This reworks axum's docs in an attempt to make things easier to find. Previously I wasn't a fan of those docs for the same topic were spread across the root module docs and more specific places like types and methods.
This changes it such that the root module docs only gives a high level introduction to a topic, perhaps with a small example, and then link to other places where all the details are. This means `Router` is now the single place to learn about routing, and etc for the topics like handlers and error handling.
With https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/pull/404 and https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/pull/402 all routes now have the same types and thus we don't need to nest them but can instead store them all in a map. This simplifies the routing quite a bit and is faster as well.
High level changes:
- Routes are now stored in a `HashMap<RouteId, Route<B>>`.
- `Router::or` is renamed to `Router::merge` because thats what it does now. It copies all routes from one router to another. This also means overlapping routes will cause a panic which is nice win.
- `Router::merge` now only accepts `Router`s so added `Router::fallback` for adding a global 404 handler.
- The `Or` service has been removed.
- `Router::layer` now only adds layers to the routes you actually have meaning middleware runs _after_ routing. I believe that addresses https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/issues/380 but will test that on another branch.
I've been thinking that having an associated type probably isn't
necessary. I imagine most users are either using `SocketAddr` to the
remote connection IP, or writing their own connection struct.
## Motivation
Current `tls-rustls` example might be inconvenient for some people.
## Solution
Rename current example to `low-level-rustls` and add a high level example in its place.
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.