The ins and outs of Rocket, in detail.

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Overview

Rocket provides primitives to build web servers and applications with Rust: the rest is up to you. In short, Rocket provides routing, pre-processing of requests, and post-processing of responses. Your application code instructs Rocket on what to pre-process and post-process and fills the gaps between pre-processing and post-processing.

Lifecycle

Rocket's main task is to listen for incoming web requests, dispatch the request to the application code, and return a response to the client. We call the process that goes from request to response the "lifecycle". We summarize the lifecycle as the following sequence of steps:

  1. Routing

    Rocket parses an incoming HTTP request into native structures that your code operates on indirectly. Rocket determines which request handler to invoke by matching against route attributes declared in your application.

  2. Validation

    Rocket validates the incoming request against types and guards present in the matched route. If validation fails, Rocket forwards the request to the next matching route or calls an error handler.

  3. Processing

    The request handler associated with the route is invoked with validated arguments. This is the main business logic of an application. Processing completes by returning a Response.

  4. Response

    The returned Response is processed. Rocket generates the appropriate HTTP response and sends it to the client. This completes the lifecycle. Rocket continues listening for requests, restarting the lifecycle for each incoming request.

The remainder of this section details the routing phase as well as additional components needed for Rocket to begin dispatching requests to request handlers. The sections following describe the request and response phases as well as other components of Rocket.

Routing

Rocket applications are centered around routes and handlers. A route is a combination of:

A handler is simply a function that takes an arbitrary number of arguments and returns any arbitrary type.

The parameters to match against include static paths, dynamic paths, path segments, forms, query strings, request format specifiers, and body data. Rocket uses attributes, which look like function decorators in other languages, to make declaring routes easy. Routes are declared by annotating a function, the handler, with the set of parameters to match against. A complete route declaration looks like this:

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#[get("/world")]              // <- route attribute
fn world() -> &'static str {  // <- request handler
    "Hello, world!"
}

This declares the world route to match against the static path "/world" on incoming GET requests. The world route is simple, but additional route parameters are necessary when building more interesting applications. The Requests section describes the available options for constructing routes.

Mounting

Before Rocket can dispatch requests to a route, the route needs to be mounted. Mounting a route is like namespacing it. Routes are mounted via the mount method on a Rocket instance. A Rocket instance is typically created with the rocket::ignite() static method.

The mount method takes:

  1. A path to namespace a list of routes under,
  2. A list of route handlers through the routes! macro, tying Rocket's code generation to your application.

For instance, to mount the world route we declared above, we can write the following:

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rocket::ignite().mount("/hello", routes![world]);

This creates a new Rocket instance via the ignite function and mounts the world route to the "/hello" path. As a result, GET requests to the "/hello/world" path will be directed to the world function.

Namespacing

When a route is declared inside a module other than the root, you may find yourself with unexpected errors when mounting:

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mod other {
    #[get("/world")]
    pub fn world() -> &'static str {
        "Hello, world!"
    }
}

use other::world;

fn main() {
  // error[E0425]: cannot find value `static_rocket_route_info_for_world` in this scope
  rocket::ignite().mount("/hello", routes![world]);
}

This occurs because the routes! macro implicitly converts the route's name into the name of a structure generated by Rocket's code generation. The solution is to name the route by a module path instead:

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rocket::ignite().mount("/hello", routes![other::world]);

Launching

Now that Rocket knows about the route, you can tell Rocket to start accepting requests via the launch method. The method starts up the server and waits for incoming requests. When a request arrives, Rocket finds the matching route and dispatches the request to the route's handler.

We typically call launch from the main function. Our complete Hello, world! application thus looks like:

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#![feature(plugin)]
#![plugin(rocket_codegen)]

extern crate rocket;

#[get("/world")]
fn world() -> &'static str {
    "Hello, world!"
}

fn main() {
    rocket::ignite().mount("/hello", routes![world]).launch();
}

Note that we've added the #![feature(plugin)] and #![plugin(rocket_codegen)] lines to tell Rust that we'll be using Rocket's code generation plugin. We've also imported the rocket crate into our namespace via extern crate rocket. Finally, we call the launch method in the main function.

Running the application, the console shows:

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🔧  Configured for development.
    => address: localhost
    => port: 8000
    => log: normal
    => workers: [logical cores * 2]
    => secret key: generated
    => limits: forms = 32KiB
    => tls: disabled
🛰  Mounting '/hello':
    => GET /hello/world
🚀  Rocket has launched from http://localhost:8000

If we visit localhost:8000/hello/world, we see Hello, world!, exactly as we expected.

A version of this example's complete crate, ready to cargo run, can be found on GitHub. You can find dozens of other complete examples, spanning all of Rocket's features, in the GitHub examples directory.