uri!() { /* proc-macro */ }
Expand description
Type-safe, encoding-safe route and non-route URI generation.
The uri!
macro creates type-safe, URL-safe URIs given a route and concrete
parameters for its URI or a URI string literal.
§String Literal Parsing
Given a string literal as input, uri!
parses the string using
Uri::parse_any()
and emits a 'static
, const
value whose type is one
of Asterisk
, Origin
, Authority
, Absolute
, or Reference
,
reflecting the parsed value. If the type allows normalization, the value is
normalized before being emitted. Parse errors are caught and emitted at
compile-time.
The grammar for this variant of uri!
is:
uri := STRING
STRING := an uncooked string literal, as defined by Rust (example: `"/hi"`)
STRING
is expected to be an undecoded URI of any variant.
§Examples
use rocket::http::uri::Absolute;
// Values returned from `uri!` are `const` and `'static`.
const ROOT_CONST: Absolute<'static> = uri!("https://rocket.rs");
static ROOT_STATIC: Absolute<'static> = uri!("https://rocket.rs?root");
// Any variant can be parsed, but beware of ambiguities.
let asterisk = uri!("*");
let origin = uri!("/foo/bar/baz");
let authority = uri!("rocket.rs:443");
let absolute = uri!("https://rocket.rs:443");
let reference = uri!("foo?bar#baz");
§Type-Safe Route URIs
A URI to a route name foo
is generated using uri!(foo(v1, v2, v3))
or
uri!(foo(a = v1, b = v2, c = v3))
, where v1
, v2
, v3
are the values
to fill in for route parameters named a
, b
, and c
. If the named
parameter syntax is used (a = v1
, etc.), parameters can appear in any
order.
More concretely, for the route person
defined below:
#[get("/person/<name>?<age>")]
fn person(name: &str, age: Option<u8>) { }
…a URI can be created as follows:
// with unnamed parameters, in route path declaration order
let mike = uri!(person("Mike Smith", Some(28)));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike%20Smith?age=28");
// with named parameters, order irrelevant
let mike = uri!(person(name = "Mike", age = Some(28)));
let mike = uri!(person(age = Some(28), name = "Mike"));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike?age=28");
// with unnamed values, explicitly `None`.
let mike = uri!(person("Mike", None::<u8>));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike");
// with named values, explicitly `None`
let option: Option<u8> = None;
let mike = uri!(person(name = "Mike", age = None::<u8>));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike");
For optional query parameters, those of type Option
or Result
, a _
can
be used in-place of None
or Err
:
// with named values ignored
let mike = uri!(person(name = "Mike", age = _));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike");
// with named values ignored
let mike = uri!(person(age = _, name = "Mike"));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike");
// with unnamed values ignored
let mike = uri!(person("Mike", _));
assert_eq!(mike.to_string(), "/person/Mike");
It is a type error to attempt to ignore query parameters that are neither
Option
or Result
. Path parameters can never be ignored. A path parameter
of type Option<T>
or Result<T, E>
must be filled by a value that can
target a type of T
:
#[get("/person/<name>")]
fn maybe(name: Option<&str>) { }
let bob1 = uri!(maybe(name = "Bob"));
let bob2 = uri!(maybe("Bob Smith"));
assert_eq!(bob1.to_string(), "/person/Bob");
assert_eq!(bob2.to_string(), "/person/Bob%20Smith");
#[get("/person/<age>")]
fn ok(age: Result<u8, &str>) { }
let kid1 = uri!(ok(age = 10));
let kid2 = uri!(ok(12));
assert_eq!(kid1.to_string(), "/person/10");
assert_eq!(kid2.to_string(), "/person/12");
Values for ignored route segments can be of any type as long as the type
implements UriDisplay
for the appropriate URI part. If a route URI
contains ignored segments, the route URI invocation cannot use named
arguments.
#[get("/ignore/<_>/<other>")]
fn ignore(other: &str) { }
let bob = uri!(ignore("Bob Hope", "hello"));
let life = uri!(ignore(42, "cat&dog"));
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "/ignore/Bob%20Hope/hello");
assert_eq!(life.to_string(), "/ignore/42/cat%26dog");
§Prefixes and Suffixes
A route URI can be be optionally prefixed and/or suffixed by a URI generated
from a string literal or an arbitrary expression. This takes the form
uri!(prefix, foo(v1, v2, v3), suffix)
, where both prefix
and suffix
are optional, and either prefix
or suffix
may be _
to specify the
value as empty.
#[get("/person/<name>?<age>")]
fn person(name: &str, age: Option<u8>) { }
// with a specific mount-point of `/api`.
let bob = uri!("/api", person("Bob", Some(28)));
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "/api/person/Bob?age=28");
// with an absolute URI as a prefix
let bob = uri!("https://rocket.rs", person("Bob", Some(28)));
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "https://rocket.rs/person/Bob?age=28");
// with another absolute URI as a prefix
let bob = uri!("https://rocket.rs/foo", person("Bob", Some(28)));
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "https://rocket.rs/foo/person/Bob?age=28");
// with an expression as a prefix
let host = uri!("http://bob.me");
let bob = uri!(host, person("Bob", Some(28)));
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "http://bob.me/person/Bob?age=28");
// with a suffix but no prefix
let bob = uri!(_, person("Bob", Some(28)), "#baz");
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "/person/Bob?age=28#baz");
// with both a prefix and suffix
let bob = uri!("https://rocket.rs/", person("Bob", Some(28)), "#woo");
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "https://rocket.rs/person/Bob?age=28#woo");
// with an expression suffix. if the route URI already has a query, the
// query part is ignored. otherwise it is added.
let suffix = uri!("?woo#bam");
let bob = uri!(_, person("Bob", Some(28)), suffix.clone());
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "/person/Bob?age=28#bam");
let bob = uri!(_, person("Bob", None::<u8>), suffix.clone());
assert_eq!(bob.to_string(), "/person/Bob?woo#bam");
§Grammar
The grammar for this variant of the uri!
macro is:
uri := (prefix ',')? route
| prefix ',' route ',' suffix
prefix := STRING | expr ; `Origin` or `Absolute`
suffix := STRING | expr ; `Reference` or `Absolute`
route := PATH '(' (named | unnamed) ')'
named := IDENT = expr (',' named)? ','?
unnamed := expr (',' unnamed)? ','?
expr := EXPR | '_'
EXPR := a valid Rust expression (examples: `foo()`, `12`, `"hey"`)
IDENT := a valid Rust identifier (examples: `name`, `age`)
STRING := an uncooked string literal, as defined by Rust (example: `"hi"`)
PATH := a path, as defined by Rust (examples: `route`, `my_mod::route`)
§Dynamic Semantics
The returned value is that of the prefix (minus any query part) concatenated
with the route URI concatenated with the query (if the route has no query
part) and fragment parts of the suffix. The route URI is generated by
interpolating the declared route URI with the URL-safe version of the route
values in uri!()
. The generated URI is guaranteed to be URI-safe.
Each route value is rendered in its appropriate place in the URI using the
UriDisplay
implementation for the value’s type. The UriDisplay
implementation ensures that the rendered value is URL-safe.
A uri!()
invocation allocated at-most once.
§Static Semantics
The uri!
macro returns one of Origin
, Absolute
, or Reference
,
depending on the types of the prefix and suffix, if any. The table below
specifies all combinations:
Prefix | Suffix | Output |
---|---|---|
None | None | Origin |
None | Absolute | Origin |
None | Reference | Reference |
Origin | None | Origin |
Origin | Absolute | Origin |
Origin | Reference | Reference |
Absolute | None | Absolute |
Absolute | Absolute | Absolute |
Absolute | Reference | Reference |
A uri!
invocation only typechecks if the type of every route URI value in
the invocation matches the type declared for the parameter in the given
route, after conversion with FromUriParam
, or if a value is ignored
using _
and the corresponding route type implements Ignorable
.
§Conversion
The FromUriParam
trait is used to typecheck and perform a conversion for
each value passed to uri!
. If a FromUriParam<P, S> for T
implementation
exists for a type T
for part URI part P
, then a value of type S
can be
used in uri!
macro for a route URI parameter declared with a type of T
in part P
. For example, the following implementation, provided by Rocket,
allows an &str
to be used in a uri!
invocation for route URI parameters
declared as String
:
impl<P: Part, 'a> FromUriParam<P, &'a str> for String { .. }
§Ignorables
Query parameters can be ignored using _
in place of an expression. The
corresponding type in the route URI must implement Ignorable
. Ignored
parameters are not interpolated into the resulting Origin
. Path parameters
are not ignorable.