Book Image

Rust Web Development with Rocket

By : Karuna Murti
Book Image

Rust Web Development with Rocket

By: Karuna Murti

Overview of this book

Looking for a fast, powerful, and intuitive framework to build web applications? This Rust book will help you kickstart your web development journey and take your Rust programming skills to the next level as you uncover the power of Rocket - a fast, flexible, and fun framework powered by Rust. Rust Web Development with Rocket wastes no time in getting you up to speed with what Rust is and how to use it. You’ll discover what makes it so productive and reliable, eventually mastering all of the concepts you need to play with the Rocket framework while developing a wide set of web development skills. Throughout this book, you'll be able to walk through a hands-on project, covering everything that goes into making advanced web applications, and get to grips with the ins and outs of Rocket development, including error handling, Rust vectors, and wrappers. You'll also learn how to use synchronous and asynchronous programming to improve application performance and make processing user content easy. By the end of the book, you'll have answers to all your questions about creating a web application using the Rust language and the Rocket web framework.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: An Introduction to the Rust Programming Language and the Rocket Web Framework
7
Part 2: An In-Depth Look at Rocket Web Application Development
14
Part 3: Finishing the Rust Web Application Development

Implementing route handlers

Here, we will make an application that handles a route. We are reusing the first code that we wrote in this chapter. The idea is that we have several user data, and we want to send requests that will select and return the selected user data according to the ID sent in the request. In this part, we will implement the request and selecting part of the route handlers. In the next section, we will learn how to create a custom response type. In the subsequent section, we will create a handler for when the request does not match any user data we have. And finally, in the last section, we will create a default error handler to handle invalid requests.

Let's start by copying the first code into a new folder. After that, in src/main.rs, add a User struct after the Filter definition:

struct Filters {
    ...
}
#[derive(Debug)]
struct User {
    uuid: String,
    name: String,
...