actix-web-utils/Readme.md

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# Actix-web-utils
by franklin blanco
Adds some useful structs, enums, macros, etc... to your typical web app, only compatible with actix-web backends for the moment.
## Why use this crate?
Honestly, I find myself repeating the same structs, behaviours and logic in my backend applications for the web apps I develop.
This crate just makes it all uniform and readable.
## How?
Mainly by standarizing everything I can, repeating logic & code everywhere possible to maintain a uniform & straightforward development.
Most web app backends have a Controller (Where routes are defined), Service (Where bsuiness logic lives (can also be inside the controller)), Repository/dao (Database access logic & methods), Clients/Communicators (Api consumption). Let's start with the controller.
### Controller
You usually have a defined route with a desired return type and an error type.
```rust
use actix_web::{http::header::ContentType, HttpResponse};
async fn index() -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok()
.content_type(ContentType::plaintext())
// .insert_header(("X-Hdr", "sample")) <-- This line is irrelevant for this example
.body("data")
}
```
*Taken Straight from actix.rs*
The way actix sells this seems a bit dry to me. How about this:
```rust
use actix_web::{http::header::ContentType, HttpResponse};
use actix_web_utils::extensions::{TypedHttpResponse};
async fn index() -> TypedHttpResponse<String> {
TypedHttpResponse::return_standard_response(200, "data".to_string())
}
```
Much better for readability, and this wraps everything you give it inside a Json response, as is usually the standard. You can see the status code outright, and the response has to be a String if successful (this is important for later).
Sure, you loose a lot of the modularity that actix web gives you. But that's why it's not a replacement for HttpResponse, but another type. You can always go back and use HttpResponse, my library isn't made to replace it, but to reduce the repetition it brings.
#### Intended Limitations:
- Can only use things that implement serde::Serialize because it attempts to wrap everything inside a json. This is planned.
- Modularity is lost, no response headers, most of the features of HttpResponse get lost. This is also planned.
- No custom errors. using this means you will be using the Error types & MessageResource defined in this package. Sorry about that, coding a modular solution for everybody would be hard. Feel free to contribute, really. I'll reply asap. In case you don't want to contribute also feel free to fork.
### Service
This is where your business logic lives. This is really the most variable of all, as everyone has their own way of doing things. But I have seen many cases of code where it's just this:
```rust
fn service_layer_function() -> HttpResponse {
// ... Some Business logic
let value_returned_from_match = match function_that_returns_a_result() {
Ok(value) => value,
Err(error) => return
HttpResponse::BadRequest().json(web::Json(error.to_string()))
};
// ... More Business logic
}
```
When you could be doing this:
```rust
fn service_layer_function() -> TypedHttpResponse<T> { //T can be whatever you want
// ... Some Business logic
let value_returned_from_match = unwrap_or_return_handled_error!(
function_that_returns_a_result(), T
);
// ... More Business logic
}
```
Much better and more readable for me.
### Repository (Database Access Object)
**UNFINISHED!**
#### MessageResource
A key-message error type to return back a neat, well formatted error to a frontend. The key is optional, as I won't force you to use internationalization.
```json
{
"key": "ERROR_KEY",
"message": "This is the part where you put the error message."
}
```
This is supposed to be sent back to the client, so the client can display the error to the user, and/or get the translation (with the key). It is optional.
#### TypedHttpResponse
A wrapper for HttpResponse. Contains a type specification inside so that you can visualize and expect a certain type.
Said type can only be a Serializable (Json).
It can also return a MessageResource or nothing at all.