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443 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: URL Dispatch
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menu: docs_advanced
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weight: 190
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---
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# URL Dispatch
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URL dispatch provides a simple way for mapping URLs to handler code using a simple pattern
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matching language. If one of the patterns matches the path information associated with a request,
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a particular handler object is invoked.
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> A handler is a specific object that implements the
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> `Handler` trait, defined in your application, that receives the request and returns
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> a response object. More information is available in the
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> [handler section](sec-4-handler.html).
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# Resource configuration
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Resource configuration is the act of adding a new resources to an application.
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A resource has a name, which acts as an identifier to be used for URL generation.
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The name also allows developers to add routes to existing resources.
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A resource also has a pattern, meant to match against the *PATH* portion of a *URL* (the portion following the scheme and
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port, e.g. */foo/bar* in the *URL* *http://localhost:8080/foo/bar?q=value*).
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It does not match against the *QUERY* portion (the portion that follows *?*, e.g. *q=value* in *http://localhost:8080/foo/bar?q=value*).
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The [*App::route()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.App.html#method.route) method provides
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simple way of registering routes. This method adds a single route to application
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routing table. This method accepts a *path pattern*,
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*http method* and a handler function. `route()` method could be called multiple times
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for the same path, in that case, multiple routes register for the same resource path.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" section="main" >}}
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While *App::route()* provides simple way of registering routes, to access
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complete resource configuration, a different method has to be used.
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The [*App::resource()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.App.html#method.resource) method
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adds a single resource to application routing table. This method accepts a *path pattern*
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and a resource configuration function.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="resource.rs" section="resource" >}}
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The *Configuration function* has the following type:
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```rust
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FnOnce(&mut Resource<_>) -> ()
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```
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The *Configuration function* can set a name and register specific routes.
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If a resource does not contain any route or does not have any matching routes, it
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returns *NOT FOUND* http response.
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## Configuring a Route
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Resource contains a set of routes. Each route in turn has a set of predicates and a handler.
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New routes can be created with `Resource::route()` method which returns a reference
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to new *Route* instance. By default the *route* does not contain any predicates, so matches
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all requests and the default handler is `HttpNotFound`.
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The application routes incoming requests based on route criteria which are defined during
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resource registration and route registration. Resource matches all routes it contains in
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the order the routes were registered via `Resource::route()`.
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> A *Route* can contain any number of *predicates* but only one handler.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="cfg.rs" section="cfg" >}}
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In this example, `HttpResponse::Ok()` is returned for *GET* requests.
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If a request contains `Content-Type` header, the value of this header is *text/plain*,
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and path equals to `/path`, Resource calls handle of the first matching route.
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If a resource can not match any route, a "NOT FOUND" response is returned.
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[*ResourceHandler::route()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.ResourceHandler.html#method.route) returns a
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[*Route*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.Route.html) object. Route can be configured with a
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builder-like pattern. Following configuration methods are available:
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* [*Route::guard()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.Route.html#method.guard)
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registers a new guard. Any number of guards can be registered for each route.
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* [*Route::method()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.Route.html#method.method)
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registers a method guard. Any number of guards can be registered for each route.
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* [*Route::to()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.Route.html#method.to) registers
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handler function for this route. Only one handler can be registered.
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Usually handler registration
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is the last config operation. Handler function can be a function or closure
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and has the type
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`Fn(HttpRequest<S>) -> R + 'static`
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* [*Route::to_async()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/dev/struct.Route.html#method.to_async) registers
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an async handler function for this route. Only one handler can be registered.
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Handler registration is the last config operation. Handler function can
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be a function or closure and has the type
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`Fn(HttpRequest<S>) -> Future<Item = HttpResponse, Error = Error> + 'static`
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# Route matching
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The main purpose of route configuration is to match (or not match) the request's `path`
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against a URL path pattern. `path` represents the path portion of the URL that was requested.
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The way that *actix* does this is very simple. When a request enters the system,
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for each resource configuration declaration present in the system, actix checks
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the request's path against the pattern declared. This checking happens in the order that
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the routes were declared via `App::resource()` method. If resource can not be found,
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the *default resource* is used as the matched resource.
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When a route configuration is declared, it may contain route guard arguments. All route
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guards associated with a route declaration must be `true` for the route configuration to
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be used for a given request during a check. If any guard in the set of route guard
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arguments provided to a route configuration returns `false` during a check, that route is
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skipped and route matching continues through the ordered set of routes.
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If any route matches, the route matching process stops and the handler associated with
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the route is invoked. If no route matches after all route patterns are exhausted, a
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*NOT FOUND* response get returned.
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# Resource pattern syntax
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The syntax of the pattern matching language used by actix in the pattern
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argument is straightforward.
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The pattern used in route configuration may start with a slash character. If the pattern
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does not start with a slash character, an implicit slash will be prepended
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to it at matching time. For example, the following patterns are equivalent:
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```
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{foo}/bar/baz
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```
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and:
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```
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/{foo}/bar/baz
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```
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A *variable part* (replacement marker) is specified in the form *{identifier}*,
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where this means "accept any characters up to the next slash character and use this
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as the name in the `HttpRequest.match_info()` object".
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A replacement marker in a pattern matches the regular expression `[^{}/]+`.
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A match_info is the `Params` object representing the dynamic parts extracted from a
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*URL* based on the routing pattern. It is available as *request.match_info*. For example, the
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following pattern defines one literal segment (foo) and two replacement markers (baz, and bar):
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```
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foo/{baz}/{bar}
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```
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The above pattern will match these URLs, generating the following match information:
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```
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foo/1/2 -> Params {'baz':'1', 'bar':'2'}
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foo/abc/def -> Params {'baz':'abc', 'bar':'def'}
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```
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It will not match the following patterns however:
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```
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foo/1/2/ -> No match (trailing slash)
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bar/abc/def -> First segment literal mismatch
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```
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The match for a segment replacement marker in a segment will be done only up to
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the first non-alphanumeric character in the segment in the pattern. So, for instance,
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if this route pattern was used:
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```
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foo/{name}.html
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```
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The literal path */foo/biz.html* will match the above route pattern, and the match result
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will be `Params{'name': 'biz'}`. However, the literal path */foo/biz* will not match,
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because it does not contain a literal *.html* at the end of the segment represented
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by *{name}.html* (it only contains biz, not biz.html).
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To capture both segments, two replacement markers can be used:
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```
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foo/{name}.{ext}
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```
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The literal path */foo/biz.html* will match the above route pattern, and the match
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result will be *Params{'name': 'biz', 'ext': 'html'}*. This occurs because there is a
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literal part of *.* (period) between the two replacement markers *{name}* and *{ext}*.
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Replacement markers can optionally specify a regular expression which will be used to decide
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whether a path segment should match the marker. To specify that a replacement marker should
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match only a specific set of characters as defined by a regular expression, you must use a
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slightly extended form of replacement marker syntax. Within braces, the replacement marker
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name must be followed by a colon, then directly thereafter, the regular expression. The default
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regular expression associated with a replacement marker *[^/]+* matches one or more characters
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which are not a slash. For example, under the hood, the replacement marker *{foo}* can more
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verbosely be spelled as *{foo:[^/]+}*. You can change this to be an arbitrary regular expression
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to match an arbitrary sequence of characters, such as *{foo:\d+}* to match only digits.
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Segments must contain at least one character in order to match a segment replacement marker.
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For example, for the URL */abc/*:
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* */abc/{foo}* will not match.
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* */{foo}/* will match.
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> **Note**: path will be URL-unquoted and decoded into valid unicode string before
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> matching pattern and values representing matched path segments will be URL-unquoted too.
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So for instance, the following pattern:
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```
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foo/{bar}
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```
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When matching the following URL:
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```
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http://example.com/foo/La%20Pe%C3%B1a
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```
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The matchdict will look like so (the value is URL-decoded):
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```
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Params{'bar': 'La Pe\xf1a'}
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```
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Literal strings in the path segment should represent the decoded value of the
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path provided to actix. You don't want to use a URL-encoded value in the pattern.
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For example, rather than this:
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```
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/Foo%20Bar/{baz}
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```
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You'll want to use something like this:
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```
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/Foo Bar/{baz}
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```
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It is possible to get "tail match". For this purpose custom regex has to be used.
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```
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foo/{bar}/{tail:.*}
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```
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The above pattern will match these URLs, generating the following match information:
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```
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foo/1/2/ -> Params{'bar':'1', 'tail': '2/'}
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foo/abc/def/a/b/c -> Params{'bar':u'abc', 'tail': 'def/a/b/c'}
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```
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# Scoping Routes
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Scoping helps you organize routes sharing common root paths. You can nest
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scopes within scopes.
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Suppose that you want to organize paths to endpoints used to manage a "Project",
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consisting of "Tasks". Such paths may include:
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- /project
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- /project/{project_id}
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- /project/{project_id}/task
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- /project/{project_id}/task/{task_id}
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A scoped layout of these paths would appear as follows
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="scope.rs" section="scope" >}}
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A *scoped* path can contain variable path segments as resources. Consistent with
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unscoped paths.
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You can get variable path segments from `HttpRequest::match_info()`.
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`Path` extractor also is able to extract scope level variable segments.
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# Match information
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All values representing matched path segments are available in
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[`HttpRequest::match_info`](../actix_web/struct.HttpRequest.html#method.match_info).
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Specific values can be retrieved with
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[`Params::get()`](../actix_web/dev/struct.Params.html#method.get).
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="minfo.rs" section="minfo" >}}
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For this example for path '/a/1/2/', values v1 and v2 will resolve to "1" and "2".
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It is possible to create a `PathBuf` from a tail path parameter. The returned `PathBuf` is
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percent-decoded. If a segment is equal to "..", the previous segment (if
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any) is skipped.
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For security purposes, if a segment meets any of the following conditions,
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an `Err` is returned indicating the condition met:
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* Decoded segment starts with any of: `.` (except `..`), `*`
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* Decoded segment ends with any of: `:`, `>`, `<`
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* Decoded segment contains any of: `/`
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* On Windows, decoded segment contains any of: '\'
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* Percent-encoding results in invalid UTF8.
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As a result of these conditions, a `PathBuf` parsed from request path parameter is
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safe to interpolate within, or use as a suffix of, a path without additional checks.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="pbuf.rs" section="pbuf" >}}
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## Path information extractor
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Actix provides functionality for type safe path information extraction.
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[*Path*](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.Path.html) extracts information, destination type
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could be defined in several different forms. Simplest approach is to use
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`tuple` type. Each element in tuple must correpond to one element from
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path pattern. i.e. you can match path pattern `/{id}/{username}/` against
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`Path<(u32, String)>` type, but `Path<(String, String, String)>` type will
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always fail.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="path.rs" section="path" >}}
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It also possible to extract path pattern information to a struct. In this case,
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this struct must implement *serde's *`Deserialize` trait.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="path2.rs" section="path" >}}
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[*Query*](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.Query.html) provides similar
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functionality for request query parameters.
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# Generating resource URLs
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Use the [*HttpRequest.url_for()*](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.HttpRequest.html#method.url_for)
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method to generate URLs based on resource patterns. For example, if you've configured a
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resource with the name "foo" and the pattern "{a}/{b}/{c}", you might do this:
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="urls.rs" section="url" >}}
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This would return something like the string *http://example.com/test/1/2/3* (at least if
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the current protocol and hostname implied http://example.com).
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`url_for()` method returns [*Url object*](https://docs.rs/url/1.7.0/url/struct.Url.html) so you
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can modify this url (add query parameters, anchor, etc).
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`url_for()` could be called only for *named* resources otherwise error get returned.
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# External resources
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Resources that are valid URLs, can be registered as external resources. They are useful
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for URL generation purposes only and are never considered for matching at request time.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="url_ext.rs" section="ext" >}}
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# Path normalization and redirecting to slash-appended routes
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By normalizing it means:
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* To add a trailing slash to the path.
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* To replace multiple slashes with one.
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The handler returns as soon as it finds a path that resolves
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correctly. The order of normalization conditions, if all are enabled, is 1) merge, 2) both merge and append
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and 3) append. If the path resolves with
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at least one of those conditions, it will redirect to the new path.
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If *append* is *true*, append slash when needed. If a resource is
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defined with trailing slash and the request doesn't have one, it will
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be appended automatically.
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If *merge* is *true*, merge multiple consecutive slashes in the path into one.
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This handler designed to be used as a handler for application's *default resource*.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="norm.rs" section="norm" >}}
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In this example `/resource`, `//resource///` will be redirected to `/resource/`.
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In this example, the path normalization handler is registered for all methods,
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but you should not rely on this mechanism to redirect *POST* requests. The redirect of the
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slash-appending *Not Found* will turn a *POST* request into a GET, losing any
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*POST* data in the original request.
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It is possible to register path normalization only for *GET* requests only:
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="norm2.rs" section="norm" >}}
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## Using an Application Prefix to Compose Applications
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The `web::scope()` method allows to set a specific application scope.
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This scope represents a resource prefix that will be prepended to all resource patterns added
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by the resource configuration. This can be used to help mount a set of routes at a different
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location than the included callable's author intended while still maintaining the same
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resource names.
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For example:
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="scope.rs" section="scope" >}}
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In the above example, the *show_users* route will have an effective route pattern of
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*/users/show* instead of */show* because the application's scope will be prepended
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to the pattern. The route will then only match if the URL path is */users/show*,
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and when the `HttpRequest.url_for()` function is called with the route name show_users,
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it will generate a URL with that same path.
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# Custom route guard
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You can think of a guard as a simple function that accepts a *request* object reference
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and returns *true* or *false*. Formally, a guard is any object that implements the
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[`Guard`](../actix_web/guard/trait.Guard.html) trait. Actix provides
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several predicates, you can check
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[functions section](../../actix-web/actix_web/guard/index.html#functions) of api docs.
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Here is a simple guard that check that a request contains a specific *header*:
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="pred.rs" section="pred" >}}
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In this example, *index* handler will be called only if request contains *CONTENT-TYPE* header.
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Guards have access to the application's state via `HttpRequest::data()`.
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Also predicates can store extra information in
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[request extensions](../../actix-web/actix_web/struct.HttpRequest.html#method.extensions).
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## Modifying guard values
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You can invert the meaning of any predicate value by wrapping it in a `Not` predicate.
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For example, if you want to return "METHOD NOT ALLOWED" response for all methods
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except "GET":
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="pred2.rs" section="pred" >}}
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The `Any` guard accepts a list of guards and matches if any of the supplied
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guards match. i.e:
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```rust
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guard::Any(guard::Get()).or(guard::Post())
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```
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The `All` guard accepts a list of guard and matches if all of the supplied
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guards match. i.e:
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```rust
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guard::All(guard::Get()).and(guard::Header("content-type", "plain/text"))
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```
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# Changing the default Not Found response
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If the path pattern can not be found in the routing table or a resource can not find matching
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route, the default resource is used. The default response is *NOT FOUND*.
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It is possible to override the *NOT FOUND* response with `App::default_service()`.
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This method accepts a *configuration function* same as normal resource configuration
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with `App::service()` method.
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{{< include-example example="url-dispatch" file="dhandler.rs" section="default" >}}
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