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actix-website/content/docs/extractors.md
2019-06-16 23:17:17 -04:00

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Extractors docs_basics 170

Type-safe information extraction

Actix provides facility for type-safe request information extraction. By default, actix provides several extractor implementations.

Accessing Extractors

How you access an Extractor depends on whether you are using a handler function or a custom Handler type.

Within Handler Functions

An Extractor can be passed to a handler function as a function parameter or accessed within the function by calling the ExtractorType::<...>::extract(req) function.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="main.rs" section="main" >}}

Within Custom Handler Types

Like a handler function, a custom Handler type can access an Extractor by calling the ExtractorType::<...>::extract(&req) function. An Extractor cannot be passed as a parameter to a custom Handler type because a custom Handler type must follow the handle function signature specified by the Handler trait it implements.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="custom_handler.rs" section="custom-handler" >}}

Path

Path provides information that can be extracted from the Request's path. You can deserialize any variable segment from the path.

For instance, for resource that registered for the /users/{userid}/{friend} path two segments could be deserialized, userid and friend. These segments could be extracted into a tuple, i.e. Path<(u32, String)> or any structure that implements the Deserialize trait from the serde crate.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="path_one.rs" section="path-one" >}}

It is also possible to extract path information to a specific type that implements the Deserialize trait from serde. Here is an equivalent example that uses serde instead of a tuple type.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="path_two.rs" section="path-two" >}}

Query

Same can be done with the request's query. The Query type provides extraction functionality. Underneath it uses serde_urlencoded crate.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="query.rs" section="query" >}}

Json

Json allows to deserialize a request body into a struct. To extract typed information from a request's body, the type T must implement the Deserialize trait from serde.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="json_one.rs" section="json-one" >}}

Some extractors provide a way to configure the extraction process. Json extractor JsonConfig type for configuration. When you register a handler using Route::with(), it returns a configuration instance. In case of a Json extractor it returns a JsonConfig. You can configure the maximum size of the json payload as well as a custom error handler function.

The following example limits the size of the payload to 4kb and uses a custom error handler.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="json_two.rs" section="json-two" >}}

Form

At the moment only url-encoded forms are supported. The url-encoded body could be extracted to a specific type. This type must implement the Deserialize trait from the serde crate.

FormConfig allows configuring the extraction process.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="form.rs" section="form" >}}

Multiple extractors

Actix provides extractor implementations for tuples (up to 10 elements) whose elements implement FromRequest.

For example we can use a path extractor and a query extractor at the same time.

{{< include-example example="extractors" file="multiple.rs" section="multi" >}}

Other

Actix also provides several other extractors:

  • Data - If you need access to an application state. This is similar to a HttpRequest::app_data().
  • HttpRequest - HttpRequest itself is an extractor which returns self, in case you need access to the request.
  • String - You can convert a request's payload to a String. Example is available in doc strings.
  • bytes::Bytes - You can convert a request's payload into Bytes. Example is available in doc strings.