.start();
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println!("Started http server: 127.0.0.1:8088");
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let _ = sys.run();
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}
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```
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## Async handlers
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There are two different types of async handlers. Response objects can be generated asynchronously
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or more precisely, any type that implements the [*Responder*](../../actix-web/actix_web/trait.Responder.html) trait.
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In this case, the handler must return a `Future` object that resolves to the *Responder* type, i.e:
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```rust
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use actix_web::*;
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use bytes::Bytes;
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use futures::stream::once;
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use futures::future::{Future, result};
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> Box<Future<Item=HttpResponse, Error=Error>> {
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result(Ok(HttpResponse::Ok()
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.content_type("text/html")
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.body(format!("Hello!"))))
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.responder()
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}
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index2(req: &HttpRequest) -> Box<Future<Item=&'static str, Error=Error>> {
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result(Ok("Welcome!"))
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.responder()
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}
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fn main() {
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App::new()
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.resource("/async", |r| r.route().a(index))
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.resource("/", |r| r.route().a(index2))
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.finish();
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}
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```
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Or the response body can be generated asynchronously. In this case, body
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must implement the stream trait `Stream<Item=Bytes, Error=Error>`, i.e:
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```rust
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use actix_web::*;
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use bytes::Bytes;
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use futures::stream::once;
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
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let body = once(Ok(Bytes::from_static(b"test")));
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HttpResponse::Ok()
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.content_type("application/json")
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.body(Body::Streaming(Box::new(body)))
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}
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fn main() {
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App::new()
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.resource("/async", |r| r.f(index))
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.finish();
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}
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```
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Both methods can be combined. (i.e Async response with streaming body)
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It is possible to return a `Result` where the `Result::Item` type can be `Future`.
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In this example, the `index` handler can return an error immediately or return a
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future that resolves to a `HttpResponse`.
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```rust
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use actix_web::*;
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use bytes::Bytes;
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use futures::stream::once;
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use futures::future::{Future, result};
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2018-07-21 14:40:42 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> Result<Box<Future<Item=HttpResponse, Error=Error>>, Error> {
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if is_error() {
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Err(error::ErrorBadRequest("bad request"))
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} else {
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Ok(Box::new(
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result(Ok(HttpResponse::Ok()
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.content_type("text/html")
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.body(format!("Hello!"))))))
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}
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}
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```
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## Different return types (Either)
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Sometimes, you need to return different types of responses. For example,
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you can error check and return errors, return async responses, or any result that requires two different types.
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For this case, the [*Either*](../../actix-web/actix_web/enum.Either.html) type can be used.
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`Either` allows combining two different responder types into a single type.
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```rust
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use futures::future::{Future, result};
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use actix_web::{Either, Error, HttpResponse};
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type RegisterResult = Either<HttpResponse, Box<Future<Item=HttpResponse, Error=Error>>>;
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2018-10-27 01:24:47 +02:00
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fn index(req: &HttpRequest) -> RegisterResult {
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if is_a_variant() { // <- choose variant A
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Either::A(
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HttpResponse::BadRequest().body("Bad data"))
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} else {
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Either::B( // <- variant B
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result(Ok(HttpResponse::Ok()
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.content_type("text/html")
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.body(format!("Hello!")))).responder())
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}
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}
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```
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