5.8 KiB
title | menu | weight |
---|---|---|
Application | docs_basics | 140 |
Writing an Application
actix-web
provides various primitives to build web servers and applications with Rust.
It provides routing, middlewares, pre-processing of requests, post-processing of
responses, etc.
All actix-web
servers are built around the App
instance. It is used for
registering routes for resources and middlewares. It also stores application
state shared across all handlers within the same scope.
An application's scope
acts as a namespace for all routes, i.e. all routes for a
specific application scope have the same url path prefix. The application prefix always
contains a leading "/" slash. If a supplied prefix does not contain leading slash,
it is automatically inserted. The prefix should consist of value path segments.
For an application with scope
/app
, any request with the paths/app
,/app/
, or/app/test
would match; however, the path/application
would not match.
{{< include-example example="application" file="app.rs" section="setup" >}}
In this example, an application with the /app
prefix and a index.html
resource
are created. This resource is available through the /app/index.html
url.
For more information, check the URL Dispatch section.
State
Application state is shared with all routes and resources within the same scope. State
can be accessed with the web::Data<T>
extractor where T
is the type of the state. State is
also available for middlewares.
Let's write a simple application and store the application name in the state:
{{< include-example example="application" file="state.rs" section="setup" >}}
and pass in the state when initializing the App, and start the application:
{{< include-example example="application" file="state.rs" section="start_app" >}}
Any number of state types could be registered within the application.
Shared Mutable State
HttpServer
accepts an application factory rather than an application instance.
An HttpServer
constructs an application instance for each thread. Therefore, application data must be
constructed multiple times. If you want to share data between different threads, a shareable
object should be used, e.g. Send
+ Sync
.
Internally, web::Data
uses Arc
. Thus, in order to avoid creating two Arc
s, we should create our Data before registering it using App::app_data()
.
In the following example, we will write an application with mutable, shared state. First, we define our state and create our handler:
{{< include-example example="application" file="mutable_state.rs" section="setup_mutable" >}}
and register the data in an App
:
{{< include-example example="application" file="mutable_state.rs" section="make_app_mutable" >}}
Using an Application Scope to Compose Applications
The web::scope()
method allows setting a resource group prefix. This scope 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 original author intended while still maintaining the same resource names.
For example:
{{< include-example example="application" file="scope.rs" section="scope" >}}
In the above example, the show_users
route will have an effective route pattern of
/users/show
instead of /show
because the application's scope 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 guards and virtual hosting
You can think of a guard as a simple function that accepts a request object reference
and returns true or false. Formally, a guard is any object that implements the
Guard
trait. Actix-web provides several guards. You can check the
functions section of the API docs.
One of the provided guards is Header
. It can be used as a
filter based on request header information.
{{< include-example example="application" file="vh.rs" section="vh" >}}
Configure
For simplicity and reusability both App
and web::Scope
provide the configure
method.
This function is useful for moving parts of the configuration to a different module or even
library. For example, some of the resource's configuration could be moved to a different
module.
{{< include-example example="application" file="config.rs" section="config" >}}
The result of the above example would be:
/ -> "/"
/app -> "app"
/api/test -> "test"
Each ServiceConfig
can have its own data
, routes
, and services
.