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add vh section

This commit is contained in:
Nikolay Kim 2018-06-07 21:08:11 -07:00
parent d9fe72926f
commit 5938691794
3 changed files with 57 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -72,3 +72,36 @@ Combining multiple applications with different state is possible as well.
This limitation can easily be overcome with the [App::boxed](https://docs.rs/actix-web/*/actix_web/struct.App.html#method.boxed) method, which converts an App into a boxed trait object. This limitation can easily be overcome with the [App::boxed](https://docs.rs/actix-web/*/actix_web/struct.App.html#method.boxed) method, which converts an App into a boxed trait object.
{{< include-example example="application" file="state.rs" section="combine" >}} {{< include-example example="application" file="state.rs" section="combine" >}}
## Using an Application Prefix to Compose Applications
The `App::prefix()` method allows to set a specific application prefix.
This prefix represents a resource prefix that will be prepended to all resource patterns added
by the resource configuration. This can be used to help mount a set of routes at a different
location than the included callable's author intended while still maintaining the same
resource names.
For example:
{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="prefix.rs" section="prefix" >}}
In the above example, the *show_users* route will have an effective route pattern of
*/users/show* instead of */show* because the application's prefix argument will be prepended
to the pattern. The route will then only match if the URL path is */users/show*,
and when the `HttpRequest.url_for()` function is called with the route name show_users,
it will generate a URL with that same path.
## Application predicates and virtual hosting
You can think of a predicate as a simple function that accepts a *request* object reference
and returns *true* or *false*. Formally, a predicate is any object that implements the
[`Predicate`](../actix_web/pred/trait.Predicate.html) trait. Actix provides
several predicates, you can check
[functions section](../../actix-web/actix_web/pred/index.html#functions) of api docs.
Any of this predicates could be used
with [`App::filter()`](../actix_web/struct.App.html#method.filter) method. One of the
provided predicates is [`Host`](../actix_web/pred/fn.Host.html), it can be used
as application's filter based on request's host information.
{{< include-example example="application" file="vh.rs" section="vh" >}}

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@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ extern crate actix_web;
use actix_web::{http::Method, server, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, Responder}; use actix_web::{http::Method, server, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, Responder};
mod state; mod state;
mod vh;
fn make_app() { fn make_app() {
// <make_app> // <make_app>

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@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
#![allow(unused)]
extern crate actix_web;
use actix_web::{http::Method, server, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, Responder};
mod state;
// <vh>
fn main() {
let server = server::new(|| {
vec![
App::new()
.filter(pred::Host("www.rust-lang.org"))
.resource("/", |r| r.f(|r| HttpResponse::Ok())),
App::new()
.filter(pred::Host("users.rust-lang.org"))
.resource("/", |r| r.f(|r| HttpResponse::Ok())),
App::new().resource("/", |r| r.f(|r| HttpResponse::Ok())),
]
});
server.run();
}
// </vh>