//! A "tiny" example of HTTP request/response handling using transports. //! //! This example is intended for *learning purposes* to see how various pieces //! hook up together and how HTTP can get up and running. Note that this example //! is written with the restriction that it *can't* use any "big" library other //! than Tokio, if you'd like a "real world" HTTP library you likely want a //! crate like Hyper. //! //! Code here is based on the `echo-threads` example and implements two paths, //! the `/plaintext` and `/json` routes to respond with some text and json, //! respectively. By default this will run I/O on all the cores your system has //! available, and it doesn't support HTTP request bodies. #![warn(rust_2018_idioms)] use bytes::BytesMut; use futures::SinkExt; use http::{header::HeaderValue, Request, Response, StatusCode}; #[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive; use std::{env, error::Error, fmt, io}; use tokio::net::{TcpListener, TcpStream}; use tokio::stream::StreamExt; use tokio_util::codec::{Decoder, Encoder, Framed}; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box> { // Parse the arguments, bind the TCP socket we'll be listening to, spin up // our worker threads, and start shipping sockets to those worker threads. let addr = env::args() .nth(1) .unwrap_or_else(|| "127.0.0.1:8080".to_string()); let server = TcpListener::bind(&addr).await?; println!("Listening on: {}", addr); loop { let (stream, _) = server.accept().await?; tokio::spawn(async move { if let Err(e) = process(stream).await { println!("failed to process connection; error = {}", e); } }); } } async fn process(stream: TcpStream) -> Result<(), Box> { let mut transport = Framed::new(stream, Http); while let Some(request) = transport.next().await { match request { Ok(request) => { let response = respond(request).await?; transport.send(response).await?; } Err(e) => return Err(e.into()), } } Ok(()) } async fn respond(req: Request<()>) -> Result, Box> { let mut response = Response::builder(); let body = match req.uri().path() { "/plaintext" => { response = response.header("Content-Type", "text/plain"); "Hello, World!".to_string() } "/json" => { response = response.header("Content-Type", "application/json"); #[derive(Serialize)] struct Message { message: &'static str, } serde_json::to_string(&Message { message: "Hello, World!", })? } _ => { response = response.status(StatusCode::NOT_FOUND); String::new() } }; let response = response .body(body) .map_err(|err| io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, err))?; Ok(response) } struct Http; /// Implementation of encoding an HTTP response into a `BytesMut`, basically /// just writing out an HTTP/1.1 response. impl Encoder> for Http { type Error = io::Error; fn encode(&mut self, item: Response, dst: &mut BytesMut) -> io::Result<()> { use std::fmt::Write; write!( BytesWrite(dst), "\ HTTP/1.1 {}\r\n\ Server: Example\r\n\ Content-Length: {}\r\n\ Date: {}\r\n\ ", item.status(), item.body().len(), date::now() ) .unwrap(); for (k, v) in item.headers() { dst.extend_from_slice(k.as_str().as_bytes()); dst.extend_from_slice(b": "); dst.extend_from_slice(v.as_bytes()); dst.extend_from_slice(b"\r\n"); } dst.extend_from_slice(b"\r\n"); dst.extend_from_slice(item.body().as_bytes()); return Ok(()); // Right now `write!` on `Vec` goes through io::Write and is not // super speedy, so inline a less-crufty implementation here which // doesn't go through io::Error. struct BytesWrite<'a>(&'a mut BytesMut); impl fmt::Write for BytesWrite<'_> { fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result { self.0.extend_from_slice(s.as_bytes()); Ok(()) } fn write_fmt(&mut self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> fmt::Result { fmt::write(self, args) } } } } /// Implementation of decoding an HTTP request from the bytes we've read so far. /// This leverages the `httparse` crate to do the actual parsing and then we use /// that information to construct an instance of a `http::Request` object, /// trying to avoid allocations where possible. impl Decoder for Http { type Item = Request<()>; type Error = io::Error; fn decode(&mut self, src: &mut BytesMut) -> io::Result>> { // TODO: we should grow this headers array if parsing fails and asks // for more headers let mut headers = [None; 16]; let (method, path, version, amt) = { let mut parsed_headers = [httparse::EMPTY_HEADER; 16]; let mut r = httparse::Request::new(&mut parsed_headers); let status = r.parse(src).map_err(|e| { let msg = format!("failed to parse http request: {:?}", e); io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, msg) })?; let amt = match status { httparse::Status::Complete(amt) => amt, httparse::Status::Partial => return Ok(None), }; let toslice = |a: &[u8]| { let start = a.as_ptr() as usize - src.as_ptr() as usize; assert!(start < src.len()); (start, start + a.len()) }; for (i, header) in r.headers.iter().enumerate() { let k = toslice(header.name.as_bytes()); let v = toslice(header.value); headers[i] = Some((k, v)); } ( toslice(r.method.unwrap().as_bytes()), toslice(r.path.unwrap().as_bytes()), r.version.unwrap(), amt, ) }; if version != 1 { return Err(io::Error::new( io::ErrorKind::Other, "only HTTP/1.1 accepted", )); } let data = src.split_to(amt).freeze(); let mut ret = Request::builder(); ret = ret.method(&data[method.0..method.1]); let s = data.slice(path.0..path.1); let s = unsafe { String::from_utf8_unchecked(Vec::from(s.as_ref())) }; ret = ret.uri(s); ret = ret.version(http::Version::HTTP_11); for header in headers.iter() { let (k, v) = match *header { Some((ref k, ref v)) => (k, v), None => break, }; let value = HeaderValue::from_bytes(data.slice(v.0..v.1).as_ref()) .map_err(|_| io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, "header decode error"))?; ret = ret.header(&data[k.0..k.1], value); } let req = ret .body(()) .map_err(|e| io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, e))?; Ok(Some(req)) } } mod date { use std::cell::RefCell; use std::fmt::{self, Write}; use std::str; use time::{self, Duration}; pub struct Now(()); /// Returns a struct, which when formatted, renders an appropriate `Date` /// header value. pub fn now() -> Now { Now(()) } // Gee Alex, doesn't this seem like premature optimization. Well you see // there Billy, you're absolutely correct! If your server is *bottlenecked* // on rendering the `Date` header, well then boy do I have news for you, you // don't need this optimization. // // In all seriousness, though, a simple "hello world" benchmark which just // sends back literally "hello world" with standard headers actually is // bottlenecked on rendering a date into a byte buffer. Since it was at the // top of a profile, and this was done for some competitive benchmarks, this // module was written. // // Just to be clear, though, I was not intending on doing this because it // really does seem kinda absurd, but it was done by someone else [1], so I // blame them! :) // // [1]: https://github.com/rapidoid/rapidoid/blob/f1c55c0555007e986b5d069fe1086e6d09933f7b/rapidoid-commons/src/main/java/org/rapidoid/commons/Dates.java#L48-L66 struct LastRenderedNow { bytes: [u8; 128], amt: usize, next_update: time::Timespec, } thread_local!(static LAST: RefCell = RefCell::new(LastRenderedNow { bytes: [0; 128], amt: 0, next_update: time::Timespec::new(0, 0), })); impl fmt::Display for Now { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { LAST.with(|cache| { let mut cache = cache.borrow_mut(); let now = time::get_time(); if now >= cache.next_update { cache.update(now); } f.write_str(cache.buffer()) }) } } impl LastRenderedNow { fn buffer(&self) -> &str { str::from_utf8(&self.bytes[..self.amt]).unwrap() } fn update(&mut self, now: time::Timespec) { self.amt = 0; write!(LocalBuffer(self), "{}", time::at(now).rfc822()).unwrap(); self.next_update = now + Duration::seconds(1); self.next_update.nsec = 0; } } struct LocalBuffer<'a>(&'a mut LastRenderedNow); impl fmt::Write for LocalBuffer<'_> { fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result { let start = self.0.amt; let end = start + s.len(); self.0.bytes[start..end].copy_from_slice(s.as_bytes()); self.0.amt += s.len(); Ok(()) } } }