mirror of https://github.com/rwf2/Rocket.git
292 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
292 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
# State
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Many web applications have a need to maintain state. This can be as simple as
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maintaining a counter for the number of visits or as complex as needing to
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access job queues and multiple databases. Rocket provides the tools to enable
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these kinds of interactions in a safe and simple manner.
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## Managed State
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The enabling feature for maintaining state is _managed state_. Managed state, as
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the name implies, is state that Rocket manages for your application. The state
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is managed on a per-type basis: Rocket will manage at most one value of a given
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type.
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The process for using managed state is simple:
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1. Call `manage` on the `Rocket` instance corresponding to your application
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with the initial value of the state.
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2. Add a `State<T>` type to any request handler, where `T` is the type of the
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value passed into `manage`.
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### Adding State
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To instruct Rocket to manage state for your application, call the
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[`manage`](https://api.rocket.rs/rocket/struct.Rocket.html#method.manage) method
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on an instance of `Rocket`. For example, to ask Rocket to manage a `HitCount`
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structure with an internal `AtomicUsize` with an initial value of `0`, we can
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write the following:
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```rust
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struct HitCount {
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count: AtomicUsize
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}
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rocket::ignite().manage(HitCount { count: AtomicUsize::new(0) });
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```
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The `manage` method can be called any number of times as long as each call
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refers to a value of a different type. For instance, to have Rocket manage both
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a `HitCount` value and a `Config` value, we can write:
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```rust
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rocket::ignite()
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.manage(HitCount { count: AtomicUsize::new(0) })
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.manage(Config::from(user_input));
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```
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### Retrieving State
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State that is being managed by Rocket can be retrieved via the
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[`State`](https://api.rocket.rs/rocket/struct.State.html) type: a [request
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guard](/guide/requests/#request-guards) for managed state. To use the request
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guard, add a `State<T>` type to any request handler, where `T` is the type of
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the managed state. For example, we can retrieve and respond with the current
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`HitCount` in a `count` route as follows:
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```rust
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#[get("/count")]
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fn count(hit_count: State<HitCount>) -> String {
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let current_count = hit_count.count.load(Ordering::Relaxed);
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format!("Number of visits: {}", current_count)
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}
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```
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You can retrieve more than one `State` type in a single route as well:
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```rust
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#[get("/state")]
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fn state(hit_count: State<HitCount>, config: State<Config>) -> T { ... }
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```
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### Within Guards
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It can also be useful to retrieve managed state from a `FromRequest`
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implementation. To do so, simply invoke `State<T>` as a guard using the
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[`Request::guard()`] method.
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```rust
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fn from_request(req: &'a Request<'r>) -> request::Outcome<T, ()> {
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let hit_count_state = req.guard::<State<HitCount>>()?;
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let current_count = hit_count_state.count.load(Ordering::Relaxed);
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...
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}
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```
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[`Request::guard()`]: https://api.rocket.rs/rocket/struct.Request.html#method.guard
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### Unmanaged State
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If you request a `State<T>` for a `T` that is not `managed`, Rocket won't call
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the offending route. Instead, Rocket will log an error message and return a
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**500** error to the client.
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While this behavior is 100% safe, it isn't fun to return **500** errors to
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clients, especially when the issue can be easily avoided. Because of this,
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Rocket tries to prevent an application with unmanaged state from ever running
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via the `unmanaged_state` lint. The lint reads through your code at compile-time
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and emits a warning when a `State<T>` request guard is being used in a mounted
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route for a type `T` that isn't being managed.
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As an example, consider the following short application using our `HitCount`
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type from previous examples:
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```rust
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#[get("/count")]
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fn count(hit_count: State<HitCount>) -> String {
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let current_count = hit_count.count.load(Ordering::Relaxed);
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format!("Number of visits: {}", current_count)
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}
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fn main() {
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rocket::ignite()
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.manage(Config::from(user_input))
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.launch()
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}
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```
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The application is buggy: a value for `HitCount` isn't being `managed`, but a
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`State<HitCount>` type is being requested in the `count` route. When we compile
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this application, Rocket emits the following warning:
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```rust
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warning: HitCount is not currently being managed by Rocket
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--> src/main.rs:2:17
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2 | fn count(hit_count: State<HitCount>) -> String {
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| ^^^^^^^^
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= note: this State request guard will always fail
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help: maybe add a call to 'manage' here?
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--> src/main.rs:8:5
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8 | rocket::ignite()
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| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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```
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The `unmanaged_state` lint isn't perfect. In particular, it cannot track calls
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to `manage` across function boundaries. Because of this, you may find yourself
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with incorrect warnings. You can disable the lint on a per-route basis by adding
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`#[allow(unmanaged_state)]` to a route handler. If you wish to disable the lint
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globally, add `#![allow(unmanaged_state)]` to your crate attributes.
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You can find a complete example using the `HitCount` structure in the [state
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example on
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GitHub](https://github.com/SergioBenitez/Rocket/tree/v0.4.0-dev/examples/state) and
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learn more about the [`manage`
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method](https://api.rocket.rs/rocket/struct.Rocket.html#method.manage) and
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[`State` type](https://api.rocket.rs/rocket/struct.State.html) in the API docs.
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## Databases
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While Rocket doesn't have built-in support for databases yet, you can combine a
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few external libraries to get native-feeling access to databases in a Rocket
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application. Let's take a look at how we might integrate Rocket with two common
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database libraries: [`diesel`], a type-safe ORM and query builder, and [`r2d2`],
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a library for connection pooling.
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Our approach will be to have Rocket manage a pool of database connections using
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managed state and then implement a request guard that retrieves one connection.
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This will allow us to get access to the database in a handler by simply adding a
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`DbConn` argument:
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```rust
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#[get("/users")]
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fn handler(conn: DbConn) { ... }
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```
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[`diesel`]: http://diesel.rs/
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[`r2d2`]: https://docs.rs/r2d2/
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### Dependencies
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To get started, we need to depend on the `diesel` and `r2d2` crates. For
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detailed information on how to use Diesel, please see the [Diesel getting
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started guide](http://diesel.rs/guides/getting-started/). For this example, we
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use the following dependencies:
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```
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[dependencies]
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rocket = "0.4.0-dev"
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diesel = { version = "1.0", features = ["sqlite"] }
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r2d2-diesel = "1.0"
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r2d2 = "0.8"
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```
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Your `diesel` dependency information may differ. The crates are imported as
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well:
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```rust
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extern crate rocket;
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#[macro_use] extern crate diesel;
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extern crate r2d2_diesel;
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extern crate r2d2;
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```
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### Managed Pool
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The first step is to initialize a pool of database connections. The `init_pool`
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function below uses `r2d2` to create a new pool of database connections. Diesel
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advocates for using a `DATABASE_URL` environment variable to set the database
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URL, and we use the same convention here. Excepting the long-winded types, the
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code is fairly straightforward: the `DATABASE_URL` environment variable is
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stored in the `DATABASE_URL` static, and an `r2d2::Pool` is created using the
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default configuration parameters and a Diesel `SqliteConnection`
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`ConnectionManager`.
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```rust
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use diesel::sqlite::SqliteConnection;
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use r2d2_diesel::ConnectionManager;
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// An alias to the type for a pool of Diesel SQLite connections.
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type Pool = r2d2::Pool<ConnectionManager<SqliteConnection>>;
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// The URL to the database, set via the `DATABASE_URL` environment variable.
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static DATABASE_URL: &'static str = env!("DATABASE_URL");
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/// Initializes a database pool.
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fn init_pool() -> Pool {
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let manager = ConnectionManager::<SqliteConnection>::new(DATABASE_URL);
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r2d2::Pool::new(manager).expect("db pool")
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}
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```
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We then use managed state to have Rocket manage the pool for us:
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```rust
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fn main() {
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rocket::ignite()
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.manage(init_pool())
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.launch();
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}
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```
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### Connection Guard
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The second and final step is to implement a request guard that retrieves a
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single connection from the managed connection pool. We create a new type,
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`DbConn`, that wraps an `r2d2` pooled connection. We then implement
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`FromRequest` for `DbConn` so that we can use it as a request guard. Finally, we
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implement `Deref` with a target of `SqliteConnection` so that we can
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transparently use an `&*DbConn` as an `&SqliteConnection`.
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```rust
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use std::ops::Deref;
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use rocket::http::Status;
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use rocket::request::{self, FromRequest};
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use rocket::{Request, State, Outcome};
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// Connection request guard type: a wrapper around an r2d2 pooled connection.
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pub struct DbConn(pub r2d2::PooledConnection<ConnectionManager<SqliteConnection>>);
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/// Attempts to retrieve a single connection from the managed database pool. If
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/// no pool is currently managed, fails with an `InternalServerError` status. If
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/// no connections are available, fails with a `ServiceUnavailable` status.
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impl<'a, 'r> FromRequest<'a, 'r> for DbConn {
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type Error = ();
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fn from_request(request: &'a Request<'r>) -> request::Outcome<DbConn, ()> {
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let pool = request.guard::<State<Pool>>()?;
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match pool.get() {
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Ok(conn) => Outcome::Success(DbConn(conn)),
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Err(_) => Outcome::Failure((Status::ServiceUnavailable, ()))
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}
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}
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}
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// For the convenience of using an &DbConn as an &SqliteConnection.
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impl Deref for DbConn {
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type Target = SqliteConnection;
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fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
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&self.0
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}
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}
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```
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### Usage
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With these two pieces in place, we can use `DbConn` as a request guard in any
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handler or other request guard implementation, giving our application access to
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a database. As a simple example, we might write a route that returns a JSON
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array of some `Task` structures that are fetched from a database:
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```rust
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#[get("/tasks")]
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fn get_tasks(conn: DbConn) -> QueryResult<Json<Vec<Task>>> {
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all_tasks.order(tasks::id.desc())
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.load::<Task>(&*conn)
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.map(|tasks| Json(tasks))
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}
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```
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