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Rust Web Programming

You're reading from   Rust Web Programming A hands-on guide to developing, packaging, and deploying fully functional Rust web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234694
Length 666 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Maxwell Flitton Maxwell Flitton
Author Profile Icon Maxwell Flitton
Maxwell Flitton
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Toc

Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Getting Started with Rust Web Development FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: A Quick Introduction to Rust 3. Chapter 2: Designing Your Web Application in Rust 4. Part 2:Processing Data and Managing Displays
5. Chapter 3: Handling HTTP Requests 6. Chapter 4: Processing HTTP Requests 7. Chapter 5: Displaying Content in the Browser 8. Part 3:Data Persistence
9. Chapter 6: Data Persistence with PostgreSQL 10. Chapter 7: Managing User Sessions 11. Chapter 8: Building RESTful Services 12. Part 4:Testing and Deployment
13. Chapter 9: Testing Our Application Endpoints and Components 14. Chapter 10: Deploying Our Application on AWS 15. Chapter 11: Configuring HTTPS with NGINX on AWS 16. Part 5:Making Our Projects Flexible
17. Chapter 12: Recreating Our Application in Rocket 18. Chapter 13: Best Practices for a Clean Web App Repository 19. Part 6:Exploring Protocol Programming and Async Concepts with Low-Level Network Applications
20. Chapter 14: Exploring the Tokio Framework 21. Chapter 15: Accepting TCP Traffic with Tokio 22. Chapter 16: Building Protocols on Top of TCP 23. Chapter 17: Implementing Actors and Async with the Hyper Framework 24. Chapter 18: Queuing Tasks with Redis 25. Index 26. Other Books You May Enjoy

Plugging in our existing views

When it comes to our views, they are also isolated, and we can copy our views over to the Rocket application with a few minor changes to recycle the views that we built for our Actix Web application. We can copy the views with the following command:

cp -r web_app/src/views rocket_app/src/views

With this copy, it goes without saying now that we must go through and scrub the views of any mentions of the Actix Web framework, as we are not using it. Once we have cleaned our views of any mention of Actix Web, we can refactor our existing code so that it works with the Rocket framework. We will start with our login view, as this takes in a JSON body and returns JSON in the following subsection.

Accepting and returning JSON

Before we change our view, we need to make sure that we have imported all we need in the src/views/auth/login.rs file with the following code:

use crate::diesel;
use diesel::prelude::*;
use rocket::serde::json::Json;
use crate...
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