pub struct OptionalUser<T>(pub Option<T>);Expand description
Extracts the authenticated user as Option<T>, never failing on auth.
Use this in handler signatures where authentication is optional.
Returns None for guests instead of a 401 error.
§Type Parameters
T- The concrete user type implementingAuthenticatable + Clone
§Example
#[handler]
pub async fn home(user: OptionalUser<User>) -> Response {
if let Some(u) = user.as_ref() {
json_response!({ "message": format!("Welcome back, {}!", u.name) })
} else {
json_response!({ "message": "Welcome, guest!" })
}
}Tuple Fields§
§0: Option<T>Methods from Deref<Target = Option<T>>§
1.0.0 · Sourcepub fn as_ref(&self) -> Option<&T>
pub fn as_ref(&self) -> Option<&T>
Converts from &Option<T> to Option<&T>.
§Examples
Calculates the length of an Option<String> as an Option<usize>
without moving the String. The map method takes the self argument by value,
consuming the original, so this technique uses as_ref to first take an Option to a
reference to the value inside the original.
let text: Option<String> = Some("Hello, world!".to_string());
// First, cast `Option<String>` to `Option<&String>` with `as_ref`,
// then consume *that* with `map`, leaving `text` on the stack.
let text_length: Option<usize> = text.as_ref().map(|s| s.len());
println!("still can print text: {text:?}");1.75.0 · Sourcepub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T]
pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T]
Returns a slice of the contained value, if any. If this is None, an
empty slice is returned. This can be useful to have a single type of
iterator over an Option or slice.
Note: Should you have an Option<&T> and wish to get a slice of T,
you can unpack it via opt.map_or(&[], std::slice::from_ref).
§Examples
assert_eq!(
[Some(1234).as_slice(), None.as_slice()],
[&[1234][..], &[][..]],
);The inverse of this function is (discounting
borrowing) [_]::first:
for i in [Some(1234_u16), None] {
assert_eq!(i.as_ref(), i.as_slice().first());
}1.40.0 · Sourcepub fn as_deref(&self) -> Option<&<T as Deref>::Target>where
T: Deref,
pub fn as_deref(&self) -> Option<&<T as Deref>::Target>where
T: Deref,
Converts from Option<T> (or &Option<T>) to Option<&T::Target>.
Leaves the original Option in-place, creating a new one with a reference
to the original one, additionally coercing the contents via Deref.
§Examples
let x: Option<String> = Some("hey".to_owned());
assert_eq!(x.as_deref(), Some("hey"));
let x: Option<String> = None;
assert_eq!(x.as_deref(), None);Trait Implementations§
Source§impl<T> Deref for OptionalUser<T>
impl<T> Deref for OptionalUser<T>
Source§impl<T> FromRequest for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Authenticatable + Clone + 'static,
impl<T> FromRequest for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Authenticatable + Clone + 'static,
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl<T> Freeze for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Freeze,
impl<T> RefUnwindSafe for OptionalUser<T>where
T: RefUnwindSafe,
impl<T> Send for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Send,
impl<T> Sync for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Sync,
impl<T> Unpin for OptionalUser<T>where
T: Unpin,
impl<T> UnsafeUnpin for OptionalUser<T>where
T: UnsafeUnpin,
impl<T> UnwindSafe for OptionalUser<T>where
T: UnwindSafe,
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T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
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fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
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impl<T> Instrument for T
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fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
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impl<T> IntoEither for T
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self into a Left variant of Either<Self, Self>
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Converts self into a Right variant of Either<Self, Self>
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Converts self into a Right variant of Either<Self, Self>
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