Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper https://crates.io/crates/axum
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David Pedersen ba4d8a2357
Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458)
* Move axum crate into workspace subfolder

Over time I imagine we're gonna have other crates in this repo that
provide utilities or integrations for axum. This prepares for that by
moving the main axum crate into its own folder.

The README situation is a bit annoying because we want `./README.md`
for viewing the repo on github but `axum/README.md` for crates.io. For
now I've just copy/pasted it and added CI step to make sure they're
identical.

* update changelog link

* Add licenses to all examples

* is this how you install `diff`?

* or maybe this is how?

* fix readme links

* like this?

* fix cargo-deny step

* Try making root readme a symlink

* remove compare readme step

not needed since readme in repo root is now a symlink

* Revert "Add licenses to all examples"

This reverts commit ab321b7fb9.
2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
.github Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
axum Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
examples Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
.clippy.toml Add Headers response (#193) 2021-08-17 17:28:02 +02:00
.gitignore Initial pile of hacks 2021-05-29 21:13:06 +02:00
Cargo.toml Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
CHANGELOG.md Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Contributing guide fixes 2021-08-03 21:44:49 +02:00
deny.toml Add async-graphql example (#93) 2021-08-04 12:10:20 +02:00
ECOSYSTEM.md Mention "axum-typed-websockets" in community ecosystem 2021-11-03 10:26:20 +01:00
README.md Move axum crate into workspace subfolder (#458) 2021-11-03 12:38:48 +01:00

axum

axum is a web application framework that focuses on ergonomics and modularity.

Build status Crates.io Documentation

More information about this crate can be found in the crate documentation.

High level features

  • Route requests to handlers with a macro free API.
  • Declaratively parse requests using extractors.
  • Simple and predictable error handling model.
  • Generate responses with minimal boilerplate.
  • Take full advantage of the tower and tower-http ecosystem of middleware, services, and utilities.

In particular the last point is what sets axum apart from other frameworks. axum doesn't have its own middleware system but instead uses tower::Service. This means axum gets timeouts, tracing, compression, authorization, and more, for free. It also enables you to share middleware with applications written using hyper or tonic.

Usage example

use axum::{
    routing::{get, post},
    http::StatusCode,
    response::IntoResponse,
    Json, Router,
};
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
use std::net::SocketAddr;

#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
    // initialize tracing
    tracing_subscriber::fmt::init();

    // build our application with a route
    let app = Router::new()
        // `GET /` goes to `root`
        .route("/", get(root))
        // `POST /users` goes to `create_user`
        .route("/users", post(create_user));

    // run our app with hyper
    // `axum::Server` is a re-export of `hyper::Server`
    let addr = SocketAddr::from(([127, 0, 0, 1], 3000));
    tracing::debug!("listening on {}", addr);
    axum::Server::bind(&addr)
        .serve(app.into_make_service())
        .await
        .unwrap();
}

// basic handler that responds with a static string
async fn root() -> &'static str {
    "Hello, World!"
}

async fn create_user(
    // this argument tells axum to parse the request body
    // as JSON into a `CreateUser` type
    Json(payload): Json<CreateUser>,
) -> impl IntoResponse {
    // insert your application logic here
    let user = User {
        id: 1337,
        username: payload.username,
    };

    // this will be converted into a JSON response
    // with a status code of `201 Created`
    (StatusCode::CREATED, Json(user))
}

// the input to our `create_user` handler
#[derive(Deserialize)]
struct CreateUser {
    username: String,
}

// the output to our `create_user` handler
#[derive(Serialize)]
struct User {
    id: u64,
    username: String,
}

You can find this example as well as other example projects in the example directory.

See the crate documentation for way more examples.

Performance

axum is a relatively thin layer on top of hyper and adds very little overhead. So axum's performance is comparable to hyper. You can find a benchmark here.

Safety

This crate uses #![forbid(unsafe_code)] to ensure everything is implemented in 100% safe Rust.

Minimum supported Rust version

axum's MSRV is 1.54.

Examples

The examples folder contains various examples of how to use axum. The docs also have lots of examples

Getting Help

In the axum's repo we also have a number of examples showing how to put everything together. You're also welcome to ask in the Discord channel or open an issue with your question.

Community projects

See here for a list of community maintained crates and projects built with axum.

Contributing

🎈 Thanks for your help improving the project! We are so happy to have you! We have a contributing guide to help you get involved in the axum project.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT license.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in axum by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.