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actix-website/content/docs/response.md
2018-05-22 23:15:08 +02:00

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Response

A builder-like pattern is used to construct an instance of HttpResponse. HttpResponse provides several methods that return a HttpResponseBuilder instance, which implements various convenience methods for building responses.

Check the documentation for type descriptions.

The methods .body, .finish, and .json finalize response creation and return a constructed HttpResponse instance. If this methods is called on the same builder instance multiple times, the builder will panic.

use actix_web::{HttpRequest, HttpResponse, http::ContentEncoding};

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
    HttpResponse::Ok()
        .content_encoding(ContentEncoding::Br)
        .content_type("plain/text")
        .header("X-Hdr", "sample")
        .body("data")
}

Content encoding

Actix automatically compresses payloads. The following codecs are supported:

  • Brotli
  • Gzip
  • Deflate
  • Identity

Response payload is compressed based on the content_encoding parameter. By default, ContentEncoding::Auto is used. If ContentEncoding::Auto is selected, then the compression depends on the request's Accept-Encoding header.

ContentEncoding::Identity can be used to disable compression. If another content encoding is selected, the compression is enforced for that codec.

For example, to enable brotli use ContentEncoding::Br:

use actix_web::{HttpRequest, HttpResponse, http::ContentEncoding};

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
    HttpResponse::Ok()
        .content_encoding(ContentEncoding::Br)
        .body("data")
}

In this case we explicitly disable content compression by setting content encoding to a Identity value:

use actix_web::{HttpRequest, HttpResponse, http::ContentEncoding};

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
    HttpResponse::Ok()
        // v- disable compression
        .content_encoding(ContentEncoding::Identity)
        .body("data")
}

Also it is possible to set default content encoding on application level, by default ContentEncoding::Auto is used, which implies automatic content compression negotiation.

use actix_web::{App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, http::ContentEncoding};

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
    HttpResponse::Ok()
        .body("data")
}

fn main() {
    let app = App::new()
        // v- disable compression for all routes
       .default_encoding(ContentEncoding::Identity)
       .resource("/index.html", |r| r.with(index));
}

JSON Response

The Json type allows to respond with well-formed JSON data: simply return a value of type Json where T is the type of a structure to serialize into JSON. The type T must implement the Serialize trait from serde.

# extern crate actix_web;
#[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive;
use actix_web::{App, HttpRequest, Json, Result, http::Method};

#[derive(Serialize)]
struct MyObj {
    name: String,
}

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> Result<Json<MyObj>> {
    Ok(Json(MyObj{name: req.match_info().query("name")?}))
}

fn main() {
    App::new()
        .resource(r"/a/{name}", |r| r.method(Method::GET).f(index))
        .finish();
}

Chunked transfer encoding

Chunked encoding on a response can be enabled with HttpResponseBuilder::chunked(). This takes effect only for Body::Streaming(BodyStream) or Body::StreamingContext bodies. If the response payload compression is enabled and a streaming body is used, chunked encoding is enabled automatically.

Enabling chunked encoding for HTTP/2.0 responses is forbidden.

use actix_web::*;
use bytes::Bytes;
use futures::stream::once;

fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
    HttpResponse::Ok()
        .chunked()
        .body(Body::Streaming(Box::new(once(Ok(Bytes::from_static(b"data"))))))
}