5.8 KiB
title | menu | weight |
---|---|---|
Middleware | docs_advanced | 220 |
Middleware
Actix-web's middleware system allows us to add additional behavior to request/response processing. Middleware can hook into an incoming request process, enabling us to modify requests as well as halt request processing to return a response early.
Middleware can also hook into response processing.
Typically, middleware is involved in the following actions:
- Pre-process the Request
- Post-process a Response
- Modify application state
- Access external services (redis, logging, sessions)
Middleware is registered for each App
, scope
, or Resource
and executed in opposite
order as registration. In general, a middleware is a type that implements the
Service trait and Transform trait. Each method in
the traits has a default implementation. Each method can return a result immediately
or a future object.
The following demonstrates creating a simple middleware:
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="main.rs" section="simple" >}}
Alternatively, for simple use cases, you can use wrap_fn to create small, ad-hoc middleware:
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="wrap_fn.rs" section="wrap-fn" >}}
Actix-web provides several useful middleware, such as logging, user sessions, compress, etc.
Warning: if you use wrap()
or wrap_fn()
multiple times, the last occurrence will be executed first.
Logging
Logging is implemented as a middleware. It is common to register a logging middleware as the first middleware for the application. Logging middleware must be registered for each application.
The Logger
middleware uses the standard log crate to log information. You should enable logger
for actix_web package to see access log (env_logger or similar).
Usage
Create Logger
middleware with the specified format
. Default Logger
can be created
with default
method, it uses the default format:
%a %t "%r" %s %b "%{Referer}i" "%{User-Agent}i" %T
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="logger.rs" section="logger" >}}
The following is an example of the default logging format:
INFO:actix_web::middleware::logger: 127.0.0.1:59934 [02/Dec/2017:00:21:43 -0800] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 302 0 "-" "curl/7.54.0" 0.000397
INFO:actix_web::middleware::logger: 127.0.0.1:59947 [02/Dec/2017:00:22:40 -0800] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1" 200 0 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.13; rv:57.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/57.0" 0.000646
Format
%%
The percent sign%a
Remote IP-address (IP-address of proxy if using reverse proxy)%t
Time when the request was started to process%P
The process ID of the child that serviced the request%r
First line of request%s
Response status code%b
Size of response in bytes, including HTTP headers%T
Time taken to serve the request, in seconds with floating fraction in .06f format%D
Time taken to serve the request, in milliseconds%{FOO}i
request.headers['FOO']%{FOO}o
response.headers['FOO']%{FOO}e
os.environ['FOO']
Default headers
To set default response headers, the DefaultHeaders
middleware can be used. The
DefaultHeaders middleware does not set the header if response headers already contain
a specified header.
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="default_headers.rs" section="default-headers" >}}
User sessions
Actix-web provides a general solution for session management. The actix-session middleware can use multiple backend types to store session data.
By default, only cookie session backend is implemented. Other backend implementations can be added.
CookieSession uses cookies as session storage. CookieSessionBackend
creates sessions which are limited to storing fewer than 4000 bytes of data, as the payload
must fit into a single cookie. An internal server error is generated if a session
contains more than 4000 bytes.
A cookie may have a security policy of signed or private. Each has a respective
CookieSession
constructor.
A signed cookie may be viewed but not modified by the client. A private cookie may neither be viewed nor modified by the client.
The constructors take a key as an argument. This is the private key for cookie session - when this value is changed, all session data is lost.
In general, you create a SessionStorage
middleware and initialize it with specific
backend implementation, such as a CookieSession
. To access session data the
Session
extractor must be used. This method returns a
Session object, which allows us to get or set session data.
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="user_sessions.rs" section="user-session" >}}
Error handlers
ErrorHandlers
middleware allows us to provide custom handlers for responses.
You can use the ErrorHandlers::handler()
method to register a custom error handler
for a specific status code. You can modify an existing response or create a completly new
one. The error handler can return a response immediately or return a future that resolves
into a response.
{{< include-example example="middleware" file="errorhandler.rs" section="error-handler" >}}