Crate rouille

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Expand description

The rouille library is very easy to get started with.

Listening to a port is done by calling the start_server function:

use rouille::Request;
use rouille::Response;

rouille::start_server("0.0.0.0:80", move |request| {
    Response::text("hello world")
});

Whenever an HTTP request is received on the address passed as first parameter, the closure passed as second parameter is called. This closure must then return a Response that will be sent back to the client.

See the documentation of start_server for more details.

Analyzing the request

The parameter that the closure receives is a Request object that represents the request made by the client.

The Request object itself provides some getters, but most advanced functionalities are provided by other modules of this crate.

  • In order to dispatch between various code depending on the URL, you can use the router! macro.
  • In order to analyze the body of the request, like handling JSON input, form input, etc. you can take a look at the input module.

Returning a response

Once you analyzed the request, it is time to return a response by returning a Response object.

All the members of Response are public, so you can customize it as you want. There are also several constructors that you build a basic Response which can then modify.

In order to serve static files, take a look at the match_assets function.

In order to apply content encodings (including compression such as gzip or deflate), see the content_encoding module, and specifically the content_encoding::apply function.

Re-exports

Modules

  • Allows you to let an external process handle the request through CGI.
  • Apply content encodings (such as gzip compression) to the response.
  • Analyze the request’s headers and body.
  • Dispatch a request to another HTTP server.
  • Sessions handling.
  • Support for websockets.

Macros

  • Dispatches between blocks depending on the value of the Accept header.
  • This macro assumes that the current function returns a Response. If the condition you pass to the macro is false, then a 400 response is returned.
  • Evaluates each parameter until one of them evaluates to something else than a 404 error code.
  • Parse input from HTML forms. See the post module for general documentation.
  • Equivalent to a match expression but for routes.
  • This macro assumes that the current function returns a Response and takes a Result. If the expression you pass to the macro is an error, then a 400 response is returned.
  • This macro assumes that the current function returns a Response and takes a Result. If the expression you pass to the macro is an error, then a 404 response is returned.

Structs

  • Iterator to the list of headers in a request.
  • Represents a request that your handler must answer to.
  • Gives access to the body of a request.
  • Contains a prototype of a response.
  • An opaque type that represents the body of a response.
  • A listening server.

Constants

Traits

  • Dummy trait that regroups the Read and Write traits.
  • Trait for objects that can take ownership of a raw connection to the client data.

Functions

  • Returns the mime type of a file based on its extension, or application/octet-stream if the extension is unknown.
  • Adds a log entry to the given writer for each request.
  • Calls custom logging functions after processing a request.
  • Searches inside path for a file that matches the given request. If a file is found, returns a Response that would serve this file if returned. If no file is found, a 404 response is returned instead.
  • Starts a server and uses the given requests handler.
  • Identical to start_server but uses a ThreadPool of the given size.