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310 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
310 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
Title: A Rustic Re-Podcasting Server (Part 1)
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Date: 2016-10-22
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Category: Blog
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Tags: Rust, nutone
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Authors: Bradlee Speice
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Summary: Learning Rust by fire (it sounds better than learning by corrosion)
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[//]: <> "Modified: "
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I listen to a lot of Drum and Bass music, because it's beautiful music. And
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there's a particular site, [Bassdrive.com](http://bassdrive.com/) that hosts
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a lot of great content. Specifically, the
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[archives](http://archives.bassdrivearchive.com/) section of the site has a
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list of the past shows that you can download and listen to. The issue is, it's
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just a [giant list of links to download](http://archives.bassdrivearchive.com/6%20-%20Saturday/Electronic%20Warfare%20-%20The%20Overfiend/). I'd really like
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this in a podcast format to take with me on the road, etc.
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So I wrote the [elektricity](https://github.com/bspeice/elektricity) web
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application to actually accomplish all that. Whenever you request a feed, it
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goes out to Bassdrive, processes all the links on a page, and serves up some
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fresh, tasty RSS to satisfy your ears. I hosted it on Heroku using the free
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tier because it's really not resource-intensive at all.
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**The issue so far** is that I keep running out of free tier hours during a
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month because my podcasting application likes to have a server scan for new
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episodes constantly. Not sure why it's doing that, but I don't have a whole
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lot of control over it. It's a phenomenal application otherwise.
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**My (over-engineered) solution**: Re-write the application using the
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[Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/en-US/) programming language. I'd like to run
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this on a small hacker board I own, and doing this in Rust would allow me to
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easily cross-compile it. Plus, I've been very interested in the Rust language
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for a while and this would be a great opportunity to really learn it well.
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The code is available [here](https://github.com/bspeice/nutone) as development
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progresses.
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# The Setup
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We'll be using the [iron](http://ironframework.io/) library to handle the
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server, and [hyper](http://hyper.rs/) to fetch the data we need from elsewhere
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on the interwebs. [HTML5Ever](http://doc.servo.org/html5ever/index.html) allows
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us to ingest the content that will be coming from Bassdrive, and finally,
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output is done with [handlebars-rust](http://sunng87.github.io/handlebars-rust/handlebars/index.html).
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It will ultimately be interesting to see how much more work must be done to
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actually get this working over another language like Python. Coming from a
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dynamic state of mind it's super easy to just chain stuff together, ship it out,
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and call it a day. I think I'm going to end up getting much dirtier trying to
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write all of this out.
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# Issue 1: Strings
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Strings in Rust are hard. I acknowledge Python can get away with some things
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that make strings super easy (and Python 3 has gotten better at cracking down
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on some bad cases, `str <-> bytes` specifically), but Rust is hard.
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Let's take for example the `404` error handler I'm trying to write. The result
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should be incredibly simple: All I want is to echo back
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`Didn't find URL: <url>`. Shouldn't be that hard right? In Python I'd just do
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something like:
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```python
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def echo_handler(request):
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return "You're visiting: {}".format(request.uri)
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```
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And we'd call it a day. Rust isn't so simple. Let's start with the trivial
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examples people post online:
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```rust
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fn hello_world(req: &mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, "You found the server!")))
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}
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```
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Doesn't look too bad right? In fact, it's essentially the same as the Python
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version! All we need to do is just send back a string of some form. So, we
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look up the documentation for [`Request`](http://ironframework.io/doc/iron/request/struct.Request.html) and see a `url` field that will contain
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what we want. Let's try the first iteration:
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```rust
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fn hello_world(req: &mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, "You found the URL: " + req.url)))
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}
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```
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Which yields the error:
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error[E0369]: binary operation `+` cannot be applied to type `&'static str`
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OK, what's going on here? Time to start Googling for ["concatenate strings in Rust"](https://www.google.com/#q=concatenate+strings+in+rust). That's what we
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want to do right? Concatenate a static string and the URL.
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After Googling, we come across a helpful [`concat!`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.concat!.html) macro that looks really nice! Let's try that one:
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```rust
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fn hello_world(req: &mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, concat!("You found the URL: ", req.url))))
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}
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```
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And the error:
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`error: expected a literal`
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Turns out Rust actually blows up because the `concat!` macro expects us to know
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at compile time what `req.url` is. Which, in my outsider opinion, is a bit
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strange. `println!` and `format!`, etc., all handle values they don't know at
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compile time. Why can't `concat!`? By any means, we need a new plan of attack.
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How about we try formatting strings?
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```rust
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fn hello_world(req: &mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, format!("You found the URL: {}", req.url))))
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}
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```
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And at long last, it works. Onwards!
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# Issue 2: Fighting with the borrow checker
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Rust's single coolest feature is how the compiler can guarantee safety in your
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program. As long as you don't use `unsafe` pointers in Rust, you're guaranteed
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safety. And not having truly manual memory management is really cool; I'm
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totally OK with never having to write `malloc()` again.
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That said, even [the Rust documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ownership.html) makes a specific note:
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> Many new users to Rust experience something we like to call
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> ‘fighting with the borrow checker’, where the Rust compiler refuses to
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> compile a program that the author thinks is valid.
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If you have to put it in the documentation, it's not a helpful note:
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it's hazing.
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So now that we have a handler which works with information from the request, we
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want to start making something that looks like an actual web application.
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The router provided by `iron` isn't terribly difficult so I won't cover it.
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Instead, the thing that had me stumped for a couple hours was trying to
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dynamically create routes.
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The unfortunate thing with Rust (in my limited experience at the moment) is that
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there is a severe lack of non-trivial examples. Using the router is easy when
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you want to give an example of a static function. But how do you you start
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working on things that are a bit more complex?
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We're going to cover that here. Our first try: creating a function which returns
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other functions. This is a principle called [currying](http://stackoverflow.com/a/36321/1454178). We set up a function that allows us to keep some data in scope
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for another function to come later.
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```rust
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fn build_handler(message: String) -> Fn(&mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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move |_: &mut Request| {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, message)))
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}
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}
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```
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We've simply set up a function that returns another anonymous function with the
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`message` parameter scoped in. If you compile this, you get not 1, not 2, but 5
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new errors. 4 of them are the same though:
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error[E0277]: the trait bound `for<'r, 'r, 'r> std::ops::Fn(&'r mut iron::Request<'r, 'r>) -> std::result::Result<iron::Response, iron::IronError> + 'static: std::marker::Sized` is not satisfied
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...oookay. I for one, am not going to spend time trying to figure out what's
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going on there.
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And it is here that I will save the audience many hours of frustrated effort.
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At this point, I decided to switch from `iron` to pure `hyper` since using
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`hyper` would give me a much simpler API. All I would have to do is build a
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function that took two parameters as input, and we're done. That said, it
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ultimately posed many more issues because I started getting into a weird fight
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with the `'static` [lifetime](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/lifetimes.html)
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and being a Rust newbie I just gave up on trying to understand it.
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Instead, we will abandon (mostly) the curried function attempt, and instead
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take advantage of something Rust actually intends us to use: `struct` and
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`trait`.
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Remember when I talked about a lack of non-trivial examples on the Internet?
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This is what I was talking about. I could only find *one* example of this
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available online, and it was incredibly complex and contained code we honestly
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don't need or care about. There was no documentation of how to build routes that
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didn't use static functions, etc. But, I'm assuming you don't really care about
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my whining, so let's get to it.
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The `iron` documentation mentions the [`Handler`](http://ironframework.io/doc/iron/middleware/trait.Handler.html) trait as being something we can implement.
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Does the function signature for that `handle()` method look familiar? It's what
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we've been working with so far.
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The principle is that we need to define a new `struct` to hold our data, then
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implement that `handle()` method to return the result. Something that looks
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like this might do:
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```rust
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struct EchoHandler {
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message: String
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}
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impl Handler for EchoHandler {
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fn handle(&self, _: &mut Request) -> IronResult<Response> {
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, self.message)))
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}
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}
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// Later in the code when we set up the router...
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let echo = EchoHandler {
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message: "Is it working yet?"
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}
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router.get("/", echo.handle, "index");
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```
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We attempt to build a struct, and give its `handle` method off to the router
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so the router knows what to do.
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You guessed it, more errors:
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error: attempted to take value of method `handle` on type `EchoHandler`
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Now, the Rust compiler is actually a really nice fellow, and offers us help:
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help: maybe a `()` to call it is missing? If not, try an anonymous function
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We definitely don't want to call that function, so maybe try an anonymous
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function as it recommends?
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```rust
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router.get("/", |req: &mut Request| echo.handle(req), "index");
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```
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Another error:
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error[E0373]: closure may outlive the current function, but it borrows `echo`, which is owned by the current function
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Another helpful message:
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help: to force the closure to take ownership of `echo` (and any other referenced variables), use the `move` keyword
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We're getting closer though! Let's implement this change:
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```rust
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router.get("/", move |req: &mut Request| echo.handle(req), "index");
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```
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And here's where things get strange:
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error[E0507]: cannot move out of borrowed content
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--> src/main.rs:18:40
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18 | Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, self.message)))
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| ^^^^ cannot move out of borrowed content
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Now, this took me another couple hours to figure out. I'm going to explain it,
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but **keep this in mind: Rust only allows one reference at a time** (exceptions
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apply of course).
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When we attempt to use `self.message` as it has been created in the earlier
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`struct`, we essentially are trying to give it away to another piece of code.
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Rust's semantics then state that *we may no longer access it* unless it is
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returned to us (which `iron`'s code does not do). There are two ways to fix
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this:
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1. Only give away references (i.e. `&self.message` instead of `self.message`)
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instead of transferring ownership
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2. Make a copy of the underlying value which will be safe to give away
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I didn't know these were the two options originally, so I hope this helps the
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audience out. Because `iron` won't accept a reference, we are forced into the
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second option: making a copy. To do so, we just need to change the function
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to look like this:
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```rust
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Ok(Response::with((status::Ok, self.message.clone())))
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```
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Not so bad, huh? My only complaint is that it took so long to figure out exactly
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what was going on.
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And now we have a small server that we can configure dynamically. At long last.
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> Final sidenote: You can actually do this without anonymous functions. Just
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> change the router line to:
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> `router.get("/", echo, "index");`
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>
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> Rust's type system seems to figure out that we want to use the `handle()` method.
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# Conclusion
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After a good long days' work, we now have the routing functionality set up on
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our application. We should be able to scale this pretty well in the future:
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the RSS content we need to deliver in the future can be treated as a string, so
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the building blocks are in place.
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There are two important things I learned starting with Rust today:
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1. Rust is a new language, and while the code is high-quality, the mindshare is coming.
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2. I'm a terrible programmer.
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Number 1 is pretty obvious and not surprising to anyone. Number two caught me
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off guard. I've gotten used to having either a garbage collector (Java, Python,
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etc.) or playing a little fast and loose with scoping rules (C, C++). You don't
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have to worry about object lifetime there. With Rust, it's forcing me to fully
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understand and use well the memory in my applications. In the final mistake I
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fixed (using `.clone()`) I would have been fine in C++ to just give away that
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reference and never use it again. I wouldn't have run into a "use-after-free"
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error, but I would have potentially been leaking memory. Rust forced me to be
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incredibly precise about how I use it.
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All said I'm excited for using Rust more. I think it's super cool, it's just
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going to take me a lot longer to do this than I originally thought.
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