[][src]Crate hyper_staticfile

Static file-serving for Hyper 0.13.

This library exports a high-level interface Static for simple file-serving, and lower-level interfaces for more control over responses.

Basic usage

The Static type is essentially a struct containing some settings, and a serve method to handle the request. It follows the builder pattern, and also implements the hyper::Service trait. It can be used as:

// Instance of `Static` containing configuration.
let static_ = hyper_staticfile::Static::new("my/doc/root/");

// A dummy request, but normally obtained from Hyper.
let request = http::Request::get("/foo/bar.txt")
    .body(())
    .unwrap();

// Serve the request. Returns a future for a `hyper::Response`.
let response_future = static_.serve(request);

Typically, you'd store the Static instance somewhere, such as in your own hyper::Service implementation.

Advanced usage

The Static type is a simple wrapper for resolve and ResponseBuilder. You can achieve the same by doing something similar to the following:

use std::path::Path;

#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
    // Document root path.
    let root = Path::new("my/doc/root/");

    // A dummy request, but normally obtained from Hyper.
    let request = http::Request::get("/foo/bar.txt")
        .body(())
        .unwrap();

    // First, resolve the request. Returns a future for a `ResolveResult`.
    let result = hyper_staticfile::resolve(&root, &request)
        .await
        .unwrap();

    // Then, build a response based on the result.
    // The `ResponseBuilder` is typically a short-lived, per-request instance.
    let response = hyper_staticfile::ResponseBuilder::new()
        .request(&request)
        .build(result)
        .unwrap();
}

The resolve function tries to find the file in the root, and returns a future for the ResolveResult enum, which determines what kind of response should be sent. The ResponseBuilder is then used to create a default response. It holds some settings, and can be constructed using the builder pattern.

It's useful to sit between these two steps to implement custom 404 pages, for example. Your custom logic can override specific cases of ResolveResult, and fall back to the default behavior using ResponseBuilder if necessary.

The ResponseBuilder in turn uses FileResponseBuilder to serve files that are found. The FileResponseBuilder can also be used directly if you have an existing open tokio::fs::File and want to serve it. It takes care of basic headers, 'not modified' responses, and streaming the file in the body.

Finally, there's FileBytesStream, which is used by FileResponseBuilder to stream the file. This is a struct wrapping a tokio::fs::File and implementing a futures::Stream that produces Bytess. It can be used for streaming a file in custom response.

Structs

FileBytesStream

Wraps a tokio::fs::File, and implements a stream of Bytess.

FileResponseBuilder

Utility to build responses for serving a tokio::fs::File.

ResponseBuilder

Utility to build the default response for a resolve result.

Static

High-level interface for serving static files.

Enums

ResolveResult

The result of resolve.

Traits

DateTimeHttp

Extensions to the chrono DateTime type for HTTP.

Functions

resolve

Resolve the request by trying to find the file in the given root.

resolve_path

Resolve the request path by trying to find the file in the given root.