3.4 KiB
title | menu | weight |
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Handlers | docs_basics | 160 |
Request Handlers
A request handler is a function that accepts zero or more parameters that can be extracted from a request (ie, impl FromRequest) and returns a type that can be converted into an HttpResponse (ie, impl Responder).
Request handling happens in two stages. First the handler object is called, returning any
object that implements the Responder trait. Then, respond_to()
is
called on the returned object, converting itself to a HttpResponse
or Error
.
By default actix-web provides Responder
implementations for some standard types,
such as &'static str
, String
, etc.
For a complete list of implementations, check Responder documentation.
Examples of valid handlers:
fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> &'static str {
"Hello world!"
}
fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> String {
"Hello world!".to_owned()
}
You can also change the signature to return impl Responder
which works well if more
complex types are involved.
fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
Bytes::from_static(b"Hello world!")
}
fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> Box<Future<Item=HttpResponse, Error=Error>> {
...
}
Response with custom type
To return a custom type directly from a handler function, the type needs to implement the Responder
trait.
Let's create a response for a custom type that serializes to an application/json
response:
{{< include-example example="responder-trait" file="main.rs" section="responder-trait" >}}
Async handlers
There are two different types of async handlers. Response objects can be generated asynchronously or more precisely, any type that implements the Responder trait.
In this case, the handler must return a Future
object that resolves to the Responder type, i.e:
{{< include-example example="async-handlers" file="main.rs" section="async-responder" >}}
Or the response body can be generated asynchronously. In this case, body must implement
the stream trait Stream<Item=Bytes, Error=Error>
, i.e:
{{< include-example example="async-handlers" file="stream.rs" section="stream" >}}
Both methods can be combined. (i.e Async response with streaming body)
It is possible to return a Result
where the Result::Item
type can be Future
. In
this example, the index
handler can return an error immediately or return a future
that resolves to a HttpResponse
.
{{< include-example example="async-handlers" file="async_stream.rs" section="async-stream" >}}
Different return types (Either)
Sometimes, you need to return different types of responses. For example, you can error check and return errors, return async responses, or any result that requires two different types.
For this case, the Either type can be used. Either
allows combining two
different responder types into a single type.
{{< include-example example="either" file="main.rs" section="either" >}}