Book Image

Rust Web Programming - Second Edition

By : Maxwell Flitton
Book Image

Rust Web Programming - Second Edition

By: Maxwell Flitton

Overview of this book

Are safety and high performance a big concern for you while developing web applications? With this practical Rust book, you’ll discover how you can implement Rust on the web to achieve the desired performance and security as you learn techniques and tooling to build fully operational web apps. In this second edition, you’ll get hands-on with implementing emerging Rust web frameworks, including Actix, Rocket, and Hyper. It also features HTTPS configuration on AWS when deploying a web application and introduces you to Terraform for automating the building of web infrastructure on AWS. What’s more, this edition also covers advanced async topics. Built on the Tokio async runtime, this explores TCP and framing, implementing async systems with the actor framework, and queuing tasks on Redis to be consumed by a number of worker nodes. Finally, you’ll go over best practices for packaging Rust servers in distroless Rust Docker images with database drivers, so your servers are a total size of 50Mb each. By the end of this book, you’ll have confidence in your skills to build robust, functional, and scalable web applications from scratch.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Part 1:Getting Started with Rust Web Development
4
Part 2:Processing Data and Managing Displays
8
Part 3:Data Persistence
12
Part 4:Testing and Deployment
16
Part 5:Making Our Projects Flexible
19
Part 6:Exploring Protocol Programming and Async Concepts with Low-Level Network Applications

Building a database connection pool

In this section, we will create a database connection pool. A database connection pool is a limited number of database connections. When our application needs a database connection, it will take the connection from the pool and place it back into the pool when the application no longer needs the connection. If there are no connections left in the pool, the application will wait until there is a connection available, as seen in the following diagram:

Figure 6.7 – Database connection pool with a limit of three connections

Figure 6.7 – Database connection pool with a limit of three connections

Before we refactor our database connection, we need to install the following dependency in our Cargo.toml file:

lazy_static = "1.4.0"

We then define our imports with the src/database.rs file with the following code:

use actix_web::dev::Payload;
use actix_web::error::ErrorServiceUnavailable;
use actix_web::{Error, FromRequest, HttpRequest};
use futures::future::{Ready, ok, err...