axum/examples/error_handling_and_dependency_injection.rs
2021-08-01 22:01:33 +02:00

146 lines
3.9 KiB
Rust

//! Example showing how to convert errors into responses and how one might do
//! dependency injection using trait objects.
#![allow(dead_code)]
use axum::{
async_trait,
extract::{Extension, Json, UrlParams},
prelude::*,
response::IntoResponse,
AddExtensionLayer,
};
use http::StatusCode;
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
use serde_json::json;
use std::{net::SocketAddr, sync::Arc};
use uuid::Uuid;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
tracing_subscriber::fmt::init();
// Inject a `UserRepo` into our handlers via a trait object. This could be
// the live implementation or just a mock for testing.
let user_repo = Arc::new(ExampleUserRepo) as DynUserRepo;
// Build our application with some routes
let app = route("/users/:id", get(users_show))
.route("/users", post(users_create))
// Add our `user_repo` to all request's extensions so handlers can access
// it.
.layer(AddExtensionLayer::new(user_repo));
// Run our application
let addr = SocketAddr::from(([127, 0, 0, 1], 3000));
tracing::debug!("listening on {}", addr);
hyper::Server::bind(&addr)
.serve(app.into_make_service())
.await
.unwrap();
}
/// Handler for `GET /users/:id`.
///
/// Extracts the user repo from request extensions and calls it. `UserRepoError`s
/// are automatically converted into `AppError` which implements `IntoResponse`
/// so it can be returned from handlers directly.
async fn users_show(
UrlParams((user_id,)): UrlParams<(Uuid,)>,
Extension(user_repo): Extension<DynUserRepo>,
) -> Result<response::Json<User>, AppError> {
let user = user_repo.find(user_id).await?;
Ok(user.into())
}
/// Handler for `POST /users`.
async fn users_create(
Json(params): Json<CreateUser>,
Extension(user_repo): Extension<DynUserRepo>,
) -> Result<response::Json<User>, AppError> {
let user = user_repo.create(params).await?;
Ok(user.into())
}
/// Our app's top level error type.
enum AppError {
/// Something went wrong when calling the user repo.
UserRepo(UserRepoError),
}
/// This makes it possible to use `?` to automatically convert a `UserRepoError`
/// into an `AppError`.
impl From<UserRepoError> for AppError {
fn from(inner: UserRepoError) -> Self {
AppError::UserRepo(inner)
}
}
impl IntoResponse for AppError {
fn into_response(self) -> http::Response<Body> {
let (status, error_json) = match self {
AppError::UserRepo(UserRepoError::NotFound) => {
(StatusCode::NOT_FOUND, json!("User not found"))
}
AppError::UserRepo(UserRepoError::InvalidUsername) => {
(StatusCode::UNPROCESSABLE_ENTITY, json!("Invalid username"))
}
};
let mut response = response::Json(json!({
"error": error_json,
}))
.into_response();
*response.status_mut() = status;
response
}
}
/// Example implementation of `UserRepo`.
struct ExampleUserRepo;
#[async_trait]
impl UserRepo for ExampleUserRepo {
async fn find(&self, _user_id: Uuid) -> Result<User, UserRepoError> {
unimplemented!()
}
async fn create(&self, _params: CreateUser) -> Result<User, UserRepoError> {
unimplemented!()
}
}
/// Type alias that makes it easier to extract `UserRepo` trait objects.
type DynUserRepo = Arc<dyn UserRepo + Send + Sync>;
/// A trait that defines things a user repo might support.
#[async_trait]
trait UserRepo {
/// Loop up a user by their id.
async fn find(&self, user_id: Uuid) -> Result<User, UserRepoError>;
/// Create a new user.
async fn create(&self, params: CreateUser) -> Result<User, UserRepoError>;
}
#[derive(Debug, Serialize)]
struct User {
id: Uuid,
username: String,
}
#[derive(Debug, Deserialize)]
struct CreateUser {
username: String,
}
/// Errors that can happen when using the user repo.
#[derive(Debug)]
enum UserRepoError {
NotFound,
InvalidUsername,
}