#[non_exhaustive]pub enum RuleHealth {
Healthy,
Provisioning,
Unhealthy,
Unknown(UnknownVariantValue),
}
Expand description
When writing a match expression against RuleHealth
, it is important to ensure
your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a
feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum
variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you
upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that
feature.
Here is an example of how you can make a match expression forward-compatible:
# let rulehealth = unimplemented!();
match rulehealth {
RuleHealth::Healthy => { /* ... */ },
RuleHealth::Provisioning => { /* ... */ },
RuleHealth::Unhealthy => { /* ... */ },
other @ _ if other.as_str() == "NewFeature" => { /* handles a case for `NewFeature` */ },
_ => { /* ... */ },
}
The above code demonstrates that when rulehealth
represents
NewFeature
, the execution path will lead to the second last match arm,
even though the enum does not contain a variant RuleHealth::NewFeature
in the current version of SDK. The reason is that the variable other
,
created by the @
operator, is bound to
RuleHealth::Unknown(UnknownVariantValue("NewFeature".to_owned()))
and calling as_str
on it yields "NewFeature"
.
This match expression is forward-compatible when executed with a newer
version of SDK where the variant RuleHealth::NewFeature
is defined.
Specifically, when rulehealth
represents NewFeature
,
the execution path will hit the second last match arm as before by virtue of
calling as_str
on RuleHealth::NewFeature
also yielding "NewFeature"
.
Explicitly matching on the Unknown
variant should
be avoided for two reasons:
- The inner data
UnknownVariantValue
is opaque, and no further information can be extracted. - It might inadvertently shadow other intended match arms.
Variants (Non-exhaustive)§
This enum is marked as non-exhaustive
Healthy
Provisioning
Unhealthy
Unknown(UnknownVariantValue)
Unknown
. See the docs on this enum for the correct way to handle unknown variants.Unknown
contains new variants that have been added since this code was generated.
Implementations§
Source§impl RuleHealth
impl RuleHealth
Source§impl RuleHealth
impl RuleHealth
Sourcepub fn try_parse(value: &str) -> Result<Self, UnknownVariantError>
pub fn try_parse(value: &str) -> Result<Self, UnknownVariantError>
Parses the enum value while disallowing unknown variants.
Unknown variants will result in an error.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl AsRef<str> for RuleHealth
impl AsRef<str> for RuleHealth
Source§impl Clone for RuleHealth
impl Clone for RuleHealth
Source§fn clone(&self) -> RuleHealth
fn clone(&self) -> RuleHealth
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source
. Read moreSource§impl Debug for RuleHealth
impl Debug for RuleHealth
Source§impl Display for RuleHealth
impl Display for RuleHealth
Source§impl From<&str> for RuleHealth
impl From<&str> for RuleHealth
Source§impl FromStr for RuleHealth
impl FromStr for RuleHealth
Source§impl Hash for RuleHealth
impl Hash for RuleHealth
Source§impl Ord for RuleHealth
impl Ord for RuleHealth
Source§fn cmp(&self, other: &RuleHealth) -> Ordering
fn cmp(&self, other: &RuleHealth) -> Ordering
1.21.0 · Source§fn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
Source§impl PartialEq for RuleHealth
impl PartialEq for RuleHealth
Source§impl PartialOrd for RuleHealth
impl PartialOrd for RuleHealth
impl Eq for RuleHealth
impl StructuralPartialEq for RuleHealth
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for RuleHealth
impl RefUnwindSafe for RuleHealth
impl Send for RuleHealth
impl Sync for RuleHealth
impl Unpin for RuleHealth
impl UnwindSafe for RuleHealth
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