Anatomy of a Rocket Application

Rocket applications are incredibly easy to write! Tab through the examples below to get a glimpse into how a Rocket application is structured.

Routing

Rocket’s main task is to route incoming requests to the appropriate request handler using your application’s declared routes. Routes are declared using Rocket’s route attributes. The attribute describes the requests that match the route. The attribute is placed on top of a function that is the request handler for that route.

As an example, consider the simple route below:

  1. #[get("/")]
  2. fn index() -> &'static str {
  3. "Hello, world!"
  4. }

This route, named index, will match against incoming HTTP GET requests to the / path, the index. The request handler returns a string. Rocket will use the string as the body of a fully formed HTTP response.

Dynamic Params

Rocket allows you to interpret segments of a request path dynamically. To illustrate, let’s use the following route:

  1. #[get("/hello/<name>/<age>")]
  2. fn hello(name: &str, age: u8) -> String {
  3. format!("Hello, {} year old named {}!", age, name)
  4. }

The hello route above matches two dynamic path segments declared inside brackets in the path: <name> and <age>. Dynamic means that the segment can be any value the end-user desires.

Each dynamic parameter (name and age) must have a type, here &str and u8, respectively. Rocket will attempt to parse the string in the parameter’s position in the path into that type. The route will only be called if parsing succeeds. To parse the string, Rocket uses the FromParam trait, which you can implement for your own types!

Handling Data

Request body data is handled in a special way in Rocket: via the FromData trait. Any type that implements FromData can be derived from incoming body data. To tell Rocket that you’re expecting request body data, the data route argument is used with the name of the parameter in the request handler:

  1. #[post("/login", data = "<user_form>")]
  2. fn login(user_form: Form<UserLogin>) -> String {
  3. // Use `user_form`, return a String.
  4. }

The login route above says that it expects data of type Form<UserLogin> in the user_form parameter. The Form type is a built-in Rocket type that knows how to parse web forms into structures. Rocket will automatically attempt to parse the request body into the Form and call the login handler if parsing succeeds. Other built-in FromData types include Data, Json, and Flash

In addition to dynamic path and data parameters, request handlers can also contain a third type of parameter: request guards. Request guards aren’t declared in the route attribute, and any number of them can appear in the request handler signature.

Request Guards

Request guards protect the handler from running unless some set of conditions are met by the incoming request metadata. For instance, if you are writing an API that requires sensitive calls to be accompanied by an API key in the request header, Rocket can protect those calls via a custom ApiKey request guard:

  1. #[get("/sensitive")]
  2. fn sensitive(key: ApiKey) -> &'static str { ... }

ApiKey protects the sensitive handler from running incorrectly. In order for Rocket to call the sensitive handler, the ApiKey type needs to be derived through a FromRequest implementation, which in this case, validates the API key header. Request guards are a powerful and unique Rocket concept; they centralize application policy and invariants through types.

Responders

The return type of a request handler can be any type that implements Responder:

  1. #[get("/")]
  2. fn route() -> T { ... }

Above, T must implement Responder. Rocket implements Responder for many of the standard library types including &str, String, File, Option, and Result. Rocket also implements custom responders such as Redirect, Flash, and Template.

The task of a Responder is to generate a Response, if possible. Responders can fail with a status code. When they do, Rocket calls the corresponding error catcher, a catch route, which can be declared as follows:

  1. #[catch(404)]
  2. fn not_found() -> T { ... }

Launching

Launching a Rocket application is the funnest part! For Rocket to begin dispatching requests to routes, the routes need to be mounted. After mounting, the application needs to be launched. These two steps, usually done in main, look like:

  1. rocket::ignite()
  2. .mount("/base", routes![index, another])
  3. .launch()

The mount call takes a base path and a set of routes via the routes! macro. The base path (/base above) is prepended to the path of every route in the list. This effectively namespaces the routes, allowing for easier composition.

The launch call starts the server. In development, Rocket prints useful information to the console to let you know everything is okay.

  1. 🚀 Rocket has launched from http://localhost:8000...

How Rocket Works

Every request received by a Rocket web application follows a simple 3-step process from request to response.

1 Validation

First, Rocket validates a matching request by ensuring that all of the types in a given handler can be derived from the incoming request. If the types cannot be derived, the request is forwarded to the next matching route until a route’s types validate or there are no more routes to try. If all routes fail, a customizable 404 error is returned.

  1. #[post("/user", data = "<new_user>")]
  2. fn new_user(admin: AdminUser, new_user: Form<User>) -> T {
  3. ...
  4. }

For the new_user handler above to be called, the following conditions must hold:

  • The request method must be POST.
  • The request path must be /user.
  • The request must contain data in its body.
  • The request metadata must authenticate an AdminUser.
  • The request body must be a form that parses into a User struct.

2 Processing

Next, the request is processed by an arbitrary handler. This is where most of the business logic in an application resides, and the part of your applications you’ll likely spend the most time writing. In Rocket, handlers are simply functions - that’s it! The only caveat is that the function’s return type must implement the Responder trait. The new_user function above is an example of a handler.

3 Response

Finally, Rocket responds to the client by transforming the return value of the handler into an HTTP response. The HTTP response generated from the returned value depends on the type’s specific Responder trait implementation.

  1. fn route() -> T { ... }

If the function above is used as a handler, for instance, then the type T must implement Responder. Rocket provides many useful responder types out of the box. They include:

  • Json<T>: Serializes the structure T into JSON and returns it to the client.
  • Template: Renders a template file and returns it to the client.
  • Redirect: Returns a properly formatted HTTP redirect.
  • NamedFile: Streams a given file to the client with the Content-Type taken from the file’s extension.
  • Stream: Streams data to the client from an arbitrary Read value.
  • Many Primitive Types: String, &str, File, Option, Result, and others all implement the Responder trait.