pub struct Scope<T = ScopeEndpoint> { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
A collection of Route
s, Resource
s, or other services that share a common path prefix.
The Scope
’s path can contain dynamic segments. The dynamic segments can be extracted from
requests using the Path
extractor or
with HttpRequest::match_info()
.
Avoid Trailing Slashes
Avoid using trailing slashes in the scope prefix (e.g., web::scope("/scope/")
). It will almost
certainly not have the expected behavior. See the documentation on resource definitions
to understand why this is the case and how to correctly construct scope/prefix definitions.
Examples
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpResponse};
let app = App::new().service(
web::scope("/{project_id}")
.service(web::resource("/path1").to(|| async { "OK" }))
.service(web::resource("/path2").route(web::get().to(|| HttpResponse::Ok())))
.service(web::resource("/path3").route(web::head().to(HttpResponse::MethodNotAllowed)))
);
In the above example three routes get registered:
- /{project_id}/path1 - responds to all HTTP methods
- /{project_id}/path2 - responds to
GET
requests - /{project_id}/path3 - responds to
HEAD
requests
Implementations§
source§impl<T> Scope<T>where
T: ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Error = Error, InitError = ()>,
impl<T> Scope<T>where T: ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Error = Error, InitError = ()>,
sourcepub fn guard<G: Guard + 'static>(self, guard: G) -> Self
pub fn guard<G: Guard + 'static>(self, guard: G) -> Self
Add match guard to a scope.
use actix_web::{web, guard, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse};
async fn index(data: web::Path<(String, String)>) -> &'static str {
"Welcome!"
}
let app = App::new().service(
web::scope("/app")
.guard(guard::Header("content-type", "text/plain"))
.route("/test1", web::get().to(index))
.route("/test2", web::post().to(|r: HttpRequest| {
HttpResponse::MethodNotAllowed()
}))
);
sourcepub fn app_data<U: 'static>(self, data: U) -> Self
pub fn app_data<U: 'static>(self, data: U) -> Self
Add scope data.
Data of different types from parent contexts will still be accessible. Any Data<T>
types
set here can be extracted in handlers using the Data<T>
extractor.
Examples
use std::cell::Cell;
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpRequest, HttpResponse, Responder};
struct MyData {
count: std::cell::Cell<usize>,
}
async fn handler(req: HttpRequest, counter: web::Data<MyData>) -> impl Responder {
// note this cannot use the Data<T> extractor because it was not added with it
let incr = *req.app_data::<usize>().unwrap();
assert_eq!(incr, 3);
// update counter using other value from app data
counter.count.set(counter.count.get() + incr);
HttpResponse::Ok().body(counter.count.get().to_string())
}
let app = App::new().service(
web::scope("/app")
.app_data(3usize)
.app_data(web::Data::new(MyData { count: Default::default() }))
.route("/", web::get().to(handler))
);
sourcepub fn data<U: 'static>(self, data: U) -> Self
👎Deprecated since 4.0.0: Use .app_data(Data::new(val))
instead.
pub fn data<U: 'static>(self, data: U) -> Self
.app_data(Data::new(val))
instead.Add scope data after wrapping in Data<T>
.
Deprecated in favor of app_data
.
sourcepub fn configure<F>(self, cfg_fn: F) -> Selfwhere
F: FnOnce(&mut ServiceConfig),
pub fn configure<F>(self, cfg_fn: F) -> Selfwhere F: FnOnce(&mut ServiceConfig),
Run external configuration as part of the scope building process.
This function is useful for moving parts of configuration to a different module or library. For example, some of the resource’s configuration could be moved to different module.
use actix_web::{web, middleware, App, HttpResponse};
// this function could be located in different module
fn config(cfg: &mut web::ServiceConfig) {
cfg.service(web::resource("/test")
.route(web::get().to(|| HttpResponse::Ok()))
.route(web::head().to(|| HttpResponse::MethodNotAllowed()))
);
}
let app = App::new()
.wrap(middleware::Logger::default())
.service(
web::scope("/api")
.configure(config)
)
.route("/index.html", web::get().to(|| HttpResponse::Ok()));
sourcepub fn service<F>(self, factory: F) -> Selfwhere
F: HttpServiceFactory + 'static,
pub fn service<F>(self, factory: F) -> Selfwhere F: HttpServiceFactory + 'static,
Register HTTP service.
This is similar to App's
service registration.
Actix Web provides several services implementations:
- Resource is an entry in resource table which corresponds to requested URL.
- Scope is a set of resources with common root path.
- “StaticFiles” is a service for static files support
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpRequest};
struct AppState;
async fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> &'static str {
"Welcome!"
}
let app = App::new().service(
web::scope("/app").service(
web::scope("/v1")
.service(web::resource("/test1").to(index)))
);
sourcepub fn route(self, path: &str, route: Route) -> Self
pub fn route(self, path: &str, route: Route) -> Self
Configure route for a specific path.
This is a simplified version of the Scope::service()
method.
This method can be called multiple times, in that case
multiple resources with one route would be registered for same resource path.
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpResponse};
async fn index(data: web::Path<(String, String)>) -> &'static str {
"Welcome!"
}
let app = App::new().service(
web::scope("/app")
.route("/test1", web::get().to(index))
.route("/test2", web::post().to(|| HttpResponse::MethodNotAllowed()))
);
sourcepub fn default_service<F, U>(self, f: F) -> Selfwhere
F: IntoServiceFactory<U, ServiceRequest>,
U: ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse, Error = Error> + 'static,
U::InitError: Debug,
pub fn default_service<F, U>(self, f: F) -> Selfwhere F: IntoServiceFactory<U, ServiceRequest>, U: ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse, Error = Error> + 'static, U::InitError: Debug,
Default service to be used if no matching resource could be found.
If a default service is not registered, it will fall back to the default service of
the parent App
(see App::default_service
).
sourcepub fn wrap<M, B>(
self,
mw: M
) -> Scope<impl ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()>>where
M: Transform<T::Service, ServiceRequest, Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()> + 'static,
B: MessageBody,
pub fn wrap<M, B>( self, mw: M ) -> Scope<impl ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()>>where M: Transform<T::Service, ServiceRequest, Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()> + 'static, B: MessageBody,
Registers a scope-wide middleware.
mw
is a middleware component (type), that can modify the request and response across all
sub-resources managed by this Scope
.
See App::wrap
for more details.
sourcepub fn wrap_fn<F, R, B>(
self,
mw: F
) -> Scope<impl ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()>>where
F: Fn(ServiceRequest, &T::Service) -> R + Clone + 'static,
R: Future<Output = Result<ServiceResponse<B>, Error>>,
B: MessageBody,
pub fn wrap_fn<F, R, B>( self, mw: F ) -> Scope<impl ServiceFactory<ServiceRequest, Config = (), Response = ServiceResponse<B>, Error = Error, InitError = ()>>where F: Fn(ServiceRequest, &T::Service) -> R + Clone + 'static, R: Future<Output = Result<ServiceResponse<B>, Error>>, B: MessageBody,
Registers a scope-wide function middleware.
mw
is a closure that runs during inbound and/or outbound processing in the request
life-cycle (request -> response), modifying request/response as necessary, across all
requests handled by the Scope
.
See App::wrap_fn
for examples and more details.