Response

Volo-HTTP Response

Routing Responses

The Volo-HTTP handler can also return any impl IntoResponse type, for example:

use volo_http::{
    http::StatusCode
};

// 默认返回 `StatusCode::OK`
async fn ping() {}

// ref: [RFC2324](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2324)
async fn who_are_you() -> StatusCode {
    StatusCode::IM_A_TEAPOT
}

Handler Response Tips

handler In addition to customizable parameters, the return value type can also be customized, such as:

async fn ping() {}
async fn hello_world() -> &'static str { "Hello, World" }
async fn teapot() -> StatusCode { StatusCode::IM_A_TEAPOT }

All three of these functions are legitimate handlers, since all of these return value types implement the IntoResponse trait.

In the framework, types such as Form, Json, etc. also implement IntoResponse by default and can add a Content-Type to the response.

Use Json for Response

use volo_http::{
    json::Json,
    server::{
        route::{get, post, Router},
        IntoResponse,
    },
};
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Debug)]
struct Person {
    name: String,
    age: u8,
    phones: Vec<String>,
}

// test with:
//     curl http://localhost:8080/json/get
async fn json_get() -> Json<Person> {
    Json(Person {
        name: "Foo".to_string(),
        age: 25,
        phones: vec!["Bar".to_string(), "114514".to_string()],
    })
}

// test with:
//     curl http://localhost:8080/json/post \
//         -X POST \
//         -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
//         -d '{"name":"Foo", "age": 25, "phones":["Bar", "114514"]}'
async fn json_post(Json(request): Json<Person>) -> String {
    let first_phone = request
        .phones
        .first()
        .map(|p| p.as_str())
        .unwrap_or("no number");
    format!(
        "{} is {} years old, {}'s first phone number is `{}`\n",
        request.name, request.age, request.name, first_phone
    )
}

pub fn json_test_router() -> Router {
    Router::new()
        .route("/json/get", get(json_get))
        .route("/json/post", post(json_post))
}

Compound Response Types

The IntoResponse trait not only supports String, Json, etc., but there are other ways to use it, such as:

async fn return_result() -> Result<&'static str, StatusCode> {
    if rand::random() {
        Ok("It Works!\n")
    } else {
        Err(StatusCode::IM_A_TEAPOT)
    }
}

async fn return_with_status_code() -> (StatusCode, String) {
    (StatusCode::NOT_FOUND, "Not Found!\n".to_owned())
}

pub fn response_router() -> Router {
    Router::new()
        .route("/response/result", get(return_result))
        .route("/response/status", get(return_with_status_code))
}

Using Result<&'static str, StatusCode> as the return value type.
You can use the contents of str as the Response when returning Ok, StatusCode when returning Err, and return the status code of the Response. When returning Err, use StatusCode as the status code for Response and return an empty implementation.

With (StatusCode, String) you can use the String as the Body of the Response and set the status code of the Response to the value of StatusCode.

Implementing IntoResponse for Your Own Types

For custom types, you can implement IntoResponse as the return value of the handler, here is an example.

In business logic, we often define our own internal error types or error codes. Since the framework implements IntoResponse for Result<T, E>, we can implement IntoResponse for errors. We can easily write handlers by implementing IntoResponse for errors:

use volo_http::{
    server::{IntoResponse},
    http::{StatusCode},
    response::ServerResponse,
    PathParams,
};

#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct ErrorCode(usize);

impl ErrorCode {
    pub const INVALID_USER_ID: Self = Self(1);
    pub const INVALID_VIDEO_ID: Self = Self(2);
}

impl IntoResponse for ErrorCode {
    fn into_response(self) -> ServerResponse {
        match self {
            Self::INVALID_USER_ID => "Invalid User ID".into_response(),
            Self::INVALID_VIDEO_ID => StatusCode::BAD_REQUEST.into_response(),
            Self(code) => format!("Unknown error code {code}").into_response()
        }
    }
}

async fn handler(
    PathParams((uid, vid)): PathParams<(String, String)>,
) -> Result<String, ErrorCode>
{
    if uid == "admin" {
        return Err(ErrorCode::INVALID_USER_ID);
    }
    if vid == "-1" {
        return Err(ErrorCode::INVALID_VIDEO_ID);
    }
    Ok(format!("uid: {uid}, vid: {vid}"))
}

The response format of the above code is very irregular, Functional demonstration use only, in the actual business, please use a unified response format according to the needs of the


Last modified September 14, 2024 : doc: add kitex v0.11.0 release log (#1135) (796ca7c)