This way there is now only one way to create a router:
```rust
use axum::{Router, handler::get};
let app = Router::new()
.route("/foo", get(handler))
.route("/foo", get(handler));
```
`nest` was changed in the same way:
```rust
use axum::Router;
let app = Router::new().nest("/foo", service);
```
Previously, on `main`, this wouldn't compile:
```rust
let app = route("/", get(handler))
.layer(
ServiceBuilder::new()
.timeout(Duration::from_secs(10))
.into_inner(),
)
.handle_error(...)
.route(...); // <-- doesn't work
```
That is because `handle_error` would be
`axum::service::ServiceExt::handle_error` which returns `HandleError<_,
_, _, HandleErrorFromService>` which does _not_ implement `RoutingDsl`.
So you couldn't call `route`. This was caused by
https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/pull/120.
Basically `handle_error` when called on a `RoutingDsl`, the resulting
service should also implement `RoutingDsl`, but if called on another
random service it should _not_ implement `RoutingDsl`.
I don't think thats possible by having `handle_error` on `ServiceExt`
which is implemented for any service, since all axum routers are also
services by design.
This resolves the issue by removing `ServiceExt` and moving its methods
to `RoutingDsl`. Then we have more tight control over what has a
`handle_error` method.
`service::OnMethod` now also has a `handle_error` so you can still
handle errors from random services, by doing
`service::any(svc).handle_error(...)`.
* feat(ws): make Message an enum to allow pattern matching
* fix(examples): update to new websockets `Message`
* fix(ws): remove wildcard imports
* fix(examples/chat): apply clippy's never_loop
* style: `cargo fmt`
* docs:add license notes above parts that are copied
* fix(ws): make CloseCode an alias to u16
* fix: move Message from src/ws/mod.rs to src/extract/ws.rs
* docs: add changelog entry about websocket messages
* fix: remove useless convertions to the same type
Adds associated `Body` and `BodyError` types to `IntoResponse`. This is required for returning responses with bodies other than `hyper::Body` from handlers. That wasn't previously possible.
This is a breaking change so should be shipped in 0.2.
* Set RUST_LOG environment var for all examples using tracing
Signed-off-by: Spencer Gilbert <spencer.gilbert@gmail.com>
* Update examples/multipart_form.rs
Co-authored-by: David Pedersen <david.pdrsn@gmail.com>
Example usage:
```rust
use axum::{prelude::*, sse::{sse, Event, KeepAlive}};
use tokio_stream::StreamExt as _;
use futures::stream::{self, Stream};
use std::{
time::Duration,
convert::Infallible,
};
let app = route("/sse", sse(make_stream).keep_alive(KeepAlive::default()));
async fn make_stream(
// you can also put extractors here
) -> Result<impl Stream<Item = Result<Event, Infallible>>, Infallible> {
// A `Stream` that repeats an event every second
let stream = stream::repeat_with(|| Event::default().data("hi!"))
.map(Ok)
.throttle(Duration::from_secs(1));
Ok(stream)
}
```
Implementation is based on [warp's](https://github.com/seanmonstar/warp/blob/master/src/filters/sse.rs)
Fixes https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/issues/43
With this you can get the remote address like so:
```rust
use axum::{prelude::*, extract::ConnectInfo};
use std::net::SocketAddr;
let app = route("/", get(handler));
async fn handler(ConnectInfo(addr): ConnectInfo<SocketAddr>) -> String {
format!("Hello {}", addr)
}
// Starting the app with `into_make_service_with_connect_info` is required
// for `ConnectInfo` to work.
let make_svc = app.into_make_service_with_connect_info::<SocketAddr, _>();
hyper::Server::bind(&"0.0.0.0:3000".parse().unwrap())
.serve(make_svc)
.await
.expect("server failed");
```
This API is fully generic and supports whatever transport layer you're using with Hyper. I've updated the unix domain socket example to extract `peer_creds` and `peer_addr`.
Not actually related to Axum, can be implemented directly with Hyper, but I figure its nice to have for demonstration and might help catch accidental breaking changes in the future.
Previously extractors worked directly on `Request<B>` which meant you
had to do weird tricks like `mem::take(req.headers_mut())` to get owned
parts of the request.
This changes that instead to use a new `RequestParts` type that have
methods to "take" each part of the request. Without having to do weird
tricks.
Also removed the need to have `B: Default` for body extractors.
This changes error model to actually allow errors. I think if we're going to use this for things like tonic's route we need a more flexible error handling model. The same `handle_error` adaptors are still there but services aren't required to have `Infallible` as their error type. The error type is simply propagated all the way through.