Zero To Production in RUST True PDF Later
Zero To Production in RUST True PDF Later
Zero To Production in RUST True PDF Later
ZERO TO
PRODUCTION
IN RUST
AN OPINIONATED INTRODUCTION TO BACKEND DEVELOPMENT
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Contents
Foreword 9
Preface 10
What Is This Book About . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Cloud-native applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Working in a team . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Who Is This Book For . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
1 Getting Started 13
1.1 Installing The Rust Toolchain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1.1.1 Compilation Targets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1.1.2 Release Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1.1.3 What Toolchains Do We Need? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
1.2 Project Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
1.3 IDEs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1.3.1 Rust-analyzer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1.3.2 IntelliJ Rust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1.3.3 What Should I Use? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1.4 Inner Development Loop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1.4.1 Faster Linking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
1.4.2 cargo-watch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
1.5 Continuous Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
1.5.1 CI Steps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1.5.1.1 Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1.5.1.2 Code Coverage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1.5.1.3 Linting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1.5.1.4 Formatting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.5.1.5 Security Vulnerabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.5.2 Ready-to-go CI Pipelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
1
3.5.1.1 Clean Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
3.5.1.2 Choosing A Random Port . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
3.6 Refocus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
3.7 Working With HTML Forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
3.7.1 Refining Our Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
3.7.2 Capturing Our Requirements As Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
3.7.3 Parsing Form Data From A POST Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
3.7.3.1 Extractors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
3.7.3.2 Form And FromRequest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
3.7.3.3 Serialisation In Rust: serde . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
3.7.3.4 Putting Everything Together . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
3.8 Storing Data: Databases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
3.8.1 Choosing A Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
3.8.2 Choosing A Database Crate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
3.8.2.1 Compile-time Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
3.8.2.2 Query Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3.8.2.3 Async Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3.8.2.4 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3.8.2.5 Our Pick: sqlx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.8.3 Integration Testing With Side-effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.8.4 Database Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
3.8.4.1 Docker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
3.8.4.2 Database Migrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
3.8.5 Writing Our First Query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
3.8.5.1 Sqlx Feature Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
3.8.5.2 Configuration Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
3.8.5.3 Connecting To Postgres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.8.5.4 Our Test Assertion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.8.5.5 Updating Our CI Pipeline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.9 Persisting A New Subscriber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.9.1 Application State In actix-web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.9.2 actix-web Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
3.9.3 The Data Extractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
3.9.4 The INSERT Query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
3.10 Updating Our Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
3.10.1 Test Isolation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
3.11 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
4 Telemetry 78
4.1 Unknown Unknowns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
4.2 Observability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
4.3 Logging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
4.3.1 The log Crate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
4.3.2 actix-web’s Logger Middleware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
4.3.3 The Facade Pattern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
4.4 Instrumenting POST /subscriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
4.4.1 Interactions With External Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
4.4.2 Think Like A User . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
4.4.3 Logs Must Be Easy To Correlate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
4.5 Structured Logging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
4.5.1 The tracing Crate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
4.5.2 Migrating From log To tracing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
4.5.3 tracing’s Span . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
4.5.4 Instrumenting Futures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
4.5.5 tracing’s Subscriber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
4.5.6 tracing-subscriber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
4.5.7 tracing-bunyan-formatter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
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4.5.8 tracing-log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
4.5.9 Removing Unused Dependencies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
4.5.10 Cleaning Up Initialisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
4.5.11 Logs For Integration Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
4.5.12 Cleaning Up Instrumentation Code - tracing::instrument . . . . . . . . . . . 101
4.5.13 Protect Your Secrets - secrecy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
4.5.14 Request Id . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
4.5.15 Leveraging The tracing Ecosystem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
4.6 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
3
6.13.1 How To Generate Random Test Data With fake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
6.13.2 quickcheck Vs proptest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
6.13.3 Getting Started With quickcheck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
6.13.4 Implementing The Arbitrary Trait . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
6.14 Payload Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
6.14.1 Refactoring With TryFrom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
6.15 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
4
7.5.2.1 Naive Deployment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
7.5.2.2 Load Balancers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
7.5.2.3 Rolling Update Deployments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
7.5.2.4 Digital Ocean App Platform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
7.6 Database Migrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
7.6.1 State Is Kept Outside The Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
7.6.2 Deployments And Migrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
7.6.3 Multi-step Migrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
7.6.4 A New Mandatory Column . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
7.6.4.1 Step 1: Add As Optional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
7.6.4.2 Step 2: Start Using The New Column . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
7.6.4.3 Step 3: Backfill And Mark As NOT NULL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
7.6.5 A New Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216
7.7 Sending A Confirmation Email . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216
7.7.1 A Static Email . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216
7.7.1.1 Red test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
7.7.1.2 Green test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
7.7.2 A Static Confirmation Link . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
7.7.2.1 Red Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
7.7.2.2 Green Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
7.7.2.3 Refactor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
7.7.3 Pending Confirmation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
7.7.3.1 Red test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
7.7.3.2 Green Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
7.7.4 Skeleton of GET /subscriptions/confirm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
7.7.4.1 Red Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
7.7.4.2 Green Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
7.7.5 Connecting The Dots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
7.7.5.1 Red Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
7.7.5.2 Green Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
7.7.5.3 Refactor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
7.7.6 Subscription Tokens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
7.7.6.1 Red Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
7.7.6.2 Green Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
7.8 Database Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
7.8.1 All Or Nothing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
7.8.2 Transactions In Postgres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
7.8.3 Transactions In Sqlx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
7.9 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 244
5
8.3.4 Removing The Boilerplate With thiserror . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
8.4 Avoid “Ball Of Mud” Error Enums . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264
8.4.1 Using anyhow As Opaque Error Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 268
8.4.2 anyhow Or thiserror? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
8.5 Who Should Log Errors? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
8.6 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 271
6
10.3.5 Person Via Browser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
10.3.5.1 Federated Identity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
10.3.6 Machine to machine, on behalf of a person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
10.4 Interlude: Next Steps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
10.5 Login Forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
10.5.1 Serving HTML Pages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
10.6 Login . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
10.6.1 HTML Forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
10.6.2 Redirect On Success . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
10.6.3 Processing Form Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328
10.6.3.1 Building An authentication Module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
10.6.3.2 Rejecting Invalid Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332
10.6.4 Contextual Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
10.6.4.1 Naive Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
10.6.4.2 Query Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
10.6.4.3 Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337
10.6.4.4 Message Authentication Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
10.6.4.5 Add An HMAC Tag To Protect Query Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . 338
10.6.4.6 Verifying The HMAC Tag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
10.6.4.7 Error Messages Must Be Ephemeral . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344
10.6.4.8 What Is A Cookie? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
10.6.4.9 An Integration Test For Login Failures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
10.6.4.10 How To Set A Cookie In actix-web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
10.6.4.11 An Integration Test For Login Failures - Part 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
10.6.4.12 How To Read A Cookie In actix-web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
10.6.4.13 How To Delete A Cookie In actix-web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 353
10.6.4.14 Cookie Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 354
10.6.4.15 actix-web-flash-messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 355
10.7 Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
10.7.1 Session-based Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
10.7.2 Session Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
10.7.3 Choosing A Session Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
10.7.3.1 Postgres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 359
10.7.3.2 Redis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 359
10.7.4 actix-session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 359
10.7.4.1 Redis In Our Development Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361
10.7.4.2 Redis On Digital Ocean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 362
10.7.5 Admin Dashboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 362
10.7.5.1 Redirect On Login Success . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 362
10.7.5.2 Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
10.7.5.3 A Typed Interface To Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 367
10.7.5.4 Reject Unauthenticated Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 369
10.8 Seed Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370
10.8.1 Database Migration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370
10.8.2 Password Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
10.8.2.1 Form Skeleton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
10.8.2.2 Unhappy Path: New Passwords Do Not Match . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
10.8.2.3 Unhappy Path: The Current Password Is Invalid . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
10.8.2.4 Unhappy Path: The New Password Is Too Short . . . . . . . . . . . . 379
10.8.2.5 Logout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379
10.8.2.6 Happy Path: The Password Was Changed Successfully . . . . . . . . 382
10.9 Refactoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 384
10.9.1 How To Write An actix-web Middleware . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
10.10Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389
7
11.2 Our Goal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
11.3 Failure Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
11.3.1 Invalid Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
11.3.2 Network I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.3.2.1 Postgres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.3.2.2 Postmark - API Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.3.3 Application Crashes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.3.4 Author Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 394
11.4 Idempotency: An Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 394
11.4.1 Idempotency In Action: Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 394
11.4.2 Idempotency Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395
11.4.3 Concurrent Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 396
11.5 Requirements As Tests #1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 396
11.6 Implementation Strategies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397
11.6.1 Stateful Idempotency: Save And Replay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397
11.6.2 Stateless Idempotency: Deterministic Key Generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397
11.6.3 Time Is a Tricky Beast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.6.4 Making A Choice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.7 Idempotency Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.7.1 Which Database Should We Use? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.7.2 Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.8 Save And Replay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 400
11.8.1 Read Idempotency Key . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 400
11.8.2 Retrieve Saved Responses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 402
11.8.3 Save Responses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405
11.8.3.1 MessageBody and HTTP Streaming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 406
11.8.3.2 Array Of Composite Postgres Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 408
11.8.3.3 Plug It In . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
11.9 Concurrent Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
11.9.1 Requirements As Tests #2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
11.9.2 Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 411
11.9.2.1 Transaction Isolation Levels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
11.10Dealing With Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 416
11.10.1 Distributed Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 418
11.10.2 Backward Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 418
11.10.3 Forward Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419
11.10.4 Asynchronous Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419
11.10.4.1 newsletter_issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420
11.10.4.2 issue_delivery_queue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421
11.10.4.3 POST /admin/newsletters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421
11.10.4.4 Email Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 422
11.10.4.5 Worker loop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425
11.10.4.6 Launching Background Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 427
11.10.4.7 Updating The Test Suite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 429
11.11Epilogue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 432
8
Foreword
When you read these lines, Rust has achieved its biggest goal: make an offer to programmers to write
their production systems in a different language. By the end of the book, it is still your choice to
follow that path, but you have all you need to consider the offer. I’ve been part of the growth process
of two widely different languages: Ruby and Rust - by programming them, but also by running events,
being part of their project management and running business around them. Through that, I had the
privilege of being in touch with many of the creators of those languages and consider some of them
friends. Rust has been my one chance in life to see and help a language grow from the experimental
stage to adoption in the industry.
I’ll let you in on a secret I learned along the way: programming languages are not adopted because
of a feature checklist. It’s a complex interplay between good technology, the ability to speak about it
and finding enough people willing to take long bets. When I write these lines, over 5000 people have
contributed to the Rust project, often for free, in their spare time - because they believe in that bet.
But you don’t have to contribute to the compiler or be recorded in a git log to contribute to Rust.
Luca’s book is such a contribution: it gives newcomers a perspective on Rust and promotes the good
work of those many people.
Rust was never intended to be a research platform - it was always meant as a programming language
solving real, tangible issues in large codebases. It is no surprise that it comes out of an organization
that maintains a very large and complex codebase - Mozilla, creators of Firefox. When I joined Rust,
it was just ambition - but the ambition was to industrialize research to make the software of tomorrow
better. With all of its theoretical concepts, linear typing, region based memory management, the
programming language was always meant for everyone. This reflects in its lingo: Rust uses accessible
names like “Ownership” and “Borrowing” for the concepts I just mentioned. Rust is an industry
language, through and through.
And that reflects in its proponents: I’ve known Luca for years as a community member who knows
a ton about Rust. But his deeper interest lies in convincing people that Rust is worth a try by
addressing their needs. The title and structure of this book reflects one of the core values of Rust:
to find its worth in writing production software that is solid and works. Rust shows its strength in
the care and knowledge that went into it to write stable software productively. Such an experience
is best found with a guide and Luca is one of the best guides you can find around Rust.
Rust doesn’t solve all of your problems, but it has made an effort to eliminate whole categories
of mistakes. There’s the view out there that safety features in languages are there because of the
incompetence of programmers. I don’t subscribe to this view. Emily Dunham, captured it well in
her RustConf 2017 keynote: “safe code allows you to take better risks”. Much of the magic of the
Rust community lies in this positive view of its users: whether you are a newcomer or an experienced
developer, we trust your experience and your decision-making. In this book, Luca offers a lot of new
knowledge that can be applied even outside of Rust, well explained in the context of daily software
praxis. I wish you a great time reading, learning and contemplating.
Florian Gilcher,
Management Director of Ferrous Systems and
Co-Founder of the Rust Foundation
9
Preface
What Is This Book About
The world of backend development is vast.
The context you operate into has a huge impact on the optimal tools and practices to tackle the
problem you are working on.
For example, trunk-based development works extremely well to write software that is continuously
deployed in a Cloud environment.
The very same approach might fit poorly the business model and the challenges faced by a team that
sells software that is hosted and run on-premise by their customers - they are more likely to benefit
from a Gitflow approach.
If you are working alone, you can just push straight to main.
There are few absolutes in the field of software development and I feel it’s beneficial to clarify your
point of view when evaluating the pros and cons of any technique or approach.
Zero To Production will focus on the challenges of writing Cloud-native applications in a team
of four or five engineers with different levels of experience and proficiency.
Cloud-native applications
Defining what Cloud-native application means is, by itself, a topic for a whole new book1 . Instead of
prescribing what Cloud-native applications should look like, we can lay down what we expect them
to do.
Paraphrasing Cornelia Davis, we expect Cloud-native applications:
• To achieve high-availability while running in fault-prone environments;
• To allow us to continuously release new versions with zero downtime;
• To handle dynamic workloads (e.g. request volumes).
These requirements have a deep impact on the viable solution space for the architecture of our
software.
High availability implies that our application should be able to serve requests with no downtime even if
one or more of our machines suddenly starts failing (a common occurrence in a Cloud environment2 ).
This forces our application to be distributed - there should be multiple instances of it running on
multiple machines.
The same is true if we want to be able to handle dynamic workloads - we should be able to measure
if our system is under load and throw more compute at the problem by spinning up new instances of
the application. This also requires our infrastructure to be elastic to avoid overprovisioning and its
associated costs.
Running a replicated application influences our approach to data persistence - we will avoid using
the local filesystem as our primary storage solution, relying instead on databases for our persistence
needs.
Zero To Production will thus extensively cover topics that might seem tangential to pure backend
application development. But Cloud-native software is all about rainbows and DevOps, therefore
we will be spending plenty of time on topics traditionally associated with the craft of operating
systems.
We will cover how to instrument your Rust application to collect logs, traces and metrics to be able
to observe our system.
1 Like the excellent Cloud-native patterns by Cornelia Davis!
2 For example, many companies run their software on AWS Spot Instances to reduce their infrastructure bills. The
price of Spot instances is the result of a continuous auction and it can be substantially cheaper than the corresponding
full price for On Demand instances (up to 90% cheaper!).
There is one gotcha: AWS can decommission your Spot instances at any point in time. Your software must be
fault-tolerant to leverage this opportunity.
10
We will cover how to set up and evolve your database schema via migrations.
We will cover all the material required to use Rust to tackle both day one and day two concerns of a
Cloud-native API.
Working in a team
The impact of those three requirements goes beyond the technical characteristics of our system: it
influences how we build our software.
To be able to quickly release a new version of our application to our users we need to be sure that
our application works.
If you are working on a solo project you can rely on your thorough understanding of the whole system:
you wrote it, it might be small enough to fit entirely in your head at any point in time.3
If you are working in a team on a commercial project, you will be very often working on code that
was neither written or reviewed by you. The original authors might not be around anymore.
You will end up being paralysed by fear every time you are about to introduce changes if you are
relying on your comprehensive understanding of what the code does to prevent it from breaking.
You want automated tests.
Running on every commit. On every branch. Keeping main healthy.
You want to leverage the type system to make undesirable states difficult or impossible to represent.
You want to use every tool at your disposal to empower each member of the team to evolve that piece
of software. To contribute fully to the development process even if they might not be as experienced
as you or equally familiar with the codebase or the technologies you are using.
Zero To Production will therefore put a strong emphasis on test-driven development and continuous
integration from the get-go - we will have a CI pipeline set up before we even have a web server up
and running!
We will be covering techniques such as black-box testing for APIs and HTTP mocking - not wildly
popular or well documented in the Rust community yet extremely powerful.
We will also borrow terminology and techniques from the Domain Driven Design world, combining
them with type-driven design to ensure the correctness of our systems.
Our main focus is enterprise software: correct code which is expressive enough to model the
domain and supple enough to support its evolution over time.
We will thus have a bias for boring and correct solutions, even if they incur a performance overhead
that could be optimised away with a more careful and chiseled approach.
Get it to run first, optimise it later (if needed).
Your past self from one year ago counts as a stranger for all intents and purposes in the world of software development.
Pray that your past self wrote comments for your present self if you are about to pick up again an old project of yours.
11
had built reading The Rust Book or working in the Rust numerical ecosystem.
I wanted to get an answer to a straight-forward question:
Yes.
But it can take some time to figure out how.
That’s why I am writing this book.
I am writing this book for the seasoned backend developers who have read The Rust Book and are
now trying to port over a couple of simple systems.
I am writing this book for the new engineers on my team, a trail to help them make sense of the
codebases they will contribute to over the coming weeks and months.
I am writing this book for a niche whose needs I believe are currently underserved by the articles and
resources available in the Rust ecosystem.
I am writing this book for myself a year ago.
To socialise the knowledge gained during the journey: what does your toolbox look like if you are
using Rust for backend development in 2022? What are the design patterns? Where are the pitfalls?
If you do not fit this description but you are working towards it I will do my best to help you on the
journey: while we won’t be covering a lot of material directly (e.g. most Rust language features) I
will try to provide references and links where needed to help you pick up/brush off those concepts
along the way.
Let’s get started.
12
1 Getting Started
There is more to a programming language than the language itself: tooling is a key element of the
experience of using the language.
The same applies to many other technologies (e.g. RPC frameworks like gRPC or Apache Avro) and
it often has a disproportionate impact on the uptake (or the demise) of the technology itself.
Tooling should therefore be treated as a first-class concern both when designing and teaching the
language itself.
The Rust community has put tooling at the forefront since its early days: it shows.
We are now going to take a brief tour of a set of tools and utilities that are going to be useful in
our journey. Some of them are officially supported by the Rust organisation, others are built and
maintained by the community.
[..] you should never have to fear upgrading to a new version of stable Rust. Each upgrade
should be painless, but should also bring you new features, fewer bugs, and faster compile
times.
That is why, for application development, you should generally rely on the latest released version of
the compiler to run, build and test your software - the so-called stable channel.
A new version of the compiler is released on the stable channel every six weeks4 - the latest version
at the time of writing is v1.43.15 .
There are two other release channels:
• beta, the candidate for the next release;
• nightly, built from the master branch of rust-lang/rust every night, thus the name.
4 More details on the release schedule can be found here.
5 You can check the next version and its release date at Rust forge.
13
Testing your software using the beta compiler is one of the many ways to support the Rust project -
it helps catching bugs before the release date6 .
nightly serves a different purpose: it gives early adopters access to unfinished features7 before they
are released (or even on track to be stabilised!).
I would invite you to think twice if you are planning to run production software on top of the nightly
compiler: it’s called unstable for a reason.
You will not be spending a lot of quality time working directly with rustc - your main interface for
building and testing Rust applications will be cargo, Rust’s build tool.
You can double-check everything is up and running with
cargo --version
Let’s use cargo to create the skeleton of the project we will be working on for the whole book:
cargo new zero2prod
You should have a new zero2prod folder, with the following file structure:
zero2prod/
Cargo.toml
.gitignore
.git
src/
main.rs
We will be using GitHub as a reference given its popularity and the recently released GitHub Actions
feature for CI pipelines, but you are of course free to choose any other git hosting solution (or none
at all).
6 It’s fairly rare for beta releases to contain issues thanks to the CI/CD setup of the Rust project. One of its most
interesting components is crater, a tool designed to scrape crates.io and GitHub for Rust projects to build them and
run their test suites to identify potential regressions. Pietro Albini gave an awesome overview of the Rust release
process in his Shipping a compiler every six weeks talk at RustFest 2019.
7 You can check the list of feature flags available on nightly in The Unstable Book. Spoiler: there are loads.
14
1.3 IDEs
The project skeleton is ready, it is now time to fire up your favourite editor so that we can start
messing around with it.
Different people have different preferences but I would argue that the bare minimum you want to
have, especially if you are starting out with a new programming language, is a setup that supports
syntax highlighting, code navigation and code completion.
Syntax highlighting gives you immediate feedback on glaring syntax errors, while code navigation
and code completion enable “exploratory” programming: jumping in and out of the source of your
dependencies, quick access to the available methods on a struct or an enum you imported from a
crate without having to continuously switch between your editor and docs.rs.
You have two main options for your IDE setup: rust-analyzer and IntelliJ Rust.
1.3.1 Rust-analyzer
rust-analyzer8 is an implementation of the Language Server Protocol for Rust.
The Language Server Protocol makes it easy to leverage rust-analyzer in many different editors,
including but not limited to VS Code, Emacs, Vim/NeoVim and Sublime Text 3.
Editor-specific setup instructions can be found here.
forward.
15
This is also known as the inner development loop.
The speed of your inner development loop is as an upper bound on the number of iterations that you
can complete in a unit of time.
If it takes 5 minutes to compile and run the application, you can complete at most 12 iterations in
an hour. Cut it down to 2 minutes and you can now fit in 30 iterations in the same hour!
Rust does not help us here - compilation speed can become a pain point on big projects. Let’s see
what we can do to mitigate the issue before moving forward.
# On Windows
# ```
# cargo install -f cargo-binutils
# rustup component add llvm-tools-preview
# ```
[target.x86_64-pc-windows-msvc]
rustflags = ["-C", "link-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
[target.x86_64-pc-windows-gnu]
rustflags = ["-C", "link-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
# On Linux:
# - Ubuntu, `sudo apt-get install lld clang`
# - Arch, `sudo pacman -S lld clang`
[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
rustflags = ["-C", "linker=clang", "-C", "link-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
[target.aarch64-apple-darwin]
rustflags = ["-C", "link-arg=-fuse-ld=/usr/local/bin/zld"]
There is ongoing work on the Rust compiler to use lld as the default linker where possible - soon
enough this custom configuration will not be necessary to achieve higher compilation performance!11
1.4.2 cargo-watch
We can also mitigate the impact on our productivity by reducing the perceived compilation time -
i.e. the time you spend looking at your terminal waiting for cargo check or cargo run to complete.
11 This might not truly be the case though - mold is the newest linker on the block and it looks even faster than lld!
It feels a bit early, so we will not be using it as our default linker, but consider checking it out.
16
Tooling can help here - let’s install cargo-watch:
cargo install cargo-watch
cargo-watch monitors your source code to trigger commands every time a file changes.
For example:
cargo watch -x check
Continuous Integration empowers each member of the team to integrate their changes into
the main branch multiple times a day.
17
1.5.1 CI Steps
1.5.1.1 Tests If your CI pipeline had a single step, it should be testing.
Tests are a first-class concept in the Rust ecosystem and you can leverage cargo to run your unit and
integration tests:
cargo test
cargo test also takes care of building the project before running tests, hence you do not need to
run cargo build beforehand (even though most pipelines will invoke cargo build before running
tests to cache dependencies).
1.5.1.2 Code Coverage Many articles have been written on the pros and cons of measuring code
coverage.
While using code coverage as a quality check has several drawbacks I do argue that it is a quick way
to collect information and spot if some portions of the codebase have been overlooked over time and
are indeed poorly tested.
The easiest way to measure code coverage of a Rust project is via cargo tarpaulin, a cargo sub-
command developed by xd009642. You can install tarpaulin with
# At the time of writing tarpaulin only supports
# x86_64 CPU architectures running Linux.
cargo install cargo-tarpaulin
while
cargo tarpaulin --ignore-tests
will compute code coverage for your application code, ignoring your test functions.
tarpaulin can be used to upload code coverage metrics to popular services like Codecov or Coveralls
- instructions can be found in tarpaulin’s README.
1.5.1.3 Linting Writing idiomatic code in any programming language requires time and practice.
It is easy at the beginning of your learning journey to end up with fairly convoluted solutions to
problems that could otherwise be tackled with a much simpler approach.
Static analysis can help: in the same way a compiler steps through your code to ensure it conforms
to the language rules and constraints, a linter will try to spot unidiomatic code, overly-complex
constructs and common mistakes/inefficiencies.
The Rust team maintains clippy, the official Rust linter12 .
clippy is included in the set of components installed by rustup if you are using the default profile.
Often CI environments use rustup’s minimal profile, which does not include clippy.
You can easily install it with
rustup component add clippy
In our CI pipeline we would like to fail the linter check if clippy emits any warnings.
We can achieve it with
cargo clippy -- -D warnings
Static analysis is not infallible: from time to time clippy might suggest changes that you do not
believe to be either correct or desirable.
You can mute a warning using the #[allow(clippy::lint_name)] attribute on the affected code
block or disable the noisy lint altogether for the whole project with a configuration line in clippy.toml
12 Yes, clippy is named after the (in)famous paperclip-shaped Microsoft Word assistance.
18
or a project-level #![allow(clippy::lint_name)] directive.
Details on the available lints and how to tune them for your specific purposes can be found in clippy’s
README.
1.5.1.4 Formatting Most organizations have more than one line of defence for the main branch:
one is provided by the CI pipeline checks, the other is often a pull request review.
A lot can be said on what distinguishes a value-adding PR review process from a soul-sucking one -
no need to re-open the whole debate here.
I know for sure what should not be the focus of a good PR review: formatting nitpicks - e.g. Can
you add a newline here?, I think we have a trailing whitespace there!, etc.
Let machines deal with formatting while reviewers focus on architecture, testing thoroughness, re-
liability, observability. Automated formatting removes a distraction from the complex equation of
the PR review process. You might dislike this or that formatting choice, but the complete erasure of
formatting bikeshedding is worth the minor discomfort.
rustfmt is the official Rust formatter.
Just like clippy, rustfmt is included in the set of default components installed by rustup. If missing,
you can easily install it with
rustup component add rustfmt
It will fail when a commit contains unformatted code, printing the difference to the console.13
You can tune rustfmt for a project with a configuration file, rustfmt.toml. Details can be found in
rustfmt’s README.
1.5.1.5 Security Vulnerabilities cargo makes it very easy to leverage existing crates in the
ecosystem to solve the problem at hand.
On the flip side, each of those crates might hide an exploitable vulnerability that could compromise
the security posture of your software.
The Rust Secure Code working group maintains an Advisory Database - an up-to-date collection of
reported vulnerabilities for crates published on crates.io.
They also provide cargo-audit14 , a convenient cargo sub-command to check if vulnerabilities have
been reported for any of the crates in the dependency tree of your project.
You can install it with
cargo install cargo-audit
the process smoother. Alternatively, you can use a git pre-push hook.
14 cargo-deny, developed by Embark Studios, is another cargo sub-command that supports vulnerability scanning of
your dependency tree. It also bundles additional checks you might want to perform on your dependencies - it helps
you identify unmaintained crates, define rules to restrict the set of allowed software licenses and spot when you have
multiple versions of the same crate in your lock file (wasted compilation cycles!). It requires a bit of upfront effort in
configuration, but it can be a powerful addition to your CI toolbox.
19
that we might not be actively working on at the moment but are still running in our production
environment!
Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a
lifetime.
Hopefully I have taught you enough to go out there and stitch together a solid CI pipeline for your
Rust projects.
We should also be honest and admit that it can take multiple hours of fidgeting around to learn
how to use the specific flavour of configuration language used by a CI provider and the debugging
experience can often be quite painful, with long feedback cycles.
I have thus decided to collect a set of ready-made configuration files for the most popular CI providers
- the exact steps we just described, ready to be embedded in your project repository:
• GitHub Actions;
• CircleCI;
• GitLab CI;
• Travis.
It is often much easier to tweak an existing setup to suit your specific needs than to write a new one
from scratch.
20
2 Building An Email Newsletter
2.1 Our Driving Example
The Foreword stated that
Zero To Production will focus on the challenges of writing cloud-native applications in a team
of four or five engineers with different levels of experience and proficiency.
2.1.2 Course-correcting
Problem-based learning works best in an interactive environment: the teacher acts as a facilitator,
providing more or less support based on the behavioural cues and reactions of the participants.
A book, published on a website, does not give me the same chance.
I truly appreciate feedback on the material - please reach out to [email protected] or send me a
DM on Twitter.
Providing feedback is, at this stage, a tangible way to contribute to Zero To Production.
paying for the peace of mind of knowing that there is an engineering team working full time to keep the service up and
running, for their legal and compliance expertise, for their security team. We (developers) often underestimate how
much time (and headaches) that saves us over time.
21
2.2.1 Capturing Requirements: User Stories
The product brief above leaves some room for interpretation - to better scope what our service should
support we will leverage user stories.
The format is fairly simple:
As a …,
I want to …,
So that …
A user story helps us to capture who we are building for (as a), the actions they want to perform
(want to) as well as their motives (so that).
We will fulfill three user stories:
• As a blog visitor,
I want to subscribe to the newsletter,
So that I can receive email updates when new content is published on the blog;
• As the blog author,
I want to send an email to all my subscribers,
So that I can notify them when new content is published;
• As a subscriber,
I want to be able to unsubscribe from the newsletter,
So that I can stop receiving email updates from the blog.
We will not add features to
• manage multiple newsletters;
• segment subscribers in multiple audiences;
• track opening and click rates.
As said, pretty barebone - nonetheless, enough to satisfy the requirements of most blog authors. It
would certainly satisfy mine for Zero To Production itself.
22
feature.
Our code is going to production at the end of each iteration - it needs to be production-quality.
2.3.1 Coming Up
Strategy is clear, we can finally get started: the next chapter will focus on the subscription function-
ality.
Getting off the ground will require some initial heavy-lifting: choosing a web framework, setting up
the infrastructure for managing database migrations, putting together our application scaffolding as
well as our setup for integration testing.
Expect to spend way more time pair programming with the compiler going forward!
23
3 Sign Up A New Subscriber
We spent the whole previous chapter defining what we will be building (an email newsletter!), nar-
rowing down a precise set of requirements. It is now time to roll up our sleeves and get started with
it.
This chapter will take a first stab at implementing this user story:
As a blog visitor,
I want to subscribe to the newsletter,
So that I can receive email updates when new content is published on the blog.
We expect our blog visitors to input their email address in a form embedded on a web page.
The form will trigger an API call to a backend server that will actually process the information, store
it and send back a response.
This chapter will focus on that backend server - we will implement the /subscriptions POST
endpoint.
24
3.3 Our First Endpoint: A Basic Health Check
Let’s try to get off the ground by implementing a health-check endpoint: when we receive a GET
request for /health_check we want to return a 200 OK response with no body.
We can use /health_check to verify that the application is up and ready to accept incoming requests.
Combine it with a SaaS service like pingdom.com and you can be alerted when your API goes dark -
quite a good baseline for an email newsletter that you are running on the side.
A health-check endpoint can also be handy if you are using a container orchestrator to juggle your
application (e.g. Kubernetes or Nomad): the orchestrator can call /health_check to detect if the
API has become unresponsive and trigger a restart.
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/", web::get().to(greet))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(greet))
})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")?
.run()
.await
}
We have not added actix-web and tokio to our list of dependencies, therefore the compiler cannot
resolve what we imported.
We can either fix the situation manually, by adding
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
17 During our development process we are not always interested in producing a runnable binary: we often just want
to know if our code compiles or not. cargo check was born to serve exactly this usecase: it runs the same checks that
are run by cargo build, but it does not bother to perform any machine code generation. It is therefore much faster
and provides us with a tighter feedback loop. See link for more details.
25
[dependencies]
actix-web = "4"
tokio = { version = "1", features = ["macros", "rt-multi-thread"] }
under [dependencies] in our Cargo.toml or we can use cargo add to quickly add the latest version
of both crates as a dependency of our project:
cargo add actix-web --vers 4.0.0
Hello World!
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/", web::get().to(greet))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(greet))
})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")?
.run()
.await
}
3.3.2.1 Server - HttpServer HttpServer is the backbone supporting our application. It takes
care of things like:
• where should the application be listening for incoming requests? A TCP socket (e.g. 127.0.0.1:8000)?
A Unix domain socket?
• what is the maximum number of concurrent connections that we should allow? How many new
connections per unit of time?
• should we enable transport layer security (TLS)?
• etc.
HttpServer, in other words, handles all transport level concerns.
What happens afterwards? What does HttpServer do when it has established a new connection with
a client of our API and we need to start handling their requests?
That is where App comes into play!
3.3.2.2 Application - App App is where all your application logic lives: routing, middlewares,
request handlers, etc.
18 cargo follows the same philosophy of Rust’s standard library: where possible, the addition of new functionality is
explored via third-party crates and then upstreamed where it makes sense to do so (e.g. cargo-vendor).
26
App is the component whose job is to take an incoming request as input and spit out a response.
Let’s zoom in on our code snippet:
App::new()
.route("/", web::get().to(greet))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(greet))
App is a practical example of the builder pattern: new() gives us a clean slate to which we can add,
one bit at a time, new behaviour using a fluent API (i.e. chaining method calls one after the other).
We will cover the majority of App’s API surface on a need-to-know basis over the course of the whole
book: by the end of our journey you should have touched most of its methods at least once.
"/" will match all requests without any segment following the base path - i.e. http://localhost:8000/.
web::get() is a short-cut for Route::new().guard(guard::Get()) a.k.a. the request should be
passed to the handler if and only if its HTTP method is GET.
You can start to picture what happens when a new request comes in: App iterates over all registered
endpoints until it finds a matching one (both path template and guards are satisfied) and passes over
the request object to the handler.
This is not 100% accurate but it is a good enough mental model for the time being.
What does a handler look like instead? What is its function signature?
We only have one example at the moment, greet:
async fn greet(req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
[...]
}
greet is an asynchronous function that takes an HttpRequest as input and returns something that
implements the Responder trait19 . A type implements the Responder trait if it can be converted into
a HttpResponse - it is implemented off the shelf for a variety of common types (e.g. strings, status
codes, bytes, HttpResponse, etc.) and we can roll our own implementations if needed.
Do all our handlers need to have the same function signature of greet?
No! actix-web, channelling some forbidden trait black magic, allows a wide range of different function
signatures for handlers, especially when it comes to input arguments. We will get back to it soon
enough.
3.3.2.4 Runtime - tokio We drilled down from the whole HttpServer to a Route. Let’s look
again at the whole main function:
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
19 impl Responder is using the impl Trait syntax introduced in Rust 1.26 - you can find more details here.
27
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/", web::get().to(greet))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(greet))
})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")?
.run()
.await
}
What is #[tokio::main] doing here? Well, let’s remove it and see what happens! cargo check
screams at us with these errors:
error[E0277]: `main` has invalid return type `impl std::future::Future`
--> src/main.rs:8:20
|
8 | async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| `main` can only return types that implement `std::process::Termination`
|
= help: consider using `()`, or a `Result`
another excellent reference on the topic. If you prefer books to talks, check out Futures Explained in 200 Lines of Rust.
28
cargo install cargo-expand
Rust macros operate at the token level: they take in a stream of symbols (e.g. in our case, the whole
main function) and output a stream of new symbols which then gets passed to the compiler. In other
words, the main purpose of Rust macros is code generation.
How do we debug or inspect what is happening with a particular macro? You inspect the tokens it
outputs!
That is exactly where cargo expand shines: it expands all macros in your code without passing the
output to the compiler, allowing you to step through it and understand what is going on.
Let’s use cargo expand to demystify #[tokio::main]:
cargo expand
Unfortunately, it fails:
error: the option `Z` is only accepted on the nightly compiler
error: could not compile `zero2prod`
We are using the stable compiler to build, test and run our code. cargo-expand, instead, relies on
the nightly compiler to expand our macros.
You can install the nightly compiler by running
rustup toolchain install nightly --allow-downgrade
Some components of the bundle installed by rustup might be broken/missing on the latest nightly
release: --allow-downgrade tells rustup to find and install the latest nightly where all the needed
components are available.
You can use rustup default to change the default toolchain used by cargo and the other tools
managed by rustup. In our case, we do not want to switch over to nightly - we just need it for
cargo-expand.
Luckily enough, cargo allows us to specify the toolchain on a per-command basis:
# Use the nightly toolchain just for this command invocation
cargo +nightly expand
/// [...]
29
.build()
.expect("Failed building the Runtime")
.block_on(body)
We are starting tokio’s async runtime and we are using it to drive the future returned by
HttpServer::run to completion.
In other words, the job of #[tokio::main] is to give us the illusion of being able to define an
asynchronous main while, under the hood, it just takes our main asynchronous body and writes the
necessary boilerplate to make it run on top of tokio’s runtime.
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/", web::get().to(greet))
.route("/{name}", web::get().to(greet))
})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")?
.run()
.await
}
First of all we need a request handler. Mimicking greet we can start with this signature:
async fn health_check(req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
todo!()
}
We said that Responder is nothing more than a conversion trait into a HttpResponse. Returning an
instance of HttpResponse directly should work then!
Looking at its documentation we can use HttpResponse::Ok to get a HttpResponseBuilder primed
with a 200 status code. HttpResponseBuilder exposes a rich fluent API to progressively build out
a HttpResponse response, but we do not need it here: we can get a HttpResponse with an empty
body by calling finish on the builder.
Gluing everything together:
async fn health_check(req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
A quick cargo check confirms that our handler is not doing anything weird. A closer look at
HttpResponseBuilder unveils that it implements Responder as well - we can therefore omit our call
to finish and shorten our handler to:
async fn health_check(req: HttpRequest) -> impl Responder {
HttpResponse::Ok()
30
}
The next step is handler registration - we need to add it to our App via route:
App::new()
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
})
.bind("127.0.0.1:8000")?
.run()
.await
}
Our health check response is indeed static and does not use any of the data bundled with the
incoming HTTP request (routing aside). We could follow the compiler’s advice and prefix req with
an underscore… or we could remove that input argument entirely from health_check:
async fn health_check() -> impl Responder {
HttpResponse::Ok()
}
Surprise surprise, it compiles! actix-web has some pretty advanced type magic going on behind the
scenes and it accepts a broad range of signatures as request handlers - more on that later.
What is left to do?
Well, a little test!
# Launch the application first in another terminal with `cargo run`
curl -v http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check
* Trying 127.0.0.1...
* TCP_NODELAY set
* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 8000 (#0)
> GET /health_check HTTP/1.1
> Host: localhost:8000
> User-Agent: curl/7.61.0
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
31
< content-length: 0
< date: Wed, 05 Aug 2020 22:11:52 GMT
Congrats, you have just implemented your first working actix_web endpoint!
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_succeeds() {
let response = health_check().await;
// This requires changing the return type of `health_check`
// from `impl Responder` to `HttpResponse` to compile
// You also need to import it with `use actix_web::HttpResponse`!
assert!(response.status().is_success())
}
}
32
Changing any of these two properties would break our API contract, but our test would still pass -
not good enough.
actix-web provides some conveniences to interact with an App without skipping the routing logic,
but there are severe shortcomings to its approach:
• migrating to another web framework would force us to rewrite our whole integration test suite.
As much as possible, we’d like our integration tests to be highly decoupled from the technology
underpinning our API implementation (e.g. having framework-agnostic integration tests is life-
saving when you are going through a large rewrite or refactoring!);
• due to some actix-web’s limitations21 , we wouldn’t be able to share our App startup logic
between our production code and our testing code, therefore undermining our trust in the
guarantees provided by our test suite due to the risk of divergence over time.
We will opt for a fully black-box solution: we will launch our application at the beginning of each
test and interact with it using an off-the-shelf HTTP client (e.g. reqwest).
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// Import the code I want to test
use super::*;
// My tests
}
src/
tests/
Cargo.toml
Cargo.lock
...
therefore impossible (or, at least, so cumbersome that I have never succeeded at it) to write a function that returns an
instance of App.
33
An embedded test module has privileged access to the code living next to it: it can interact with
structs, methods, fields and functions that have not been marked as public and would normally not
be available to a user of our code if they were to import it as a dependency of their own project.
Embedded test modules are quite useful for what I call iceberg projects, i.e. the exposed surface is very
limited (e.g. a couple of public functions), but the underlying machinery is much larger and fairly
complicated (e.g. tens of routines). It might not be straight-forward to exercise all the possible edge
cases via the exposed functions - you can then leverage embedded test modules to write unit tests for
private sub-components to increase your overall confidence in the correctness of the whole project.
Tests in the external tests folder and doc tests, instead, have exactly the same level of access to your
code that you would get if you were to add your crate as a dependency in another project. They are
therefore used mostly for integration testing, i.e. testing your code by calling it in the same exact way
a user would.
Our email newsletter is not a library, therefore the line is a bit blurry - we are not exposing it to the
world as a Rust crate, we are putting it out there as an API accessible over the network.
Nonetheless we are going to use the tests folder for our API integration tests - it is more clearly
separated and it is easier to manage test helpers as sub-modules of an external test binary.
use zero2prod::main;
#[test]
fn dummy_test() {
main()
}
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0432`.
error: could not compile `zero2prod`.
We need to refactor our project into a library and a binary: all our logic will live in the library crate
while the binary itself will be just an entrypoint with a very slim main function.
First step: we need to change our Cargo.toml.
It currently looks something like this:
[package]
name = "zero2prod"
version = "0.1.0"
34
authors = ["Luca Palmieri <[email protected]>"]
edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
# [...]
We are relying on cargo’s default behaviour: unless something is spelled out, it will look for a
src/main.rs file as the binary entrypoint and use the package.name field as the binary name.
Looking at the manifest target specification, we need to add a lib section to add a library to our
project:
[package]
name = "zero2prod"
version = "0.1.0"
authors = ["Luca Palmieri <[email protected]>"]
edition = "2021"
[lib]
# We could use any path here, but we are following the community convention
# We could specify a library name using the `name` field. If unspecified,
# cargo will default to `package.name`, which is what we want.
path = "src/lib.rs"
[dependencies]
# [...]
The lib.rs file does not exist yet and cargo won’t create it for us:
cargo check
Everything should be working now: cargo check passes and cargo run still launches our application.
Although it is working, our Cargo.toml file now does not give you at a glance the full picture: you
see a library, but you don’t see our binary there. Even if not strictly necessary, I prefer to have
everything spelled out as soon as we move out of the auto-generated vanilla configuration:
[package]
name = "zero2prod"
version = "0.1.0"
authors = ["Luca Palmieri <[email protected]>"]
edition = "2021"
[lib]
path = "src/lib.rs"
35
[dependencies]
# [...]
Feeling nice and clean, let’s move forward.
For the time being we can move our main function, as it is, to our library (named run to avoid
clashes):
//! main.rs
use zero2prod::run;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
run().await
}
//! lib.rs
When we receive a GET request for /health_check we return a 200 OK response with no body.
36
// Act
let response = client
.get("http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check")
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert!(response.status().is_success());
assert_eq!(Some(0), response.content_length());
}
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
# Dev dependencies are used exclusively when running tests or examples
# They do not get included in the final application binary!
[dev-dependencies]
reqwest = "0.11"
# [...]
Take a second to really look at this test case.
spawn_app is the only piece that will, reasonably, depend on our application code.
Everything else is entirely decoupled from the underlying implementation details - if tomorrow we
decide to ditch Rust and rewrite out application in Ruby on Rails we can still use the same test suite
to check for regressions in our new stack as long as spawn_app gets replaced with the appropriate
trigger (e.g. a bash command to launch the Rails app).
The test also covers the full range of properties we are interested to check:
• the health check is exposed at /health_check;
• the health check is behind a GET method;
• the health check always returns a 200;
• the health check’s response has no body.
If this passes we are done.
The test as it is crashes before doing anything useful: we are missing spawn_app, the last piece of the
integration testing puzzle.
Why don’t we just call run in there? I.e.
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
Running target/debug/deps/health_check-fc74836458377166
running 1 test
test health_check_works ...
test health_check_works has been running for over 60 seconds
No matter how long you wait, test execution will never terminate. What is going on?
37
In zero2prod::run we invoke (and await) HttpServer::run. HttpServer::run returns an instance
of Server - when we call .await it starts listening on the address we specified indefinitely: it will
handle incoming requests as they arrive, but it will never shutdown or “complete” on its own.
This implies that spawn_app never returns and our test logic never gets executed.
We need to run our application as a background task.
tokio::spawn comes quite handy here: tokio::spawn takes a future and hands it over to the runtime
for polling, without waiting for its completion; it therefore runs concurrently with downstream futures
and tasks (e.g. our test logic).
Let’s refactor zero2prod::run to return a Server without awaiting it:
//! src/lib.rs
use zero2prod::run;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// Bubble up the io::Error if we failed to bind the address
// Otherwise call .await on our Server
run()?.await
}
38
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_works() {
// No .await, no .expect
spawn_app();
// [...]
}
Running target/debug/deps/health_check-a1d027e9ac92cd64
running 1 test
test health_check_works ... ok
3.5.1 Polishing
We got it working, now we need to have a second look and improve it, if needed or possible.
3.5.1.1 Clean Up What happens to our app running in the background when the test run ends?
Does it shut down? Does it linger as a zombie somewhere?
Well, running cargo test multiple times in a row always succeeds - a strong hint that our 8000 port
is getting released at the end of each run, therefore implying that the application is correctly shut
down.
A second look at tokio::spawn’s documentation supports our hypothesis: when a tokio runtime is
shut down all tasks spawned on it are dropped. tokio::test spins up a new runtime at the beginning
of each test case and they shut down at the end of each test case.
In other words, good news - no need to implement any clean up logic to avoid leaking resources
between test runs.
3.5.1.2 Choosing A Random Port spawn_app will always try to run our application on port
8000 - not ideal:
• if port 8000 is being used by another program on our machine (e.g. our own application!), tests
will fail;
• if we try to run two or more tests in parallel only one of them will manage to bind the port, all
others will fail.
We can do better: tests should run their background application on a random available port.
First of all we need to change our run function - it should take the application address as an argument
instead of relying on a hard-coded value:
//! src/lib.rs
// [...]
39
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
})
.bind(address)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
fn spawn_app() {
let server = zero2prod::run("127.0.0.1:0").expect("Failed to bind address");
let _ = tokio::spawn(server);
}
Done - the background app now runs on a random port every time we launch cargo test!
There is only a small issue… our test is failing22 !
running 1 test
test health_check_works ... FAILED
failures:
failures:
health_check_works
Our HTTP client is still calling 127.0.0.1:8000 and we really don’t know what to put there now:
the application port is determined at runtime, we cannot hard code it there.
22 There is a remote chance that the OS ended up picking 8000 as random port and everything worked out smoothly.
40
We need, somehow, to find out what port the OS has gifted our application and return it from
spawn_app.
There are a few ways to go about it - we will use a std::net::TcpListener.
Our HttpServer right now is doing double duty: given an address, it will bind it and then start the
application. We can take over the first step: we will bind the port on our own with TcpListener and
then hand that over to the HttpServer using listen.
What is the upside?
TcpListener::local_addr returns a SocketAddr which exposes the actual port we bound via
.port().
Let’s begin with our run function:
//! src/lib.rs
use actix_web::dev::Server;
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpResponse, HttpServer};
use std::net::TcpListener;
// [...]
The change broke both our main and our spawn_app function. I’ll leave main to you, let’s focus on
spawn_app:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
We can now leverage the application address in our test to point our reqwest::Client:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_works() {
// Arrange
let address = spawn_app();
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
// Act
let response = client
// Use the returned application address
.get(&format!("{}/health_check", &address))
41
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert!(response.status().is_success());
assert_eq!(Some(0), response.content_length());
}
All is good - cargo test comes out green. Our setup is much more robust now!
3.6 Refocus
Let’s take a small break to look back, we covered a fair amount of ground!
We set out to implement a /health_check endpoint and that gave us the opportunity to learn more
about the fundamentals of our web framework, actix-web, as well as the basics of (integration)
testing for Rust APIs.
It is now time to capitalise on what we learned to finally fulfill the first user story of our email
newsletter project:
As a blog visitor,
I want to subscribe to the newsletter,
So that I can receive email updates when new content is published on the blog.
We expect our blog visitors to input their email address in a form embedded on a web page.
The form will trigger a POST /subscriptions call to our backend API that will actually process the
information, store it and send back a response.
We will have to dig into:
• how to read data collected in a HTML form in actix-web (i.e. how do I parse the request body
of a POST?);
• what libraries are available to work with a PostgreSQL database in Rust (diesel vs sqlx vs
tokio-postgres);
• how to setup and manage migrations for our database;
• how to get our hands on a database connection in our API request handlers;
• how to test for side-effects (a.k.a. stored data) in our integration tests;
• how to avoid weird interactions between tests when working with a database.
Let’s get started!
42
whatever they feel like using as their identifier in our newsletter system: DenverCoder9, we welcome
you.
It is settled then: we want an email address and a name for all new subscribers.
Given that the data is collected via a HTML form, it will be passed to our backend API in the body
of a POST request. How is the body going to be encoded?
There are a few options available when using HTML forms: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
is the most suitable to our usecase.
Quoting MDN web docs, with application/x-www-form-urlencoded
the keys and values [in our form] are encoded in key-value tuples separated by ‘&’, with a
‘=’ between the key and the value. Non-alphanumeric characters in both keys and values are
percent encoded.
For example: if the name is Le Guin and the email is [email protected] the POST request
body should be name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com (spaces are replaced by %20
while @ becomes %40 - a reference conversion table can be found here).
To summarise:
• if a valid pair of name and email is supplied using the application/x-www-form-urlencoded
format the backend should return a 200 OK;
• if either name or email are missing the backend should return a 400 BAD REQUEST.
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_works() {
[...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app_address = spawn_app();
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
// Act
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
let response = client
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &app_address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
43
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing() {
// Arrange
let app_address = spawn_app();
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let test_cases = vec![
("name=le%20guin", "missing the email"),
("email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com", "missing the name"),
("", "missing both name and email")
];
// Assert
assert_eq!(
400,
response.status().as_u16(),
// Additional customised error message on test failure
"The API did not fail with 400 Bad Request when the payload was {}.",
error_message
);
}
}
44
thread 'health_check::subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `400`,
right: `404`:
The API did not fail with 400 Bad Request when the payload was missing the email.'
failures:
45
failures:
health_check::subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing
3.7.3.1 Extractors Quite prominent on actix-web’s User Guide is the Extractors’ section.
Extractors are used, as the name implies, to tell the framework to extract certain pieces of information
from an incoming request.
actix-web provides several extractors out of the box to cater for the most common usecases:
• Path to get dynamic path segments from a request’s path;
• Query for query parameters;
• Json to parse a JSON-encoded request body;
• etc.
Luckily enough, there is an extractor that serves exactly our usecase: Form.
Reading straight from its documentation:
Example:
use actix_web::web;
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
struct FormData {
username: String,
}
So, basically… you just slap it there as an argument of your handler and actix-web, when a request
comes in, will somehow do the heavy-lifting for you. Let’s ride along for now and we will circle back
later to understand what is happening under the hood.
Our subscribe handler currently looks like this:
//! src/lib.rs
// Let's start simple: we always return a 200 OK
async fn subscribe() -> HttpResponse {
46
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
Using the example as a blueprint, we probably want something along these lines:
//! src/lib.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
struct FormData {
email: String,
name: String
}
Fair enough: we need to add serde to our dependencies. Let’s add a new line to our Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
# We need the optional `derive` feature to use `serde`'s procedural macros:
# `#[derive(Serialize)]` and `#[derive(Deserialize)]`.
# The feature is not enabled by default to avoid pulling in
# unnecessary dependencies for projects that do not need it.
serde = { version = "1", features = ["derive"]}
cargo check should succeed now. What about cargo test?
running 3 tests
test health_check_works ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
3.7.3.2 Form And FromRequest Let’s go straight to the source: what does Form look like?
You can find its source code here.
The definition seems fairly innocent:
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord)]
pub struct Form<T>(pub T);
It is nothing more than a wrapper: it is generic over a type T which is then used to populate Form’s
only field.
Not much to see here.
Where does the extraction magic take place?
An extractor is a type that implements the FromRequest trait.
FromRequest’s definition is a bit noisy because Rust does not yet support async fn in trait definitions.
Reworking it slightly, it boils down to something that looks more or less like this:
47
/// Trait implemented by types that can be extracted from request.
///
/// Types that implement this trait can be used with `Route` handlers.
pub trait FromRequest: Sized {
type Error = Into<actix_web::Error>;
async fn from_request(
req: &HttpRequest,
payload: &mut Payload
) -> Result<Self, Self::Error>;
from_request takes as inputs the head of the incoming HTTP request (i.e. HttpRequest) and the
bytes of its payload (i.e. Payload). It then returns Self, if the extraction succeeds, or an error type
that can be converted into actix_web::Error.
All arguments in the signature of a route handler must implement the FromRequest trait: actix-web
will invoke from_request for each argument and, if the extraction succeeds for all of them, it will
then run the actual handler function.
If one of the extractions fails, the corresponding error is returned to the caller and the handler is
never invoked (actix_web::Error can be converted to a HttpResponse).
This is extremely convenient: your handler does not have to deal with the raw incoming request and
can instead work directly with strongly-typed information, significantly simplifying the code that you
need to write to handle a request.
Let’s look at Form’s FromRequest implementation: what does it do?
Once again, I slightly reshaped the actual code to highlight the key elements and ignore the nitty-
gritty implementation details.
impl<T> FromRequest for Form<T>
where
T: DeserializeOwned + 'static,
{
type Error = actix_web::Error;
async fn from_request(
req: &HttpRequest,
payload: &mut Payload
) -> Result<Self, Self::Error> {
// Omitted stuff around extractor configuration (e.g. payload size limits)
48
data format.
from_bytes takes as input a contiguous slice of bytes and it deserialises an instance of type T from
it according to the rules of the URL-encoded format: the keys and values are encoded in key-value
tuples separated by &, with a = between the key and the value; non-alphanumeric characters in both
keys and values are percent encoded.
How does it know how to do it for a generic type T?
It is because T implements the DeserializedOwned trait from serde:
impl<T> FromRequest for Form<T>
where
T: DeserializeOwned + 'static,
{
// [...]
}
To understand what is actually going under the hood we need to take a closer look at serde itself.
3.7.3.3 Serialisation In Rust: serde Why do we need serde? What does serde actually do
for us?
Quoting from its guide:
Serde is a framework for serializing and deserializing Rust data structures efficiently and
generically.
3.7.3.3.1 Generically serde does not, by itself, provide support for (de)serialisation from/to any
specific data format: you will not find any code inside serde that deals with the specifics of JSON,
Avro or MessagePack. If you need support for a specific data format, you need to pull in another
crate (e.g. serde_json for JSON or avro-rs for Avro).
serde defines a set of interfaces or, as they themselves call it, a data model.
If you want to implement a library to support serialisation for a new data format, you have to provide
an implementation of the Serializer trait.
Each method on the Serializer trait corresponds to one of the 29 types that form serde’s data
model - your implementation of Serializer specifies how each of those types maps to your specific
data format.
For example, if you were adding support for JSON serialisation, your serialize_seq implementation
would output an opening square bracket [ and return a type which can be used to serialize sequence
elements.23
On the other side, you have the Serialize trait: your implementation of Serialize::serialize
for a Rust type is meant to specify how to decompose it according to serde’s data model using the
methods available on the Serializer trait.
Using again the sequence example, this is how Serialize is implemented for a Rust vector:
use serde::ser::{Serialize, Serializer, SerializeSeq};
empty sequences (you immediately output []), but that is pretty much what is happening.
49
fn serialize<S>(&self, serializer: S) -> Result<S::Ok, S::Error>
where
S: Serializer,
{
let mut seq = serializer.serialize_seq(Some(self.len()))?;
for element in self {
seq.serialize_element(element)?;
}
seq.end()
}
}
That is what allows serde to be agnostic with respect to data formats: once your type implements
Serialize, you are then free to use any concrete implementation of Serializer to actually perform
the serialisation step - i.e. you can serialize your type to any format for which there is an available
Serializer implementation on crates.io (spoiler: almost all commonly used data formats).
The same is true for deserialisation, via Deserialize and Deserializer, with a few additional details
around lifetimes to support zero-copy deserialisation.
usecase (e.g. batch-serialisation) might give you a chance to leverage algorithmic choices that are not compatible with
the structure of serde’s data model, meant to support several formats for a variety of usecases. An example in this
vein would be simd-json.
50
3.7.3.4 Putting Everything Together Given everything we learned so far, let’s take a second
look at our subscribe handler:
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
email: String,
name: String,
}
If you are uncertain about your persistence requirements, use a relational database.
If you have no reason to expect massive scale, use PostgreSQL.
The offering when it comes to databases has exploded in the last twenty years.
From a data-model perspective, the NoSQL movement has brought us document-stores (e.g. Mon-
goDB), key-value stores (e.g. AWS DynamoDB), graph databases (e.g. Neo4J), etc.
25 Unless we implement some kind of synchronisation protocol between our replicas, which would quickly turn into a
51
We have databases that use RAM as their primary storage (e.g. Redis).
We have databases that are optimised for analytical queries via columnar storage (e.g. AWS RedShift).
There is a world of possibilities and you should definitely leverage this richness when designing
systems.
Nonetheless, it is much easier to design yourself into a corner by using a specialised data storage
solution when you still do not have a clear picture of the data access patterns used by your application.
Relational databases are reasonably good as jack-of-all-trades: they will often be a good choice when
building the first version of your application, supporting you along the way while you explore the
constraints of your domain26 .
Even when it comes to relational databases there is plenty of choice.
Alongside classics like PostgreSQL and MySQL you will find some exciting new entries like AWS
Aurora, Google Spanner and CockroachDB.
What do they all have in common?
They are built to scale. Way beyond what traditional SQL databases were supposed to be able to
handle.
If scale is a problem of yours, by all means, take a look there. If it isn’t, you do not need to take
onboard the additional complexity.
This is how we end up with PostgreSQL: a battle-tested piece of technology, widely supported across
all cloud providers if you need a managed offering, opensource, exhaustive documentation, easy to
run locally and in CI via Docker, well-supported within the Rust ecosystem.
3.8.2.1 Compile-time Safety When interacting with a relational database it is fairly easy to
make mistakes - we might, for example,
• have a typo in the name of a column or a table mentioned in our query;
• try to perform operations that are rejected by the database engine (e.g. summing a string and
a number or joining two tables on the wrong column);
• expect to have a certain field in the returned data that is actually not there.
The key question is: when do we realise we made a mistake?
In most programming languages, it will be at runtime: when we try to execute our query the
database will reject it and we will get an error or an exception. This is what happens when using
tokio-postgres.
diesel and sqlx try to speed up the feedback cycle by detecting at compile-time most of these
mistakes.
diesel leverages its CLI to generate a representation of the database schema as Rust code, which is
then used to check assumptions on all of your queries.
26 Relational databases provide you with transactions - a powerful mechanism to handle partial failures and manage
concurrent access to shared data. We will discuss transactions in greater detail in Chapter 7.
52
sqlx, instead, uses procedural macros to connect to a database at compile-time and check if the
provided query is indeed sound27 .
3.8.2.2 Query Interface Both tokio-postgres and sqlx expect you to use SQL directly to
write your queries.
diesel, instead, provides its own query builder: queries are represented as Rust types and you add
filters, perform joins and similar operations by calling methods on them. This is often referred to
with the name of Domain Specific Language (DSL).
Which one is better?
As always, it depends.
SQL is extremely portable - you can use it in any project where you have to interact with a relational
database, regardless of the programming language or the framework the application is written with.
diesel’s DSL, instead, is only relevant when working with diesel: you have to pay an upfront
learning cost to become fluent with it and it only pays off if you stick to diesel for your current and
future projects. It is also worth pointing out that expressing complex queries using diesel’s DSL
can be difficult and you might end up having to write raw SQL anyway.
On the flip side, diesel’s DSL makes it easier to write reusable components: you can split your
complex queries into smaller units and leverage them in multiple places, as you would do with a
normal Rust function.
3.8.2.3 Async Support I remember reading somewhere a killer explanation of async IO that
more or less sounded like this:
Your database is not sitting next to your application on the same physical machine host: to run
queries you have to perform network calls.
An asynchronous database driver will not reduce how long it takes to process a single query, but it
will enable your application to leverage all CPU cores to perform other meaningful work (e.g. serve
another HTTP request) while waiting for the database to return results.
Is this a significant enough benefit to take onboard the additional complexity introduced by asyn-
chronous code?
It depends on the performance requirements of your application.
Generally speaking, running queries on a separate threadpool should be more than enough for most
usecases. At the same time, if your web framework is already asynchronous, using an asynchronous
database driver will actually give you less headaches28 .
Both sqlx and tokio-postgres provide an asynchronous interface, while diesel is synchronous and
does not plan to roll out async support in the near future.
It is also worth mentioning that tokio-postgres is, at the moment, the only crate that supports
query pipelining. The feature is still at the design stage for sqlx while I could not find it mentioned
anywhere in diesel’s docs or issue tracker.
27 Performing IO in a procedural macro is somewhat controversial and forces you to always have a database up and
running when working on a sqlx project; sqlx is adding support for “offline” builds by caching the retrieved query
metadata in its upcoming 0.4.0 release.
28 Async runtimes are based around the assumptions that futures, when polled, will yield control back to the executor
“very quickly”. If you run blocking IO code by mistake on the same threadpool used by the runtime to poll asynchronous
tasks you get yourself in troubles - e.g. your application might mysteriously hang under load. You have to be careful and
always make sure that blocking IO is performed on a separate threadpool using functions like tokio::spawn_blocking
or async_std::spawn_blocking.
53
Crate Compile-time safety Query interface Async
tokio-postgres No SQL Yes
sqlx Yes SQL Yes
diesel Yes DSL No
3.8.2.5 Our Pick: sqlx For Zero To Production we will use sqlx: its asynchronous support sim-
plifies the integration with actix-web without forcing us to compromise on compile-time guarantees.
It also limits the API surface that we have to cover and become proficient with thanks to its usage
of raw SQL for queries.
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app_address = spawn_app();
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
// Act
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
let response = client
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &app_address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
}
54
to log into our production database to check the list of our subscribers), but we should not start
writing a new feature just to test the one we are working on.
Let’s bite the bullet and write a small query in our test. We will remove it down the line when a
better testing strategy becomes available.
3.8.4.1 Docker To run Postgres we will use Docker - before launching our test suite we will launch
a new Docker container using Postgres’ official Docker image.
You can follow the instructions on Docker’s website to install it on your machine.
Let’s create a small bash script for it, scripts/init_db.sh, with a few knobs to customise Postgres’
default settings:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -x
set -eo pipefail
If you run docker ps you should see something along the lines of
IMAGE PORTS STATUS
postgres 127.0.0.1:5432->5432/tcp Up 12 seconds [...]
N.B. - the port mapping bit could be slightly different if you are not using Linux!
29 I do not belong to the “in-memory test database” school of thought: whenever possible you should strive to use
the same database both for your tests and your production environment. I have been burned one time too many by
differences between the in-memory stub and the real database engine to believe it provides any kind of benefit over
using “the real thing”.
55
3.8.4.2 Database Migrations To store our subscribers details we need to create our first table.
To add a new table to our database we need to change its schema - this is commonly referred to as
a database migration.
3.8.4.2.1 sqlx-cli sqlx provides a command-line interface, sqlx-cli, to manage database mi-
grations.
We can install the CLI with
cargo install --version=0.5.7 sqlx-cli --no-default-features --features postgres
3.8.4.2.2 Database Creation The first command we will usually want to run is sqlx database
create. According to the help docs:
sqlx-database-create
Creates the database specified in your DATABASE_URL
USAGE:
sqlx database create
FLAGS:
-h, --help Prints help information
-V, --version Prints version information
In our case, this is not strictly necessary: our Postgres Docker instance already comes with a default
database named newsletter, thanks to the settings we specified when launching it using environment
variables. Nonetheless, you will have to go through the creation step in your CI pipeline and in your
production environment, so worth covering it anyway.
As the help docs imply, sqlx database create relies on the DATABASE_URL environment variable to
know what to do.
DATABASE_URL is expected to be a valid Postgres connection string - the format is as follows:
postgres://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@${DB_HOST}:${DB_PORT}/${DB_NAME}
export DATABASE_URL=postgres://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@localhost:${DB_PORT}/${DB_NAME}
sqlx database create
You might run into an annoying issue from time to time: the Postgres container will not be ready to
accept connections when we try to run sqlx database create.
It happened to me often enough to look for a workaround: we need to wait for Postgres to be healthy
before starting to run commands against it. Let’s update our script to:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -x
set -eo pipefail
DB_USER=${POSTGRES_USER:=postgres}
DB_PASSWORD="${POSTGRES_PASSWORD:=password}"
DB_NAME="${POSTGRES_DB:=newsletter}"
DB_PORT="${POSTGRES_PORT:=5432}"
docker run \
-e POSTGRES_USER=${DB_USER} \
-e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${DB_PASSWORD} \
30 If you run the script again now it will fail because there is a Docker container with same name already running!
You have to stop/kill it before running the updated version of the script.
56
-e POSTGRES_DB=${DB_NAME} \
-p "${DB_PORT}":5432 \
-d postgres \
postgres -N 1000
export DATABASE_URL=postgres://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@localhost:${DB_PORT}/${DB_NAME}
sqlx database create
Problem solved!
The health check uses psql, the command line client for Postgres. Check these instructions on how
to install it on your OS.
Scripts do not come bundled with a manifest to declare their dependencies: it’s unfortunately very
common to launch a script without having installed all the prerequisites. This will usually result in
the script crashing mid-execution, sometimes leaving stuff in our system in a half-broken state.
We can do better in our initialization script: let’s check that both psql and sqlx-cli are installed
at the very beginning.
set -x
set -eo pipefail
3.8.4.2.3 Adding A Migration Let’s create our first migration now with
# Assuming you used the default parameters to launch Postgres in Docker!
export DATABASE_URL=postgres://postgres:[email protected]:5432/newsletter
sqlx migrate add create_subscriptions_table
A new top-level directory should have now appeared in your project - migrations. This is where all
migrations for our project will be stored by sqlx’s CLI.
Under migrations you should already have one file called {timestamp}_create_subscriptions_table.sql
- this is where we have to write the SQL code for our first migration.
Let’s quickly sketch the query we need:
-- migrations/{timestamp}_create_subscriptions_table.sql
-- Create Subscriptions Table
CREATE TABLE subscriptions(
id uuid NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id),
57
email TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
name TEXT NOT NULL,
subscribed_at timestamptz NOT NULL
);
There is a endless debate when it comes to primary keys: some people prefer to use columns with
a business meaning (e.g. email, a natural key), others feel safer with a synthetic key without any
business meaning (e.g. id, a randomly generated UUID, a surrogate key).
I generally default to a synthetic identifier unless I have a very compelling reason not to - feel free to
disagree with me here.
A couple of other things to make a note of:
• we are keeping track of when a subscription is created with subscribed_at (timestamptz is a
time-zone aware date and time type);
• we are enforcing email uniqueness at the database-level with a UNIQUE constraint;
• we are enforcing that all fields should be populated with a NOT NULL constraint on each column;
• we are using TEXT for email and name because we do not have any restriction on their maximum
lengths.
Database constraints are useful as a last line of defence from application bugs but they come at a
cost - the database has to ensure all checks pass before writing new data into the table. Therefore
constraints impact our write-throughput, i.e. the number of rows we can INSERT/UPDATE per unit of
time in a table.
UNIQUE, in particular, introduces an additional B-tree index on our email column: the index has to
be updated on every INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE query and it takes space on disk.
In our specific case, I would not be too worried: our mailing list would have to be incredibly popular
for us to encounter issues with our write throughput. Definitely a good problem to have, if it comes
to that.
3.8.4.2.4 Running Migrations We can run migrations against our database with
sqlx migrate run
It has the same behaviour of sqlx database create - it will look at the DATABASE_URL environment
variable to understand what database needs to be migrated.
Let’s add it to our scripts/init_db.sh script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -x
set -eo pipefail
DB_USER=${POSTGRES_USER:=postgres}
DB_PASSWORD="${POSTGRES_PASSWORD:=password}"
DB_NAME="${POSTGRES_DB:=newsletter}"
DB_PORT="${POSTGRES_PORT:=5432}"
58
# Allow to skip Docker if a dockerized Postgres database is already running
if [[ -z "${SKIP_DOCKER}" ]]
then
docker run \
-e POSTGRES_USER=${DB_USER} \
-e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${DB_PASSWORD} \
-e POSTGRES_DB=${DB_NAME} \
-p "${DB_PORT}":5432 \
-d postgres \
postgres -N 1000
fi
export PGPASSWORD="${DB_PASSWORD}"
until psql -h "localhost" -U "${DB_USER}" -p "${DB_PORT}" -d "postgres" -c '\q'; do
>&2 echo "Postgres is still unavailable - sleeping"
sleep 1
done
>&2 echo "Postgres is up and running on port ${DB_PORT} - running migrations now!"
export DATABASE_URL=postgres://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@localhost:${DB_PORT}/${DB_NAME}
sqlx database create
sqlx migrate run
We have put the docker run command behind a SKIP_DOCKER flag to make it easy to run migrations
against an existing Postgres instance without having to tear it down manually and re-create it with
scripts/init_db.sh. It will also be useful in CI, if Postgres is not spun up by our script.
We can now migrate the database with
SKIP_DOCKER=true ./scripts/init_db.sh
If you check your database using your favourite graphic interface for Postgres you will now see a
subscriptions table alongside a brand new _sqlx_migrations table: this is where sqlx keeps
track of what migrations have been run against your database - it should contain a single row now
for our create_subscriptions_table migration.
3.8.5.1 Sqlx Feature Flags We installed sqlx-cli, but we have actually not yet added sqlx
itself as a dependency of our application.
Let’s append a new line to our Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
# [...]
59
"postgres",
"uuid",
"chrono",
"migrate"
]
Yeah, there are a lot of feature flags. Let’s go through all of them one by one:
• runtime-actix-rustls tells sqlx to use the actix runtime for its futures and rustls as TLS
backend;
• macros gives us access to sqlx::query! and sqlx::query_as!, which we will be using exten-
sively;
• postgres unlocks Postgres-specific functionality (e.g. non-standard SQL types);
• uuid adds support for mapping SQL UUIDs to the Uuid type from the uuid crate. We need it
to work with our id column;
• chrono adds support for mapping SQL timestamptz to the DateTime<T> type from the chrono
crate. We need it to work with our subscribed_at column;
• migrate gives us access to the same functions used under the hood by sqlx-cli to manage
migrations. It will turn out to be useful for our test suite.
These should be enough for what we need to do in this chapter.
3.8.5.2.1 Making Space Right now all our application code lives in a single file, lib.rs.
Let’s quickly split it into multiple sub-modules to avoid chaos now that we are adding new function-
ality. We want to land on this folder structure:
src/
configuration.rs
lib.rs
main.rs
routes/
mod.rs
health_check.rs
subscriptions.rs
startup.rs
60
startup.rs will host our run function, health_check goes into routes/health_check.rs,
subscribe and FormData into routes/subscriptions.rs, configuration.rs starts empty. Both
handlers are re-exported in routes/mod.rs:
//! src/routes/mod.rs
mod health_check;
mod subscriptions;
You might have to add a few pub visibility modifiers here and there, as well as performing a few
corrections to use statements in main.rs and tests/health_check.rs.
Make sure cargo test comes out green before moving forward.
3.8.5.2.2 Reading A Configuration File To manage configuration with config we must rep-
resent our application settings as a Rust type that implements serde’s Deserialize trait.
Let’s create a new Settings struct:
//! src/configuration.rs
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Settings {}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
pub username: String,
pub password: String,
pub port: u16,
pub host: String,
pub database_name: String,
}
It makes sense: all fields in a type have to be deserialisable in order for the type as a whole to be
deserialisable.
61
We have our configuration type, what now?
First of all, let’s add config to our dependencies with
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
config = "0.11"
# [...]
We want to read our application settings from a configuration file named configuration:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
Let’s modify our main function to read configuration as its first step:
//! src/main.rs
use std::net::TcpListener;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// Panic if we can't read configuration
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration.");
// We have removed the hard-coded `8000` - it's now coming from our settings!
let address = format!("127.0.0.1:{}", configuration.application_port);
let listener = TcpListener::bind(address)?;
run(listener)?.await
}
If you try to launch the application with cargo run it should crash:
Running `target/debug/zero2prod`
62
password: "password"
database_name: "newsletter"
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app_address = spawn_app();
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration");
let connection_string = configuration.database.connection_string();
// The `Connection` trait MUST be in scope for us to invoke
// `PgConnection::connect` - it is not an inherent method of the struct!
let connection = PgConnection::connect(&connection_string)
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
// Act
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
let response = client
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &app_address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
}
3.8.5.4 Our Test Assertion Now that we are connected, we can finally write the test assertions
we have been dreaming about for the past 10 pages.
We will use sqlx’s query! macro:
63
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// [...]
// The connection has to be marked as mutable!
let mut connection = ...
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
}
What is the type of saved? The query! macro returns an anonymous record type: a struct definition
is generated at compile-time after having verified that the query is valid, with a member for each
column on the result (i.e. saved.email for the email column).
If we try to run cargo test we will get an error:
error: `DATABASE_URL` must be set to use query macros
--> tests/health_check.rs:59:17
|
59 | let saved = sqlx::query!("SELECT email, name FROM subscriptions",)
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: this error originates in a macro (in Nightly builds,
run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
As we discussed before, sqlx reaches out to Postgres at compile-time to check that queries are well-
formed. Just like sqlx-cli commands, it relies on the DATABASE_URL environment variable to know
where to find the database.
We could export DATABASE_URL manually, but we would then run in the same issue every time we
boot our machine and start working on this project. Let’s take the advice of sqlx’s authors - we’ll
add a top-level .env file
DATABASE_URL="postgres://postgres:password@localhost:5432/newsletter"
sqlx will read DATABASE_URL from it and save us the hassle of re-exporting the environment variable
every single time.
It feels a bit dirty to have the database connection parameters in two places (.env and
configuration.yaml), but it is not a major problem: configuration.yaml can be used to
alter the runtime behaviour of the application after it has been compiled, while .env is only relevant
for our development process, build and test steps.
Commit the .env file to version control - we will need it in CI soon enough!
Let’s try to run cargo test again:
running 3 tests
test health_check_works ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... FAILED
failures:
64
thread 'subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data' panicked at
'Failed to fetch saved subscription.: RowNotFound', tests/health_check.rs:59:17
failures:
subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data
3.8.5.5 Updating Our CI Pipeline If you check on it, you will notice that your CI pipeline is
now failing to perform most of the checks we introduced at the beginning of our journey.
Our tests now rely on a running Postgres database to be executed properly. All our build com-
mands (cargo check, cargo lint, cargo build), due to sqlx’s compile-time checks, need an up-
and-running database!
We do not want to venture further with a broken CI.
You can find an updated version of the GitHub Actions setup here. Only general.yml needs to be
updated.
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
email: String,
name: String,
}
To execute a query within subscribe we need to get our hands on a database connection.
Let’s figure out how to get one.
65
pub fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
// New parameter!
connection: PgConnection
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let server = HttpServer::new(|| {
App::new()
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
// Register the connection as part of the application state
.app_data(connection)
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
66
| required by this bound in `actix_web::server::HttpServer`
|
= note: required because it appears within the type
`[closure@src/startup.rs:8:34: 13:6 PgConnection]`
HttpServer::new does not take App as argument - it wants a closure that returns an App struct.
This is to support actix-web’s runtime model: actix-web will spin up a worker process for each
available core on your machine.
Each worker runs its own copy of the application built by HttpServer calling the very same closure
that HttpServer::new takes as argument.
That is why connection has to be cloneable - we need to have one for every copy of App.
But, as we said, PgConnection does not implement Clone because it sits on top of a non-cloneable
system resource, a TCP connection with Postgres. What do we do?
We can use web::Data, another actix-web extractor.
web::Data wraps our connection in an Atomic Reference Counted pointer, an Arc: each instance of
the application, instead of getting a raw copy of a PgConnection, will get a pointer to one.
Arc<T> is always cloneable, no matter who T is: cloning an Arc increments the number of active
references and hands over a new copy of the memory address of the wrapped value.
Handlers can then access the application state using the same extractor.
Let’s give it a try:
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::{health_check, subscribe};
use actix_web::dev::Server;
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpServer};
use sqlx::PgConnection;
use std::net::TcpListener;
pub fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
connection: PgConnection
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
// Wrap the connection in a smart pointer
let connection = web::Data::new(connection);
// Capture `connection` from the surrounding environment
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
// Get a pointer copy and attach it to the application state
.app_data(connection.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
67
It doesn’t compile yet, but we just need to do a bit of house-keeping:
error[E0061]: this function takes 2 arguments but 1 argument was supplied
--> src/main.rs:11:5
|
11 | run(listener)?.await
| ^^^ -------- supplied 1 argument
| |
| expected 2 arguments
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration.");
let connection = PgConnection::connect(&configuration.database.connection_string())
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
let address = format!("127.0.0.1:{}", configuration.application_port);
let listener = TcpListener::bind(address)?;
run(listener, connection)?.await
}
Perfect, it compiles.
68
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use chrono::Utc;
use uuid::Uuid;
// [...]
execute wants an argument that implements sqlx’s Executor trait and it turns out, as we should
have probably remembered from the query we wrote in our test, that &PgConnection does not
implement Executor - only &mut PgConnection does.
69
Why is that the case?
sqlx has an asynchronous interface, but it does not allow you to run multiple queries concurrently
over the same database connection.
Requiring a mutable reference allows them to enforce this guarantee in their API. You can think of a
mutable reference as a unique reference: the compiler guarantees to execute that they have indeed
exclusive access to that PgConnection because there cannot be two active mutable references to the
same value at the same time in the whole program. Quite neat.
Nonetheless it might look like we designed ourselves into a corner: web::Data will never give us
mutable access to the application state.
We could leverage interior mutability - e.g. putting our PgConnection behind a lock (e.g. a Mutex)
would allow us to synchronise access to the underlying TCP socket and get a mutable reference to
the wrapped connection once the lock has been acquired.
We could make it work, but it would not be ideal: we would be constrained to run at most one query
at a time. Not great.
Let’s take a second look at the documentation for sqlx’s Executor trait: what else implements
Executor apart from &mut PgConnection?
Bingo: a shared reference to PgPool.
PgPool is a pool of connections to a Postgres database. How does it bypass the concurrency issue
that we just discussed for PgConnection?
There is still interior mutability at play, but of a different kind: when you run a query against a
&PgPool, sqlx will borrow a PgConnection from the pool and use it to execute the query; if no
connection is available, it will create a new one or wait until one frees up.
This increases the number of concurrent queries that our application can run and it also improves its
resiliency: a single slow query will not impact the performance of all incoming requests by creating
contention on the connection lock.
Let’s refactor run, main and subscribe to work with a PgPool instead of a single PgConnection:
//! src/main.rs
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use sqlx::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration.");
// Renamed!
let connection_pool = PgPool::connect(&configuration.database.connection_string())
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
let address = format!("127.0.0.1:{}", configuration.application_port);
let listener = TcpListener::bind(address)?;
run(listener, connection_pool)?.await
}
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::{health_check, subscribe};
use actix_web::dev::Server;
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpServer};
use sqlx::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
70
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
.app_data(db_pool.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// No longer importing PgConnection!
use sqlx::PgPool;
// [...]
The compiler is almost happy: cargo check has a warning for us.
warning: unused `Result` that must be used
--> src/routes/subscriptions.rs:13:5
|
13 | / sqlx::query!(
14 | | r#"
15 | | INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
16 | | VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
... |
23 | | .execute(pool.as_ref())
24 | | .await;
| |___________^
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_must_use)]` on by default
= note: this `Result` may be an `Err` variant, which should be handled
sqlx::query may fail - it returns a Result, Rust’s way to model fallible functions.
The compiler is reminding us to handle the error case - let’s follow the advice:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
71
}
}
cargo check is satisfied, but the same cannot be said for cargo test:
error[E0061]: this function takes 2 arguments but 1 argument was supplied
--> tests/health_check.rs:10:18
|
10 | let server = run(listener).expect("Failed to bind address");
| ^^^ -------- supplied 1 argument
| |
| expected 2 arguments
72
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
All test cases have then to be updated accordingly - an off-screen exercise that I leave to you, my
dear reader.
Let’s just have a look together at what subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data looks like
after the required changes:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
// Act
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
let response = client
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &app.address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
}
The test intent is much clearer now that we got rid of most of the boilerplate related to establishing
the connection with the database.
TestApp is foundation we will be building on going forward to pull out supporting functionality that
is useful to most of our integration tests.
The moment of truth has finally come: is our updated subscribe implementation enough to turn
subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data green?
running 3 tests
test health_check_works ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... ok
Yesssssssss!
73
Success!
Let’s run it again to bathe in the light of this glorious moment!
cargo test
running 3 tests
test health_check_works ... ok
Failed to execute query: error returned from database:
duplicate key value violates unique constraint "subscriptions_email_key"
thread 'subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `200`,
right: `500`', tests/health_check.rs:66:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Panic in Arbiter thread.
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... FAILED
failures:
failures:
subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data
74
The best place to do this is spawn_app, before launching our actix-web test application.
Let’s look at it again:
//! tests/health_check.rs
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use sqlx::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
use uuid::Uuid;
// [...]
cargo test will fail: there is no database ready to accept connections using the name we generated.
Let’s add a connection_string_without_db method to our DatabaseSettings:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
impl DatabaseSettings {
pub fn connection_string(&self) -> String {
format!(
"postgres://{}:{}@{}:{}/{}",
self.username, self.password, self.host, self.port, self.database_name
)
}
75
pub fn connection_string_without_db(&self) -> String {
format!(
"postgres://{}:{}@{}:{}",
self.username, self.password, self.host, self.port
)
}
}
Omitting the database name we connect to the Postgres instance, not a specific logical database.
We can now use that connection to create the database we need and run migrations on it:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
use sqlx::{Connection, Executor, PgConnection, PgPool};
use zero2prod::configuration::{get_configuration, DatabaseSettings};
// Migrate database
let connection_pool = PgPool::connect(&config.connection_string())
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
sqlx::migrate!("./migrations")
.run(&connection_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to migrate the database");
connection_pool
}
sqlx::migrate! is the same macro used by sqlx-cli when executing sqlx migrate run - no need
to throw bash scripts into the mix to achieve the same result.
Let’s try again to run cargo test:
running 3 tests
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test health_check_works ... ok
76
test runs, performance starts to suffer due to the number of lingering (almost empty) databases.
3.11 Summary
We covered a large number of topics in this chapter: actix-web extractors and HTML forms,
(de)serialisation with serde, an overview of the available database crates in the Rust ecosystem,
the fundamentals of sqlx as well as basic techniques to ensure test isolation when dealing with
databases.
Take your time to digest the material and go back to review individual sections if necessary.
77
4 Telemetry
In Chapter 3 we managed to put together a first implementation of POST /subscriptions to fulfill
one of the user stories of our email newsletter project:
As a blog visitor,
I want to subscribe to the newsletter,
So that I can receive email updates when new content is published on the blog.
We have not yet created a web page with a HTML form to actually test the end-to-end flow, but we
have a few black-box integration tests that cover the two basic scenarios we care about at this stage:
• if valid form data is submitted (i.e. both name and email have been provided), the data is saved
in our database;
• if the submitted form is incomplete (e.g. the email is missing, the name is missing or both), the
API returns a 400.
Should we be satisfied and rush to deploy the first version of our application on the coolest cloud
provider out there?
Not yet - we are not yet equipped to properly run our software in a production environment.
We are blind: the application is not instrumented yet and we are not collecting any telemetry
data, making us vulnerable to unknown unknowns.
If most of the previous sentence makes little to no sense to you, do not worry: getting to the bottom
of it is going to be the main focus of this chapter.
78
• the system is pushed outside of its usual operating conditions (e.g. an unusual spike of traffic);
• multiple components experience failures at the same time (e.g. a SQL transaction is left hanging
while the database is going through a master-replica failover);
• a change is introduced that moves the system equilibrium (e.g. tuning a retry policy);
• no changes have been introduced for a long time (e.g. applications have not been restarted for
weeks and you start to see all sorts of memory leaks);
• etc.
All these scenarios share one key similarity: they are often impossible to reproduce outside of the live
environment.
What can we do to prepare ourselves to deal with an outage or a bug caused by an unknown unknown?
4.2 Observability
We must assume that we will not be there when an unknown unknown issue arises: it might be late
at night, we might be working on something else, etc.
Even if we were paying attention at the very same moment something starts to go wrong, it often
isn’t possible or practical to attach a debugger to a process running in production (assuming you
even know in the first place which process you should be looking at) and the degradation might affect
multiple systems at once.
The only thing we can rely on to understand and debug an unknown unknown is telemetry data:
information about our running applications that is collected automatically and can be later inspected
to answer questions about the state of the system at a certain point in time.
What questions?
Well, if it is an unknown unknown we do not really know in advance what questions we might need
to ask to isolate its root cause - that’s the whole point.
The goal is to have an observable application.
Quoting from Honeycomb’s observability guide
Observability is about being able to ask arbitrary questions about your environment without
— and this is the key part — having to know ahead of time what you wanted to ask.
“arbitrary” is a strong word - as all absolute statements, it might require an unreasonable investment
of both time and money if we are to interpret it literally.
In practice we will also happily settle for an application that is sufficiently observable to enable us to
deliver the level of service we promised to our users.
In a nutshell, to build an observable system we need:
• to instrument our application to collect high-quality telemetry data;
• access to tools and systems to efficiently slice, dice and manipulate the data to find answers to
our questions.
We will touch upon some of the options available to fulfill the second point, but an exhaustive
discussion is outside of the scope of this book.
Let’s focus on the first for the rest of this chapter.
4.3 Logging
Logs are the most common type of telemetry data.
Even developers who have never heard of observability have an intuitive understanding of the use-
fulness of logs: logs are what you look at when stuff goes south to understand what is happening,
crossing your fingers extra hard hoping you captured enough information to troubleshoot effectively.
What are logs though?
The format varies, depending on the epoch, the platform and the technologies you are using.
Nowadays a log record is usually a bunch of text data, with a line break to separate the current
record from the next one. For example
79
The application is starting on port 8080
Handling a request to /index
Handling a request to /index
Returned a 200 OK
pub fn main() {
match fallible_operation() {
Ok(success) => {
log::info!("Operation succeeded: {}", success);
}
Err(err) => {
log::error!("Operation failed: {}", err);
}
}
}
80
pub fn run(listener: TcpListener, db_pool: PgPool) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let db_pool = Data::new(db_pool);
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
// Middlewares are added using the `wrap` method on `App`
.wrap(Logger::default())
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
.app_data(db_pool.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
We can now launch the application using cargo run and fire a quick request with curl
http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check -v.
The request comes back with a 200 but… nothing happens on the terminal we used to launch our
application.
No logs. Nothing. Blank screen.
At the beginning of your main function you can call the set_logger function and pass an imple-
mentation of the Log trait: every time a log record is emitted Log::log will be called on the logger
you provided, therefore making it possible to perform whatever form of processing of log records you
deem necessary.
If you do not call set_logger, then all log records will simply be discarded. Exactly what happened
81
to our application.
Let’s initialise our logger this time.
There are a few Log implementations available on crates.io - the most popular options are listed in
the documentation of log itself.
We will use env_logger - it works nicely if, as in our case, the main goal is printing all logs records
to the terminal.
Let’s add it as a dependency with
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
env_logger = "0.9"
# [...]
env_logger::Logger prints log records to the terminal, using the following format:
[<timestamp> <level> <module path>] <log message>
It looks at the RUST_LOG environment variable to determine what logs should be printed and what
logs should be filtered out.
RUST_LOG=debug cargo run, for example, will surface all logs at debug-level or higher emitted by
our application or the crates we are using. RUST_LOG=zero2prod, instead, would filter out all records
emitted by our dependencies.
Let’s modify our main.rs file as required:
// [...]
use env_logger::Env;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// `init` does call `set_logger`, so this is all we need to do.
// We are falling back to printing all logs at info-level or above
// if the RUST_LOG environment variable has not been set.
env_logger::Builder::from_env(Env::default().default_filter_or("info")).init();
// [...]
}
Let’s try to launch the application again using cargo run (equivalent to RUST_LOG=info cargo run
given our defaulting logic). Two log records should show up on your terminal (using a new line break
with indentation to make them fit within the page margins)
[2020-09-21T21:28:40Z INFO actix_server::builder] Starting 12 workers
[2020-09-21T21:28:40Z INFO actix_server::builder] Starting
"actix-web-service-127.0.0.1:8000" service on 127.0.0.1:8000
If we make a request with curl http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check you should see another log
record, emitted by the Logger middleware we added a few paragraphs ago
[2020-09-21T21:28:43Z INFO actix_web::middleware::logger] 127.0.0.1:47244
"GET /health_check HTTP/1.1" 200 0 "-" "curl/7.61.0" 0.000225
Logs are also an awesome tool to explore how the software we are using works.
Try setting RUST_LOG to trace and launching the application again.
You should see a bunch of registering with poller log records coming from mio, a low-level
library for non-blocking IO, as well as a couple of startup log records for each worker spawned up by
actix-web (one for each physical core available on your machine!).
Insightful things can be learned by playing around with trace-level logs.
82
4.4 Instrumenting POST /subscriptions
Let’s use what we learned about log to instrument our handler for POST /subscriptions requests.
It currently looks like this:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
As it stands, we would only be emitting a log record when the query succeeds. To capture failures
we need to convert that println statement into an error-level log:
83
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
We will happily settle for an application that is sufficiently observable to enable us to deliver
the level of service we promised to our users.
Hey!
I tried subscribing to your newsletter using my main email address,
[email protected], but the website failed with a weird error. Any chance you
could look into what happened?
Best,
Tom
P.S. Keep it up, your blog rocks!
Tom landed on our website and received “a weird error” when he pressed the Submit button.
Our application is sufficiently observable if we can triage the issue from the breadcrumbs of information
he has provided us - i.e. the email address he entered.
84
Can we do it?
Let’s, first of all, confirm the issue: is Tom registered as a subscriber?
We can connect to the database and run a quick query to double-check that there is no record with
[email protected] as email in our subscribers table.
The issue is confirmed. What now?
None of our logs include the subscriber email address, so we cannot search for it. Dead end.
We could ask Tom to provide additional information: all our log records have a timestamp, maybe if
he remembers around what time he tried to subscribe we can dig something out?
This is a clear indication that our current logs are not good enough.
Let’s improve them:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
//! ..
Much better - we now have a log line that is capturing both name and email.31 .
Is it enough to troubleshoot Tom’s issue?
Going forward I will omit logs emitted by sqlx from the reported terminal output to keep the
examples concise. sqlx’s logs use the INFO level by default - we will tune it down to TRACE in
Chapter 5.
If we had a single copy of our web server running at any point in time and that copy was only capable
of handling a single request at a time, we might imagine logs showing up in our terminal more or less
like this:
# First request
[.. INFO zero2prod] Adding '[email protected]' 'Tom' as a new subscriber
31 Should we log names and emails? If you are operating in Europe, they generally qualify as Personal Identifiable
Information (PII) and their processing must obey the principles and rules laid out in the General Data Protection
Regulation (GDPR). We should have tight controls around who can access that information, how long we are planning
to store it for, procedures to delete it if the user asks to be forgotten, etc. Generally speaking, there are many types
of information that would be useful for debugging purposes but cannot be logged freely (e.g. passwords) - you will
either have to do without them or rely on obfuscation (e.g. tokenization/pseudonymisation) to strike a balance between
security, privacy and usefulness.
85
[.. INFO zero2prod] Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. INFO zero2prod] New subscriber details have been saved
[.. INFO actix_web] .. "POST /subscriptions HTTP/1.1" 200 ..
# Second request
[.. INFO zero2prod] Adding '[email protected]' 'Steven' as a new subscriber
[.. ERROR zero2prod] Failed to execute query: connection error with the database
[.. ERROR actix_web] .. "POST /subscriptions HTTP/1.1" 500 ..
You can clearly see where a single request begins, what happened while we tried to fulfill it, what we
returned as a response, where the next request begins, etc.
It is easy to follow.
But this is not what it looks like when you are handling multiple requests concurrently:
[.. INFO zero2prod] Receiving request for POST /subscriptions
[.. INFO zero2prod] Receiving request for POST /subscriptions
[.. INFO zero2prod] Adding '[email protected]' 'Tom' as a new subscriber
[.. INFO zero2prod] Adding '[email protected]' 'Steven' as a new subscriber
[.. INFO zero2prod] Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. ERROR zero2prod] Failed to execute query: connection error with the database
[.. ERROR actix_web] .. "POST /subscriptions HTTP/1.1" 500 ..
[.. INFO zero2prod] Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. INFO zero2prod] New subscriber details have been saved
[.. INFO actix_web] .. "POST /subscriptions HTTP/1.1" 200 ..
86
"request_id {} - Failed to execute query: {:?}",
request_id,
e
);
HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish()
}
}
}
We can now search for [email protected] in our logs, find the first record, grab the
request_id and then pull down all the other log records associated with that request.
Well, almost all the logs: request_id is created in our subscribe handler, therefore actix_web’s
Logger middleware is completely unaware of it.
That means that we will not know what status code our application has returned to the user when
they tried to subscribe to our newsletter.
What should we do?
We could bite the bullet, remove actix_web’s Logger, write a middleware to generate a random
request identifier for every incoming request and then write our own logging middleware that is
aware of the identifier and includes it in all log lines.
Could it work? Yes.
Should we do it? Probably not.
87
4.5.1 The tracing Crate
The tracing crate comes to the rescue:
[dependencies]
tracing = { version = "0.1", features = ["log"] }
# [...]
The first migration step is as straight-forward as it gets: search and replace all occurrences of the
log string in our function body with tracing.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
88
That’s it.
If you run the application and fire a POST /subscriptions request you will see exactly the same logs
in your console. Identical.
Pretty cool, isn’t it?
This works thanks to tracing’s log feature flag, which we enabled in Cargo.toml. It ensures that
every time an event or a span are created using tracing’s macros a corresponding log event is emitted,
allowing log’s loggers to pick up on it (env_logger, in our case).
// [...]
// `_request_span_guard` is dropped at the end of `subscribe`
// That's when we "exit" the span
}
in the log crate as well - see the unstable kv feature. At the time of writing though, none of the mainstream Log
implementation supports structured logging as far as I can see.
89
that variable. We can, though, specify a custom Drop implementation to perform other cleanup
operations on drop - e.g. exiting from a span when the Entered guard gets dropped:
//! `tracing`'s source code
if_log_enabled! {{
if let Some(ref meta) = self.span.meta {
self.span.log(
ACTIVITY_LOG_TARGET,
log::Level::Trace,
format_args!("<- {}", meta.name())
);
}
}}
}
}
Inspecting the source code of your dependencies can often expose some gold nuggets - we just found
out that if the log feature flag is enabled tracing will emit a trace-level log when a span exits.
Let’s give it a go immediately:
RUST_LOG=trace cargo run
Notice how all the information we captured in the span’s context is reported in the emitted log line.
We can closely follow the lifetime of our span using the emitted logs:
• Adding a new subscriber is logged when the span is created;
• We enter the span (->);
• We execute the INSERT query;
• We exit the span (<-);
• We finally close the span (--).
Wait, what is the difference between exiting and closing a span?
Glad you asked!
You can enter (and exit) a span multiple times. Closing, instead, is final: it happens when the span
itself is dropped.
This comes pretty handy when you have a unit of work that can be paused and then resumed - e.g. an
asynchronous task!
90
4.5.4 Instrumenting Futures
Let’s use our database query as an example.
The executor might have to poll its future more than once to drive it to completion - while that future
is idle, we are going to make progress on other futures.
This can clearly cause issues: how do we make sure we don’t mix their respective spans?
The best way would be to closely mimic the future’s lifecycle: we should enter into the span associated
to our future every time it is polled by the executor and exit every time it gets parked.
That’s where Instrument comes into the picture. It is an extension trait for futures.
Instrument::instrument does exactly what we want: enters the span we pass as argument
every time self, the future, is polled; it exits the span every time the future is parked.
Let’s try it out on our query:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use tracing::Instrument;
// [...]
If we launch the application again with RUST_LOG=trace and try a POST /subscriptions request
we will see logs that look somewhat similar to these:
[.. INFO zero2prod] Adding a new subscriber.; request_id=f349b0fe..
[email protected] subscriber_name=le guin
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Adding a new subscriber.
[.. INFO zero2prod] Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] <- Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Saving new subscriber details in the database
91
[.. TRACE zero2prod] <- Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] <- Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -> Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] <- Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -- Saving new subscriber details in the database
[.. TRACE zero2prod] <- Adding a new subscriber.
[.. TRACE zero2prod] -- Adding a new subscriber.
[.. INFO actix_web] .. "POST /subscriptions HTTP/1.1" 200 ..
We can clearly see how many times the query future has been polled by the executor before completing.
How cool is that!?
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
env_logger::from_env(Env::default().default_filter_or("info")).init();
// [...]
}
env_logger’s logger implements log’s Log trait - it knows nothing about the rich structure exposed
by tracing’s Span!
tracing’s compatibility with log was great to get off the ground, but it is now time to replace
env_logger with a tracing-native solution.
The tracing crate follows the same facade pattern used by log - you can freely use its macros to
instrument your code, but applications are in charge to spell out how that span telemetry data should
be processed.
Subscriber is the tracing counterpart of log’s Log: an implementation of the Subscriber trait
exposes a variety of methods to manage every stage of the lifecycle of a Span - creation, enter/exit,
closure, etc.
//! `tracing`'s source code
The quality of tracing’s documentation is breath-taking - I strongly invite you to have a look for
yourself at Subscriber’s docs to properly understand what each of those methods does.
92
4.5.6 tracing-subscriber
tracing does not provide any subscriber out of the box.
We need to look into tracing-subscriber, another crate maintained in-tree by the tracing project,
to find a few basic subscribers to get off the ground. Let’s add it to our dependencies:
[dependencies]
# ...
tracing-subscriber = { version = "0.3", features = ["registry", "env-filter"] }
tracing-subscriber does much more than providing us with a few handy subscribers.
It introduces another key trait into the picture, Layer.
Layer makes it possible to build a processing pipeline for spans data: we are not forced to provide an
all-encompassing subscriber that does everything we want; we can instead combine multiple smaller
layers to obtain the processing pipeline we need.
This substantially reduces duplication across in tracing ecosystem: people are focused on adding new
capabilities by churning out new layers rather than trying to build the best-possible-batteries-included
subscriber.
The cornerstone of the layering approach is Registry.
Registry implements the Subscriber trait and takes care of all the difficult stuff:
Registry does not actually record traces itself: instead, it collects and stores span data that is
exposed to any layer wrapping it […]. The Registry is responsible for storing span metadata,
recording relationships between spans, and tracking which spans are active and which are
closed.
Downstream layers can piggyback on Registry’s functionality and focus on their purpose: filtering
what spans should be processed, formatting span data, shipping span data to remote systems, etc.
4.5.7 tracing-bunyan-formatter
We’d like to put together a subscriber that has feature-parity with the good old env_logger.
We will get there by combining three layers33 :
• tracing_subscriber::filter::EnvFilter discards spans based on their log levels and their
origins, just as we did in env_logger via the RUST_LOG environment variable;
• tracing_bunyan_formatter::JsonStorageLayer processes spans data and stores the associ-
ated metadata in an easy-to-consume JSON format for downstream layers. It does, in particular,
propagate context from parent spans to their children;
• tracing_bunyan_formatter::BunyanFormatterLayer builds on top of JsonStorageLayer
and outputs log records in bunyan-compatible JSON format.
Let’s add tracing_bunyan_formatter to our dependencies34 :
[dependencies]
# ...
tracing-bunyan-formatter = "0.3"
We can now tie everything together in our main function:
//! src/main.rs
//! [...]
use tracing::subscriber::set_global_default;
use tracing_bunyan_formatter::{BunyanFormattingLayer, JsonStorageLayer};
use tracing_subscriber::{layer::SubscriberExt, EnvFilter, Registry};
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
33 We are using tracing-bunyan-formatter instead of the formatting layer provided by tracing-subscriber because
the latter does not implement metadata inheritance: it would therefore fail to meet our requirements.
34 Full disclosure - I am the author of tracing-bunyan-formatter.
93
// We removed the `env_logger` line we had before!
// [...]
}
If you launch the application with cargo run and fire a request you’ll see these logs (pretty-printed
here to be easier on the eye):
{
"msg": "[ADDING A NEW SUBSCRIBER - START]",
"subscriber_name": "le guin",
"request_id": "30f8cce1-f587-4104-92f2-5448e1cc21f6",
"subscriber_email": "[email protected]"
...
}
{
"msg": "[SAVING NEW SUBSCRIBER DETAILS IN THE DATABASE - START]",
"subscriber_name": "le guin",
"request_id": "30f8cce1-f587-4104-92f2-5448e1cc21f6",
"subscriber_email": "[email protected]"
...
}
{
"msg": "[SAVING NEW SUBSCRIBER DETAILS IN THE DATABASE - END]",
"elapsed_milliseconds": 4,
"subscriber_name": "le guin",
"request_id": "30f8cce1-f587-4104-92f2-5448e1cc21f6",
"subscriber_email": "[email protected]"
...
}
{
"msg": "[ADDING A NEW SUBSCRIBER - END]",
"elapsed_milliseconds": 5
"subscriber_name": "le guin",
"request_id": "30f8cce1-f587-4104-92f2-5448e1cc21f6",
"subscriber_email": "[email protected]",
...
}
We made it: everything we attached to the original context has been propagated to all its sub-spans.
tracing-bunyan-formatter also provides duration out-of-the-box: every time a span is closed a
JSON message is printed to the console with an elapsed_millisecond property attached to it.
The JSON format is extremely friendly when it comes to searching: an engine like ElasticSearch can
94
easily ingest all these records, infer a schema and index the request_id, name and email fields. It
unlocks the full power of a querying engine to sift through our logs!
This is exponentially better than we had before: to perform complex searches we would have had to
use custom-built regexes, therefore limiting considerably the range of questions that we could easily
ask to our logs.
4.5.8 tracing-log
If you take a closer look you will realise we lost something along the way: our terminal is only showing
logs that were directly emitted by our application. What happened to actix-web’s log records?
tracing’s log feature flag ensures that a log record is emitted every time a tracing event happens,
allowing log’s loggers to pick them up.
The opposite does not hold true: log does not emit tracing events out of the box and does not
provide a feature flag to enable this behaviour.
If we want it, we need to explicitly register a logger implementation to redirect logs to our tracing
subscriber for processing.
We can use LogTracer, provided by the tracing-log crate.
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
tracing-log = "0.1"
# [...]
Let’s edit our main as required:
//! src/main.rs
//! [...]
use tracing::subscriber::set_global_default;
use tracing_bunyan_formatter::{BunyanFormattingLayer, JsonStorageLayer};
use tracing_subscriber::{layer::SubscriberExt, EnvFilter, Registry};
use tracing_log::LogTracer;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// Redirect all `log`'s events to our subscriber
LogTracer::init().expect("Failed to set logger");
// [...]
}
95
In a large project it is very difficult to spot that a dependency has become unused after a refactoring.
Luckily enough, tooling comes to the rescue once again - let’s install cargo-udeps (unused
dependencies):
cargo install cargo-udeps
cargo-udeps scans your Cargo.toml file and checks if all the crates listed under [dependencies]
have actually been used in the project. Check cargo-deps’ trophy case for a long list of popular Rust
projects where cargo-udeps was able to spot unused dependencies and cut down build times.
Let’s run it on our project!
# cargo-udeps requires the nightly compiler.
# We add +nightly to our cargo invocation
# to tell cargo explicitly what toolchain we want to use.
cargo +nightly udeps
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
LogTracer::init().expect("Failed to set logger");
96
let address = format!("127.0.0.1:{}", configuration.application_port);
let listener = TcpListener::bind(address)?;
run(listener, connection_pool)?.await?;
Ok(())
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into());
init_subscriber(subscriber);
// [...]
}
We can now move get_subscriber and init_subscriber to a module within our zero2prod library,
97
telemetry.
//! src/lib.rs
pub mod configuration;
pub mod routes;
pub mod startup;
pub mod telemetry;
//! src/telemetry.rs
use tracing::subscriber::set_global_default;
use tracing::Subscriber;
use tracing_bunyan_formatter::{BunyanFormattingLayer, JsonStorageLayer};
use tracing_log::LogTracer;
use tracing_subscriber::{layer::SubscriberExt, EnvFilter, Registry};
pub fn get_subscriber(
name: String,
env_filter: String
) -> impl Subscriber + Sync + Send {
// [...]
}
//! src/main.rs
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use zero2prod::telemetry::{get_subscriber, init_subscriber};
use sqlx::postgres::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into());
init_subscriber(subscriber);
// [...]
}
Awesome.
98
pub struct TestApp {
pub address: String,
pub db_pool: PgPool,
}
// [...]
If you try to run cargo test you will be greeted by one success and a long series of test failures:
failures:
---- subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing stdout ----
thread 'subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing' panicked at
'Failed to set logger: SetLoggerError(())'
Panic in Arbiter thread.
failures:
subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data
subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing
init_subscriber should only be called once, but it is being invoked by all our tests.
We can use once_cell to rectify it35 :
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
once_cell = "1"
# [...]
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
use once_cell::sync::Lazy;
35 Given that we never refer to TRACING after its initialization, we could have used std::sync::Once with its call_once
method. Unfortunately, as soon as the requirements change (i.e. you need to use it after initialization), you end up
reaching for std::sync::SyncOnceCell, which is not stable yet. once_cell covers both usecases - this seemed like a
great opportunity to introduce a useful crate into your toolkit.
99
// Ensure that the `tracing` stack is only initialised once using `once_cell`
static TRACING: Lazy<()> = Lazy::new(|| {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("test".into(), "debug".into());
init_subscriber(subscriber);
});
// [...]
}
// [...]
pub fn get_subscriber<Sink>(
name: String,
env_filter: String,
sink: Sink,
) -> impl Subscriber + Sync + Send
where
// This "weird" syntax is a higher-ranked trait bound (HRTB)
// It basically means that Sink implements the `MakeWriter`
// trait for all choices of the lifetime parameter `'a`
// Check out https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/hrtb.html
// for more details.
Sink: for<'a> MakeWriter<'a> + Send + Sync + 'static,
{
// [...]
let formatting_layer = BunyanFormattingLayer::new(name, sink);
// [...]
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
100
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into(), std::io::stdout);
// [...]
}
In our test suite we will choose the sink dynamically according to an environment variable, TEST_LOG.
If TEST_LOG is set, we use std::io::stdout.
If TEST_LOG is not set, we send all logs into the void using std::io::sink.
Our own home-made version of the --nocapture flag.
//! tests/health_check.rs
//! ...
// Ensure that the `tracing` stack is only initialised once using `once_cell`
static TRACING: Lazy<()> = Lazy::new(|| {
let default_filter_level = "info".to_string();
let subscriber_name = "test".to_string();
// We cannot assign the output of `get_subscriber` to a variable based on the value of `TEST_LOG`
// because the sink is part of the type returned by `get_subscriber`, therefore they are not the
// same type. We could work around it, but this is the most straight-forward way of moving forward.
if std::env::var("TEST_LOG").is_ok() {
let subscriber = get_subscriber(subscriber_name, default_filter_level, std::io::stdout);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
} else {
let subscriber = get_subscriber(subscriber_name, default_filter_level, std::io::sink);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
};
});
// [...]
When you want to see all logs coming out of a certain test case to debug it you can run
# We are using the `bunyan` CLI to prettify the outputted logs
# The original `bunyan` requires NPM, but you can install a Rust-port with
# `cargo install bunyan`
TEST_LOG=true cargo test health_check_works | bunyan
101
);
match sqlx::query!(/* */)
.execute(pool.as_ref())
// First we attach the instrumentation, then we `.await` it
.instrument(query_span)
.await
{
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(e) => {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish()
}
}
}
It is fair to say logging has added some noise to our subscribe function.
Let’s see if we can cut it down a bit.
We will start with request_span: we’d like all operations within subscribe to happen within the
context of request_span.
In other words, we’d like to wrap the subscribe function in a span.
This requirement is fairly common: extracting each sub-task in its own function is a common way
to structure routines to improve readability and make it easier to write tests; therefore we will often
want to attach a span to a function declaration.
tracing caters for this specific usecase with its tracing::instrument procedural macro. Let’s see
it in action:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool),
fields(
request_id = %Uuid::new_v4(),
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let query_span = tracing::info_span!(
"Saving new subscriber details in the database"
);
match sqlx::query!(/* */)
.execute(pool.as_ref())
.instrument(query_span)
.await
{
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(e) => {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish()
}
}
}
#[tracing::instrument] creates a span at the beginning of the function invocation and automat-
ically attaches all arguments passed to the function to the context of the span - in our case, form
102
and pool. Often function arguments won’t be displayable on log records (e.g. pool) or we’d like to
specify more explicitly what should/how they should be captured (e.g. naming each field of form) -
we can explicitly tell tracing to ignore them using the skip directive.
name can be used to specify the message associated to the function span - if omitted, it defaults to
the function name.
We can also enrich the span’s context using the fields directive. It leverages the same syntax we
have already seen for the info_span! macro.
The result is quite nice: all instrumentation concerns are visually separated by execution concerns
- the first are dealt with in a procedural macro that “decorates” the function declaration, while the
function body focuses on the actual business logic.
It is important to point out that tracing::instrument takes care as well to use Instrument::instrument
if it is applied to an asynchronous function.
Let’s extract the query in its own function and use tracing::instrument to get rid of query_span
and the call to the .instrument method:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool),
fields(
request_id = %Uuid::new_v4(),
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &form).await
{
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish()
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Saving new subscriber details in the database",
skip(form, pool)
)]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
form: &FormData,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
form.email,
form.name,
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
103
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
// Using the `?` operator to return early
// if the function failed, returning a sqlx::Error
// We will talk about error handling in depth later!
})?;
Ok(())
}
The error event does now fall within the query span and we have a better separation of concerns:
• insert_subscriber takes care of the database logic and it has no awareness of the surrounding
web framework - i.e. we are not passing web::Form or web::Data wrappers as input types;
• subscribe orchestrates the work to be done by calling the required routines and translates
their outcome into the proper response according to the rules and conventions of the HTTP
protocol.
I must confess my unbounded love for tracing::instrument: it significantly lowers the effort required
to instrument your code.
It pushes you in the pit of success: the right thing to do is the easiest thing to do.
passwords.
104
Memory wiping, provided by the Zeroize trait, is a nice-to-have.
The key property we are looking for is Secret’s masked Debug implementation: println!("{:?}",
my_secret_string) outputs Secret([REDACTED String]) instead of the actual secret value. This is
exactly what we need to prevent accidental leakage of sensitive material via #[tracing::instrument]
or other logging statements.
There is an additional upside to an explicit wrapper type: it serves as documentation for new devel-
opers who are being introduced to the codebase. It nails down what is considered sensitive in your
domain/according to the relevant regulation.
The only secret value we need to worry about, right now, is the database password. Let’s wrap it up:
//! src/configuration.rs
use secrecy::Secret;
// [..]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
// [...]
pub password: Secret<String>,
}
Secret does not interfere with deserialization - Secret implements serde::Deserialize by delegat-
ing to the deserialization logic of the wrapped type (if you enable the serde feature flag, as we did).
The compiler is not happy:
error[E0277]: `Secret<std::string::String>` doesn't implement `std::fmt::Display`
--> src/configuration.rs:29:28
|
| self.username, self.password, self.host, self.port
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| `Secret<std::string::String>` cannot be formatted with the default formatter
That is a feature, not a bug - secret::Secret does not implement Display therefore we need to
explicitly allow the exposure of the wrapped secret. The compiler error is a great prompt to notice
that the entire database connection string should be marked as Secret as well given that it embeds
the database password:
//! src/configuration.rs
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
impl DatabaseSettings {
pub fn connection_string(&self) -> Secret<String> {
Secret::new(format!(
"postgres://{}:{}@{}:{}/{}",
// [...]
self.password.expose_secret(),
// [...]
))
}
//! src/main.rs
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
105
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let connection_pool =
PgPool::connect(&configuration.database.connection_string().expose_secret())
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
// [...]
}
//! tests/health_check.rs
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
This is it for the time being - going forward we will make sure to wrap sensitive values into Secret
as soon as they are introduced.
4.5.14 Request Id
We have one last job to do: ensure all logs for a particular request, in particular the record with the
returned status code, are enriched with a request_id property. How?
If our goal is to avoid touching actix_web::Logger the easiest solution is adding another middleware,
RequestIdMiddleware, that is in charge of:
• generating a unique request identifier;
• creating a new span with the request identifier attached as context;
• wrapping the rest of the middleware chain in the newly created span.
We would be leaving a lot on the table though: actix_web::Logger does not give us access to its
rich information (status code, processing time, caller IP, etc.) in the same structured JSON format
we are getting from other logs - we would have to parse all that information out of its message string.
We are better off, in this case, by bringing in a solution that is tracing-aware.
Let’s add tracing-actix-web as one of our dependencies38 :
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
tracing-actix-web = "0.5"
# [...]
It is designed as a drop-in replacement of actix-web’s Logger, just based on tracing instead of log:
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::{health_check, subscribe};
use actix_web::dev::Server;
use actix_web::web::Data;
38 Full disclosure - I am the author of tracing-actix-web.
106
use actix_web::{web, App, HttpServer};
use sqlx::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
use tracing_actix_web::TracingLogger;
If you launch the application and fire a request you should see a request_id on all logs as well as
request_path and a few other useful bits of information.
We are almost done - there is one outstanding issue we need to take care of.
Let’s take a closer look at the emitted log records for a POST /subscriptions request:
{
"msg": "[REQUEST - START]",
"request_id": "21fec996-ace2-4000-b301-263e319a04c5",
...
}
{
"msg": "[ADDING A NEW SUBSCRIBER - START]",
"request_id":"aaccef45-5a13-4693-9a69-5",
...
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool),
fields(
request_id = %Uuid::new_v4(),
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
}
// [...]
We are still generating a request_id at the function-level which overrides the request_id coming
from TracingLogger.
107
Let’s get rid of it to fix the issue:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool),
fields(
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
}
// [...]
All good now - we have one consistent request_id for each endpoint of our application.
4.6 Summary
We started from a completely silent actix-web application and we ended up with high-quality teleme-
try data. It is now time to take this newsletter API live!
In the next chapter we will build a basic deployment pipeline for our Rust project.
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5 Going Live
We have a working prototype of our newsletter API - it is now time to take it live.
We will learn how to package our Rust application as a Docker container to deploy it on DigitalOcean’s
App Platform.
At the end of the chapter we will have a Continuous Deployment (CD) pipeline: every commit to
the main branch will automatically trigger the deployment of the latest version of the application to
our users.
109
5.2.1 Virtualisation: Docker
Our local development environment and our production environment serve two very different pur-
poses.
Browsers, IDEs, our music playlists - they can co-exist on our local machine. It is a multi-purpose
workstation.
Production environments, instead, have a much narrower focus: running our software to make it
available to our users. Anything that is not strictly related to that goal is either a waste of resources,
at best, or a security liability, at worst.
This discrepancy has historically made deployments fairly troublesome, leading to the now meme-fied
complaint “It works on my machine!”.
It is not enough to copy the source code to our production servers. Our software is likely to make
assumptions on the capabilities exposed by the underlying operating system (e.g. a native Windows
application will not run on Linux), on the availability of other software on the same machine (e.g. a
certain version of the Python interpreter) or on its configuration (e.g. do I have root permissions?).
Even if we started with two identical environments we would, over time, run into troubles as versions
drift and subtle inconsistencies come up to haunt our nights and weekends.
The easiest way to ensure that our software runs correctly is to tightly control the environment it is
being executed into.
This is the fundamental idea behind virtualisation technology: what if, instead of shipping code to
production, you could ship a self-contained environment that included your application?!
It would work great for both sides: less Friday-night surprises for you, the developer; a consistent
abstraction to build on top of for those in charge of the production infrastructure.
Bonus points if the environment itself can be specified as code to ensure reproducibility.
The nice thing about virtualisation is that it exists and it has been mainstream for almost a decade
now.
As for most things in technology, you have a few options to choose from depending on your needs:
virtual machines, containers (e.g. Docker) and a few others (e.g. Firecracker).
We will go with the mainstream and ubiquitous option - Docker containers.
5.3.1 Dockerfiles
A Dockerfile is a recipe for your application environment.
They are organised in layers: you start from a base image (usually an OS enriched with a programming
110
language toolchain) and execute a series of commands (COPY, RUN, etc.), one after the other, to build
the environment you need.
Let’s have a look at the simplest possible Dockerfile for a Rust project:
# We use the latest Rust stable release as base image
FROM rust:1.59.0
Save it in a file named Dockerfile in the root directory of our git repository:
zero2prod/
.github/
migrations/
scripts/
src/
tests/
.gitignore
Cargo.lock
Cargo.toml
configuration.yaml
Dockerfile
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5.3.3 Sqlx Offline Mode
If you were eager enough, you might have already launched the build command… just to realise it
doesn’t work!
docker build --tag zero2prod --file Dockerfile .
# [...]
Step 4/5 : RUN cargo build --release
# [...]
error: error communicating with the server:
Cannot assign requested address (os error 99)
--> src/routes/subscriptions.rs:35:5
|
35 | / sqlx::query!(
36 | | r#"
37 | | INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
38 | | VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
... |
43 | | Utc::now()
44 | | )
| |_____^
|
= note: this error originates in a macro
112
sqlx prepare --help
sqlx-prepare
Generate query metadata to support offline compile-time verification.
USAGE:
sqlx prepare [FLAGS] [-- <args>...]
ARGS:
<args>...
Arguments to be passed to `cargo rustc ...`
FLAGS:
--check
Run in 'check' mode. Exits with 0 if the query metadata is up-to-date.
Exits with 1 if the query metadata needs updating
In other words, prepare performs the same work that is usually done when cargo build is invoked
but it saves the outcome of those queries to a metadata file (sqlx-data.json) which can later be
detected by sqlx itself and used to skip the queries altogether and perform an offline build.
Let’s invoke it!
# It must be invoked as a cargo subcommand
# All options after `--` are passed to cargo itself
# We need to point it at our library since it contains
# all our SQL queries.
cargo sqlx prepare -- --lib
We will indeed commit the file to version control, as the command output suggests.
Let’s set the SQLX_OFFLINE environment variable to true in our Dockerfile to force sqlx to look at
the saved metadata instead of trying to query a live database:
FROM rust:1.59.0
WORKDIR /app
RUN apt update && apt install lld clang -y
COPY . .
ENV SQLX_OFFLINE true
RUN cargo build --release
ENTRYPOINT ["./target/release/zero2prod"]
113
5.3.4 Running An Image
When building our image we attached a tag to it, zero2prod:
docker build --tag zero2prod --file Dockerfile .
We can use the tag to refer to the image in other commands. In particular, to run it:
docker run zero2prod
docker run will trigger the execution of the command we specified in our ENTRYPOINT statement:
ENTRYPOINT ["./target/release/zero2prod"]
In our case, it will execute our binary therefore launching our API.
Let’s launch our image then!
You should immediately see an error:
thread 'main' panicked at
'Failed to connect to Postgres:
Io(Os {
code: 99,
kind: AddrNotAvailable,
message: "Cannot assign requested address"
})'
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let connection_pool = PgPool::connect(
&configuration.database.connection_string().expose_secret()
)
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
// [...]
}
We can relax our requirements by using connect_lazy - it will only try to establish a connection
when the pool is used for the first time.
//! src/main.rs
//! [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
// No longer async, given that we don't actually try to connect!
let connection_pool = PgPool::connect_lazy(
&configuration.database.connection_string().expose_secret()
)
.expect("Failed to create Postgres connection pool.");
// [...]
}
We can now re-build the Docker image and run it again: you should immediately see a couple of log
lines! Let’s open another terminal and try to make a request to our health check endpoint:
curl http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check
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Not great.
5.3.5 Networking
By default, Docker images do not expose their ports to the underlying host machine. We need to do
it explicitly using the -p flag.
Let’s kill our running image to launch it again using:
docker run -p 8000:8000 zero2prod
Trying to hit the health check endpoint will trigger the same error message.
We need to dig into our main.rs file to understand why:
//! src/main.rs
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use zero2prod::telemetry::{get_subscriber, init_subscriber};
use sqlx::postgres::PgPool;
use std::net::TcpListener;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into(), std::io::stdout);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
We are using 127.0.0.1 as our host in address - we are instructing our application to only accept
connections coming from the same machine.
However, we are firing a GET request to /health_check from the host machine, which is not seen
as local by our Docker image, therefore triggering the Connection refused error we have just seen.
We need to use 0.0.0.0 as host to instruct our application to accept connections from any network
interface, not just the local one.
We should be careful though: using 0.0.0.0 significantly increases the “audience” of our application,
with some security implications.
The best way forward is to make the host portion of our address configurable - we will keep using
127.0.0.1 for our local development and set it to 0.0.0.0 in our Docker images.
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Settings {
pub database: DatabaseSettings,
pub application_port: u16,
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
115
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
pub username: String,
pub password: Secret<String>,
pub port: u16,
pub host: String,
pub database_name: String,
}
// [...]
Let’s introduce another struct, ApplicationSettings, to group together all configuration values
related to our application address:
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Settings {
pub database: DatabaseSettings,
pub application: ApplicationSettings,
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct ApplicationSettings {
pub port: u16,
pub host: String,
}
// [...]
as well as our main.rs, where we will leverage the new configurable host field:
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let address = format!(
"{}:{}",
configuration.application.host, configuration.application.port
);
// [...]
}
The host is now read from configuration, but how do we use a different value for different environ-
ments?
We need to make our configuration hierarchical.
Let’s have a look at get_configuration, the function in charge of loading our Settings struct:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
settings.merge(config::File::with_name("configuration"))?;
116
settings.try_into()
}
We are reading from a file named configuration to populate Settings’s fields. There is no further
room for tuning the values specified in our configuration.yaml.
Let’s take a more refined approach. We will have:
• A base configuration file, for values that are shared across our local and production environment
(e.g. database name);
• A collection of environment-specific configuration files, specifying values for fields that require
customisation on a per-environment basis (e.g. host);
• An environment variable, APP_ENVIRONMENT, to determine the running environment
(e.g. production or local).
All configuration files will live in the same top-level directory, configuration.
The good news is that config, the crate we are using, supports all the above out of the box!
Let’s put it together:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
settings.try_into()
}
impl Environment {
pub fn as_str(&self) -> &'static str {
match self {
Environment::Local => "local",
Environment::Production => "production",
}
}
}
117
fn try_from(s: String) -> Result<Self, Self::Error> {
match s.to_lowercase().as_str() {
"local" => Ok(Self::Local),
"production" => Ok(Self::Production),
other => Err(format!(
"{} is not a supported environment. Use either `local` or `production`.",
other
)),
}
}
}
#! configuration/local.yaml
application:
host: 127.0.0.1
#! configuration/production.yaml
application:
host: 0.0.0.0
We can now instruct the binary in our Docker image to use the production configuration by setting
the APP_ENVIRONMENT environment variable with an ENV instruction:
FROM rust:1.59.0
WORKDIR /app
RUN apt update && apt install lld clang -y
COPY . .
ENV SQLX_OFFLINE true
RUN cargo build --release
ENV APP_ENVIRONMENT production
ENTRYPOINT ["./target/release/zero2prod"]
118
curl -v http://127.0.0.1:8000/health_check
It works, awesome!
This should not come as a surprise - we swapped connect with connect_lazy to avoid dealing with
the database straight away.
It took us half a minute to see a 500 coming back - that is because 30 seconds is the default timeout
to acquire a connection from the pool in sqlx.
Let’s fail a little faster by using a shorter timeout:
//! src/main.rs
use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let connection_pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
.connect_timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(2))
.connect_lazy(&configuration.database.connection_string());
// [...]
}
There are various ways to get a working local setup using Docker containers:
• Run the application container with --network=host, as we are currently doing for the Postgres
container;
• Use docker-compose;
• Create a user-defined network.
A working local setup does not get us any closer to having a working database connection when
deployed on Digital Ocean. We will therefore let it be for now.
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There are two optimisations we can make to our Dockerfile to make our life easier going forward:
• smaller image size for faster usage;
• Docker layer caching for faster builds.
5.3.8.1 Docker Image Size We will not be running docker build on the machines hosting our
application. They will be using docker pull to download our Docker image without going through
the process of building it from scratch.
This is extremely convenient: it can take quite a long time to build our image (and it certainly does
in Rust!) and we only need to pay that cost once.
To actually use the image we only need to pay for its download cost which is directly related to its
size.
How big is our image?
We can find out using
docker images zero2prod
Ok, our final image is almost twice as heavy as our base image.
We can do much better than that!
Our first line of attack is reducing the size of the Docker build context by excluding files that are not
needed to build our image.
Docker looks for a specific file in our project to determine what should be ignored - .dockerignore
Let’s create one in the root directory with the following content:
.env
target/
tests/
Dockerfile
scripts/
migrations/
All files that match the patterns specified in .dockerignore are not sent by Docker as part of the
build context to the image, which means they will not be in scope for COPY instructions.
This will massively speed up our builds (and reduce the size of the final image) if we get to ignore
heavy directories (e.g. the target folder for Rust projects).
The next optimisation, instead, leverages one of Rust’s unique strengths.
Rust’s binaries are statically linked41 - we do not need to keep the source code or intermediate
compilation artifacts around to run the binary, it is entirely self-contained.
This plays nicely with multi-stage builds, a useful Docker feature. We can split our build in two
stages:
• a builder stage, to generate a compiled binary;
• a runtime stage, to run the binary.
The modified Dockerfile looks like this:
41 rustc statically links all Rust code but dynamically links libc from the underlying system if you are using the
Rust standard library. You can get a fully statically linked binary by targeting linux-musl, see here.
120
# Builder stage
FROM rust:1.59.0 AS builder
WORKDIR /app
RUN apt update && apt install lld clang -y
COPY . .
ENV SQLX_OFFLINE true
RUN cargo build --release
# Runtime stage
FROM rust:1.59.0 AS runtime
WORKDIR /app
# Copy the compiled binary from the builder environment
# to our runtime environment
COPY --from=builder /app/target/release/zero2prod zero2prod
# We need the configuration file at runtime!
COPY configuration configuration
ENV APP_ENVIRONMENT production
ENTRYPOINT ["./zero2prod"]
Just 20 MBs bigger than the size of our base image, much better!
We can go one step further: instead of using rust:1.59.0 for our runtime stage we can switch to
rust:1.59.0-slim, a smaller image using the same underlying OS.
# [...]
# Runtime stage
FROM rust:1.59.0-slim AS runtime
# [...]
That is 4x smaller than what we had at the beginning - not bad at all!
We can go even smaller by shaving off the weight of the whole Rust toolchain and machinery
(i.e. rustc, cargo, etc) - none of that is needed to run our binary.
We can use the bare operating system as base image (debian:bullseye-slim) for our runtime stage:
# [...]
# Runtime stage
FROM debian:bullseye-slim AS runtime
WORKDIR /app
# Install OpenSSL - it is dynamically linked by some of our dependencies
# Install ca-certificates - it is needed to verify TLS certificates
# when establishing HTTPS connections
RUN apt-get update -y \
&& apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends openssl ca-certificates \
# Clean up
&& apt-get autoremove -y \
&& apt-get clean -y \
121
&& rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
COPY --from=builder /app/target/release/zero2prod zero2prod
COPY configuration configuration
ENV APP_ENVIRONMENT production
ENTRYPOINT ["./zero2prod"]
Less than a 100 MBs - ~25x smaller than our initial attempt42 .
We could go even smaller by using rust:1.59.0-alpine, but we would have to cross-compile to the
linux-musl target - out of scope for now. Check out rust-musl-builder if you are interested in
generating tiny Docker images.
Another option to reduce the size of our binary further is stripping symbols from it - you can find
more information about it here.
5.3.8.2 Caching For Rust Docker Builds Rust shines at runtime, consistently delivering great
performance, but it comes at a cost: compilation times. They have been consistently among the top
answers in the Rust annual survey when it comes to the biggest challenges or problems for the Rust
project.
Optimised builds (--release), in particular, can be gruesome - up to 15/20 minutes on medium
projects with several dependencies. Quite common on web development projects like ours that are
pulling in many foundational crates from the async ecosystem (tokio, actix-web, sqlx, etc.).
Unfortunately, --release is what we use in our Dockerfile to get top-performance in our production
environment. How can we mitigate the pain?
We can leverage another Docker feature: layer caching.
Each RUN, COPY and ADD instruction in a Dockerfile creates a layer: a diff between the previous state
(the layer above) and the current state after having executed the specified command.
Layers are cached: if the starting point of an operation has not changed (e.g. the base image) and
the command itself has not changed (e.g. the checksum of the files copied by COPY) Docker does not
perform any computation and directly retrieves a copy of the result from the local cache.
Docker layer caching is fast and can be leveraged to massively speed up Docker builds.
The trick is optimising the order of operations in your Dockerfile: anything that refers to files that
are changing often (e.g. source code) should appear as late as possible, therefore maximising the
likelihood of the previous step being unchanged and allowing Docker to retrieve the result straight
from the cache.
The expensive step is usually compilation.
Most programming languages follow the same playbook: you COPY a lock-file of some kind first, build
your dependencies, COPY over the rest of your source code and then build your project.
This guarantees that most of the work is cached as long as your dependency tree does not change
between one build and the next.
In a Python project, for example, you might have something along these lines:
FROM python:3
COPY requirements.txt
RUN pip install -r requirements.txt
COPY src/ /app
WORKDIR /app
ENTRYPOINT ["python", "app"]
cargo, unfortunately, does not provide a mechanism to build your project dependencies starting from
its Cargo.lock file (e.g. cargo build --only-deps).
42 Credits to Ian Purton and flat_of_angles for pointing out that there was further room for improvement.
122
Once again, we can rely on a community project to expand cargo’s default capability: cargo-chef43 .
Let’s modify our Dockerfile as suggested in cargo-chef’s README:
FROM lukemathwalker/cargo-chef:latest-rust-1.59.0 as chef
WORKDIR /app
RUN apt update && apt install lld clang -y
We are using three stages: the first computes the recipe file, the second caches our dependencies
and then builds our binary, the third is our runtime environment. As long as our dependencies
do not change the recipe.json file will stay the same, therefore the outcome of cargo chef cook
--release --recipe-path recipe.json will be cached, massively speeding up our builds.
We are taking advantage of how Docker layer caching interacts with multi-stage builds: the COPY .
. statement in the planner stage will invalidate the cache for the planner container, but it will not
invalidate the cache for the builder container as long as the checksum of the recipe.json returned
by cargo chef prepare does not change.
You can think of each stage as its own Docker image with its own caching - they only interact with
each other when using the COPY --from statement.
This will save us a massive amount of time in the next section.
5.4.1 Setup
You have to sign up on Digital Ocean’s website.
Once you have an account install doctl, Digital Ocean’s CLI - you can find instructions here.
43 Full disclosure - I am the author of cargo-chef.
123
Hosting on Digital Ocean’s App Platform is not free - keeping our app and its associated
database up and running costs roughly 20.00 USD/month.
I suggest you to destroy the app at the end of each session - it should keep your spend way
below 1.00 USD. I spent 0.20 USD while playing around with it to write this chapter!
Take your time to go through all the specified values and understand what they are used for.
We can use their CLI, doctl, to create the application for the first time:
doctl apps create --spec spec.yaml
124
Well, we have to authenticate first.
Let’s follow their suggestion:
doctl auth init
Please authenticate doctl for use with your DigitalOcean account.
You can generate a token in the control panel at
https://cloud.digitalocean.com/account/api/tokens
Error: POST
https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/apps: 400 GitHub user not
authenticated
It worked!
You can check your app status with
doctl apps list
If you experience an out-of-memory error when building your Docker image on DigitalOcean,
check out this GitHub issue.
Deployed successfully!
You should be able to see the health check logs coming in every ten seconds or so when Digital Ocean’s
platform pings our application to ensure it is running.
With
doctl apps list
you can retrieve the public facing URI of your application. Something along the lines of
https://zero2prod-aaaaa.ondigitalocean.app
Try firing off a health check request now, it should come back with a 200 OK!
Notice that DigitalOcean took care for us to set up HTTPS by provisioning a certificate and redirect-
ing HTTPS traffic to the port we specified in the application specification. One less thing to worry
about.
The POST /subscriptions endpoint is still failing, in the very same way it did locally: we do not
have a live database backing our application in our production environment.
125
Let’s provision one.
Add this segment to your spec.yaml file:
databases:
# PG = Postgres
- engine: PG
# Database name
name: newsletter
# Again, let's keep the bill lean
num_nodes: 1
size: db-s-dev-database
# Postgres version - using the latest here
version: "12"
// Add in settings from environment variables (with a prefix of APP and '__' as separator)
// E.g. `APP_APPLICATION__PORT=5001 would set `Settings.application.port`
settings.merge(config::Environment::with_prefix("app").separator("__"))?;
settings.try_into()
}
This allows us to customize any value in our Settings struct using environment variables, overriding
what is specified in our configuration files.
Why is that convenient?
It makes it possible to inject values that are too dynamic (i.e. not known a priori) or too sensitive to
be stored in version control.
It also makes it fast to change the behaviour of our application: we do not have to go through a
full re-build if we want to tune one of those values (e.g. the database port). For languages like Rust,
126
where a fresh build can take ten minutes or more, this can make the difference between a short outage
and a substantial service degradation with customer-visible impact.
Before we move on let’s take care of an annoying detail: environment variables are strings for the
config crate and it will fail to pick up integers if using the standard deserialization routine from
serde.
Luckily enough, we can specify a custom deserialization function.
Let’s add a new dependency, serde-aux (serde auxiliary):
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
serde-aux = "3"
# [...]
and let’s modify both ApplicationSettings and DatabaseSettings
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
use serde_aux::field_attributes::deserialize_number_from_string;
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct ApplicationSettings {
#[serde(deserialize_with = "deserialize_number_from_string")]
pub port: u16,
// [...]
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
#[serde(deserialize_with = "deserialize_number_from_string")]
pub port: u16,
// [...]
}
// [...]
Our current DatabaseSettings does not handle SSL mode - it was not relevant for local development,
but it is more than desirable to have transport-level encryption for our client/database communication
in production.
Before trying to add new functionality, let’s make room for it by refactoring DatabaseSettings.
The current version looks like this:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
pub username: String,
pub password: Secret<String>,
#[serde(deserialize_with = "deserialize_number_from_string")]
pub port: u16,
pub host: String,
pub database_name: String,
}
127
impl DatabaseSettings {
pub fn connection_string(&self) -> Secret<String> {
// [...]
}
We will change its two methods to return a PgConnectOptions instead of a connection string: it will
make it easier to manage all these moving parts.
//! src/configuration.rs
use sqlx::postgres::PgConnectOptions;
// [...]
impl DatabaseSettings {
// Renamed from `connection_string_without_db`
pub fn without_db(&self) -> PgConnectOptions {
PgConnectOptions::new()
.host(&self.host)
.username(&self.username)
.password(&self.password.expose_secret())
.port(self.port)
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
// [...]
}
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
128
// Migrate database
let connection_pool = PgPool::connect_with(config.with_db())
.await
.expect("Failed to connect to Postgres.");
sqlx::migrate!("./migrations")
.run(&connection_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to migrate the database");
connection_pool
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct DatabaseSettings {
// [...]
// Determine if we demand the connection to be encrypted or not
pub require_ssl: bool,
}
impl DatabaseSettings {
pub fn without_db(&self) -> PgConnectOptions {
let ssl_mode = if self.require_ssl {
PgSslMode::Require
} else {
// Try an encrypted connection, fallback to unencrypted if it fails
PgSslMode::Prefer
};
PgConnectOptions::new()
.host(&self.host)
.username(&self.username)
.password(&self.password.expose_secret())
.port(self.port)
.ssl_mode(ssl_mode)
}
// [...]
}
We want require_ssl to be false when we run the application locally (and for our test suite), but
true in our production environment.
Let’s amend our configuration files accordingly:
#! configuration/local.yaml
application:
host: 127.0.0.1
database:
# New entry!
require_ssl: false
#! configuration/production.yaml
application:
host: 0.0.0.0
database:
# New entry!
require_ssl: true
129
We can take the opportunity - now that we are using PgConnectOptions - to tune sqlx’s instrumen-
tation: lower their logs from INFO to TRACE level.
This will eliminate the noise we noticed in the previous chapter.
//! src/configuration.rs
use sqlx::ConnectOptions;
// [...]
impl DatabaseSettings {
// [...]
pub fn with_db(&self) -> PgConnectOptions {
let mut options = self.without_db().database(&self.database_name);
options.log_statements(tracing::log::LevelFilter::Trace);
options
}
}
The scope is set to RUN_TIME to distinguish between environment variables needed during our Docker
build process and those needed when the Docker image is launched.
We are populating the values of the environment variables by interpolating what is exposed by the
Digital Ocean’s platform (e.g. ${newsletter.PORT}) - refer to their documentation for more details.
130
We now need to migrate the database44 :
DATABASE_URL=YOUR-DIGITAL-OCEAN-DB-CONNECTION-STRING sqlx migrate run
44 You will have to temporarily disable Trusted Sources to run the migrations from your local machine.
131
6 Reject Invalid Subscribers #1
Our newsletter API is live, hosted on a Cloud provider.
We have a basic set of instrumentation to troubleshoot issues that might arise.
There is an exposed endpoint (POST /subscriptions) to subscribe to our content.
We have come a long way!
But we have cut a few corners along the way: POST /subscriptions is fairly… permissive.
Our input validation is extremely limited: we just ensure that both the name and the email fields
are provided, nothing else.
We can add a new integration test to probe our API with some “troublesome” inputs:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_when_fields_are_present_but_empty() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let test_cases = vec![
("name=&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com", "empty name"),
("name=Ursula&email=", "empty email"),
("name=Ursula&email=definitely-not-an-email", "invalid email"),
];
// Assert
assert_eq!(
200,
response.status().as_u16(),
"The API did not return a 200 OK when the payload was {}.",
description
);
}
}
132
6.1 Requirements
6.1.1 Domain Constraints
It turns out that names are complicated45 .
Trying to nail down what makes a name valid is a fool’s errand. Remember that we chose to collect
a name to use it in the opening line of our emails - we do not need it to match the real identity of a
person, whatever that means in their geography. It would be totally unnecessary to inflict the pain
of incorrect or overly prescriptive validation on our users.
We could thus settle on simply requiring the name field to be non-empty (as in, it must contain at
least a non-whitespace character).
133
• Reject names containing troublesome characters. /()"<>\{} are fairly common in URLs, SQL
queries and HTML fragments - not as much in names49 . Forbidding them raises the complexity
bar for SQL injection and phishing attempts.
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
email: String,
name: String,
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool),
fields(
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &form).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
// [...]
134
}
/// Returns `true` if the input satisfies all our validation constraints
/// on subscriber names, `false` otherwise.
pub fn is_valid_name(s: &str) -> bool {
// `.trim()` returns a view over the input `s` without trailing
// whitespace-like characters.
// `.is_empty` checks if the view contains any character.
let is_empty_or_whitespace = s.trim().is_empty();
// Iterate over all characters in the input `s` to check if any of them matches
// one of the characters in the forbidden array.
let forbidden_characters = ['/', '(', ')', '"', '<', '>', '\\', '{', '}'];
let contains_forbidden_characters = s.chars().any(|g| forbidden_characters.contains(&g));
To compile the new function successfully we will have to add the unicode-segmentation crate to
our dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
unicode-segmentation = "1"
# [...]
While it looks like a perfectly fine solution (assuming we add a bunch of tests), functions like
is_valid_name give us a false sense of safety.
135
What happens if insert_subscriber becomes too big and we have to split it out in multiple sub-
functions? If they need the invariant, each of those has to perform validation to be certain it holds.
As you can see, this approach does not scale.
The issue here is that is_valid_name is a validation function: it tells us that, at a certain point in
the execution flow of our program, a set of conditions is verified.
But this information about the additional structure in our input data is not stored anywhere. It
is immediately lost.
Other parts of our program cannot reuse it effectively - they are forced to perform another point-in-
time check leading to a crowded codebase with noisy (and wasteful) input checks at every step.
What we need is a parsing function - a routine that accepts unstructured input and, if a set of
conditions holds, returns us a more structured output, an output that structurally guarantees
that the invariants we care about hold from that point onwards.
How?
Using types!
//! src/domain.rs
SubscriberName is a tuple struct - a new type, with a single (unnamed) field of type String.
SubscriberName is a proper new type, not just an alias - it does not inherit any of the methods
available on String and trying to assign a String to a variable of type SubscriberName will trigger
a compiler error - e.g.:
let name: SubscriberName = "A string".to_string();
The inner field of SubscriberName, according to our current definition, is private: it can only be
accessed from code within our domain module according to Rust’s visibility rules.
As always, trust but verify: what happens if we try to build a SubscriberName in our subscribe
request handler?
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
/// [...]
136
/// [...]
}
It is therefore impossible (as it stands now) to build a SubscriberName instance outside of our
domain module.
Let’s add a new method to SubscriberName:
//! src/domain.rs
use unicode_segmentation::UnicodeSegmentation;
impl SubscriberName {
/// Returns an instance of `SubscriberName` if the input satisfies all
/// our validation constraints on subscriber names.
/// It panics otherwise.
pub fn parse(s: String) -> SubscriberName {
// `.trim()` returns a view over the input `s` without trailing
// whitespace-like characters.
// `.is_empty` checks if the view contains any character.
let is_empty_or_whitespace = s.trim().is_empty();
// Iterate over all characters in the input `s` to check if any of them matches
// one of the characters in the forbidden array.
let forbidden_characters = ['/', '(', ')', '"', '<', '>', '\\', '{', '}'];
let contains_forbidden_characters = s.chars().any(|g| forbidden_characters.contains(&g));
Yes, you are right - that is a shameless copy-paste of what we had in is_valid_name.
There is one key difference though: the return type.
While is_valid_name gave us back a boolean, the parse method returns a SubscriberName if all
137
checks are successful.
There is more!
parse is the only way to build an instance of SubscriberName outside of the domain module - we
checked this was the case a few paragraphs ago.
We can therefore assert that any instance of SubscriberName will satisfy all our validation constraints.
We have made it impossible for an instance of SubscriberName to violate those constraints.
Let’s define a new struct, NewSubscriber:
//! src/domain.rs
// [...]
// [...]
With the new signature we can be sure that new_subscriber.name is non-empty - it is impossible
to call insert_subscriber passing an empty subscriber name.
And we can draw this conclusion just by looking up the definition of the types of the function
arguments - we can once again make a local judgement, no need to go and check all the calling sites
of our function.
Take a second to appreciate what just happened: we started with a set of requirements (all subscriber
names must verify some constraints), we identified a potential pitfall (we might forget to validate the
input before calling insert_subscriber) and we leveraged Rust’s type system to eliminate
the pitfall, entirely.
We made an incorrect usage pattern unrepresentable, by construction - it will not compile.
This technique is known as type-driven development 50 .
Type-driven development is a powerful approach to encode the constraints of a domain we are trying
to model inside the type system, leaning on the compiler to make sure they are enforced.
The more expressive the type system of our programming language is, the tighter we can constrain
our code to only be able to represent states that are valid in the domain we are working in.
Rust has not invented type-driven development - it has been around for a while, especially in the
functional programming communities (Haskell, F#, OCaml, etc.). Rust “just” provides you with
a type-system that is expressive enough to leverage many of the design patterns that have been
pioneered in those languages in the past decades. The particular pattern we have just shown is often
referred to as the “new-type pattern” in the Rust community.
We will be touching upon type-driven development as we progress in our implementation, but I
strongly invite you to check out some of the resources mentioned in the footnotes of this chapter:
they are treasure chests for any developer.
50 “Parse, don’t validate” by Alexis King is a great starting point on type-driven development. “Domain Modelling
Functional” by Scott Wlaschin is the perfect book to go deeper, with a specific focus around domain modelling - if a
book looks like too much material, definitely check out Scott’s talk.
138
6.5 Ownership Meets Invariants
We changed insert_subscriber’s signature, but we have not amended the body to match the new
requirements - let’s do it now.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use crate::domain::{NewSubscriber, SubscriberName};
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
// `web::Form` is a wrapper around `FormData`
// `form.0` gives us access to the underlying `FormData`
let new_subscriber = NewSubscriber {
email: form.0.email,
name: SubscriberName::parse(form.0.name),
};
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Saving new subscriber details in the database",
skip(new_subscriber, pool)
)]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
new_subscriber.email,
new_subscriber.name,
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
We have an issue here: we do not have any way to actually access the String value encapsulated
inside SubscriberName!
139
We could change SubscriberName’s definition from SubscriberName(String) to SubscriberName(pub
String), but we would lose all the nice guarantees we spent the last two sections talking about:
• other developers would be allowed to bypass parse and build a SubscriberName with an arbi-
trary string
let liar = SubscriberName("".to_string());
• other developers might still choose to build a SubscriberName using parse but they would then
have the option to mutate the inner value later to something that does not satisfy anymore the
constraints we care about
let mut started_well = SubscriberName::parse("A valid name".to_string());
started_well.0 = "".to_string();
We can do better - this is the perfect place to take advantage of Rust’s ownership system!
Given a field in a struct we can choose to:
• expose it by value, consuming the struct itself:
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn inner(self) -> String {
// The caller gets the inner string,
// but they do not have a SubscriberName anymore!
// That's because `inner` takes `self` by value,
// consuming it according to move semantics
self.0
}
}
inner_mut is not what we are looking for here - the loss of control on our invariants would be
equivalent to using SubscriberName(pub String).
Both inner and inner_ref would be suitable, but inner_ref communicates better our intent: give
the caller a chance to read the value without the power to mutate it.
Let’s add inner_ref to SubscriberName - we can then amend insert_subscriber to use it:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
140
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
new_subscriber.email,
// Using `inner_ref`!
new_subscriber.name.inner_ref(),
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
Boom, it compiles!
6.5.1 AsRef
While our inner_ref method gets the job done, I am obliged to point out that Rust’s standard
library exposes a trait that is designed exactly for this type of usage - AsRef.
The definition is quite concise:
pub trait AsRef<T: ?Sized> {
/// Performs the conversion.
fn as_ref(&self) -> &T;
}
To invoke it with our SubscriberName we would have to first call inner_ref and then call
do_something_with_a_string_slice:
let name = SubscriberName::parse("A valid name".to_string());
do_something_with_a_string_slice(name.inner_ref())
Nothing too complicated, but it might take you some time to figure out if SubscriberName can give
you a &str as well as how, especially if the type comes from a third-party library.
We can make the experience more seamless by changing do_something_with_a_string_slice’s sig-
nature:
// We are constraining T to implement the AsRef<str> trait
// using a trait bound - `T: AsRef<str>`
pub fn do_something_with_a_string_slice<T: AsRef<str>>(s: T) {
let s = s.as_ref();
// [...]
}
141
We can now write
let name = SubscriberName::parse("A valid name".to_string());
do_something_with_a_string_slice(name)
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
new_subscriber.email,
// Using `as_ref` now!
new_subscriber.name.as_ref(),
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
6.6 Panics
…but our tests are not green:
142
thread 'actix-rt:worker:0' panicked at
' is not a valid subscriber name.', src/domain.rs:39:13
[...]
On the bright side: we are not returning a 200 OK anymore for empty names.
On the not-so-bright side: our API is terminating the request processing abruptly, causing the client
to observe an IncompleteMessage error. Not very graceful.
Let’s change the test to reflect our new expectations: we’d like to see a 400 Bad Request response
when the payload contains invalid data.
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
// Renamed!
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid() {
// [...]
assert_eq!(
// Not 200 anymore!
400,
response.status().as_u16(),
"The API did not return a 400 Bad Request when the payload was {}.",
description
);
// [...]
}
Now, let’s look at the root cause - we chose to panic when validation checks in SubscriberName::parse
fail:
//! src/domain.rs
// [...]
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> SubscriberName {
// [...]
143
}
}
}
Panics in Rust are used to deal with unrecoverable errors: failure modes that were not expected
or that we have no way to meaningfully recover from. Examples might include the host machine
running out of memory or a full disk.
Rust’s panics are not equivalent to exceptions in languages such as Python, C# or Java. Although
Rust provides a few utilities to catch (some) panics, it is most definitely not the recommended
approach and should be used sparingly.
burntsushi put it down quite neatly in a Reddit thread a few years ago:
[…] If your Rust application panics in response to any user input, then the following should
be true: your application has a bug, whether it be in a library or in the primary application
code.
Adopting this viewpoint we can understand what is happening: when our request handler panics
actix-web assumes that something horrible happened and immediately drops the worker that was
dealing with that panicking request.51
If panics are not the way to go, what should we use to handle recoverable errors?
Result is used as the return type for fallible operations: if the operation succeeds, Ok(T) is returned;
if it fails, you get Err(E).
We have actually already used Result, although we did not stop to discuss its nuances at the time.
Let’s look again at the signature of insert_subscriber:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
It tells us that inserting a subscriber in the database is a fallible operation - if all goes as planned,
we don’t get anything back (() - the unit type), if something is amiss we will instead receive a
sqlx::Error with details about what went wrong (e.g. a connection issue).
Errors as values, combined with Rust’s enums, are awesome building blocks for a robust error handling
story.
If you are coming from a language with exception-based error handling, this is likely to be a game
changer52 : everything we need to know about the failure modes of a function is in its signature.
51 A panic in a request handler does not crash the whole application. actix-web spins up multiple workers to deal
with incoming requests and it is resilient to one or more of them crashing: it will just spawn new ones to replace the
ones that failed.
52 Checked exceptions in Java are the only example I am aware of in mainstream languages using exceptions that
144
You will not have to dig in the documentation of your dependencies to understand what exceptions
a certain function might throw (assuming it is documented in the first place!).
You will not be surprised at runtime by yet another undocumented exception type.
You will not have to insert a catch-all statement “just in case”.
We will cover the basics here and leave the finer details (Error trait) to the next chapter.
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberName, ???> {
// [...]
}
}
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberName, String> {
// [...]
}
}
Let’s focus on the second error: we cannot return a bare instance of SubscriberName at the end of
parse - we need to choose one of the two Result variants.
The compiler understands the issue and suggests the right edit: use Ok(Self(s)) instead of Self(s).
Let’s follow its advice:
145
//! src/domain.rs
// [...]
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberName, String> {
// [...]
It is complaining about our invocation of the parse method in subscribe: when parse returned a
SubscriberName it was perfectly fine to assign its output directly to Subscriber.name.
We are returning a Result now - Rust’s type system forces us to deal with the unhappy path. We
cannot just pretend it won’t happen.
Let’s avoid covering too much ground at once though - for the time being we will just panic if
validation fails in order to get the project to compile again as quickly as possible:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
146
you will get
---- dummy_fail stdout ----
thread 'dummy_fail' panicked at 'assertion failed: result.is_ok()'
We do not get any detail concerning the error itself - it makes for a somewhat painful debugging
experience.
We will be using the claim crate to get more informative error messages:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
claim = "0.5"
# [...]
claim provides a fairly comprehensive range of assertions to work with common Rust types - in
particular Option and Result.
If we rewrite our dummy_fail test to use claim
#[test]
fn dummy_fail() {
let result: Result<&str, &str> = Err("The app crashed due to an IO error");
claim::assert_ok!(result);
}
we get
---- dummy_fail stdout ----
thread 'dummy_fail' panicked at 'assertion failed, expected Ok(..),
got Err("The app crashed due to an IO error")'
Much better.
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use crate::domain::SubscriberName;
use claim::{assert_err, assert_ok};
#[test]
fn a_256_grapheme_long_name_is_valid() {
let name = "a�".repeat(256);
assert_ok!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
#[test]
fn a_name_longer_than_256_graphemes_is_rejected() {
let name = "a".repeat(257);
assert_err!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
#[test]
fn whitespace_only_names_are_rejected() {
let name = " ".to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
147
#[test]
fn empty_string_is_rejected() {
let name = "".to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
#[test]
fn names_containing_an_invalid_character_are_rejected() {
for name in &['/', '(', ')', '"', '<', '>', '\\', '{', '}'] {
let name = name.to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
}
#[test]
fn a_valid_name_is_parsed_successfully() {
let name = "Ursula Le Guin".to_string();
assert_ok!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
}
}
Unfortunately, it does not compile - cargo highlights all our usages of assert_ok/assert_err with
66 | assert_err!(SubscriberName::parse(name));
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| `SubscriberName` cannot be formatted using `{:?}`
|
= help: the trait `std::fmt::Debug` is not implemented for `SubscriberName`
= note: add `#[derive(Debug)]` or manually implement `std::fmt::Debug`
= note: required by `std::fmt::Debug::fmt`
claim needs our type to implement the Debug trait to provide those nice error messages. Let’s add
a #[derive(Debug)] attribute on top of SubscriberName:
//! src/domain.rs
// [...]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct SubscriberName(String);
failures:
domain::tests::a_name_longer_than_256_graphemes_is_rejected
domain::tests::empty_string_is_rejected
domain::tests::names_containing_an_invalid_character_are_rejected
domain::tests::whitespace_only_names_are_rejected
All our unhappy-path tests are failing because we are still panicking if our validation constraints are
not satisfied - let’s change it:
//! src/domain.rs
// [...]
impl SubscriberName {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberName, String> {
// [...]
148
Err(format!("{} is not a valid subscriber name.", s))
} else {
Ok(Self(s))
}
}
}
All our domain unit tests are now passing - let’s finally address the failing integration test we wrote
at the beginning of the chapter.
6.10.1 match
How do we handle the possibility of a failure on the caller side?
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
149
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
It allows us to return early when something fails using a single character instead of a multi-line block.
Given that ? triggers an early return using an Err variant, it can only be used within a function that
returns a Result. subscribe does not qualify (yet).
cargo test is not green yet, but we are getting a different error:
150
--- subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid stdout ----
thread 'subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `400`,
right: `200`:
The API did not return a 400 Bad Request when the payload was empty email.',
tests/health_check.rs:167:9
The test case using an empty name is now passing, but we are failing to return a 400 Bad Request
when an empty email is provided.
Not unexpected - we have not implemented any kind of email validation yet!
151
[...]
Unit tests should be in the same file of the type they refer to. We will end up with:
//! src/domain/mod.rs
mod subscriber_name;
mod subscriber_email;
mod new_subscriber;
//! src/domain/subscriber_name.rs
use unicode_segmentation::UnicodeSegmentation;
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct SubscriberName(String);
impl SubscriberName {
// [...]
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
}
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
//! src/domain/new_subscriber.rs
use crate::domain::subscriber_name::SubscriberName;
No changes should be required to other files in our project - the API of our module has not changed
thanks to our pub use statements in mod.rs.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct SubscriberEmail(String);
impl SubscriberEmail {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberEmail, String> {
// TODO: add validation!
Ok(Self(s))
}
152
}
//! src/domain/mod.rs
mod new_subscriber;
mod subscriber_email;
mod subscriber_name;
We start with tests this time: let’s come up with a few examples of invalid emails that should be
rejected.
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct SubscriberEmail(String);
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::SubscriberEmail;
use claim::assert_err;
#[test]
fn empty_string_is_rejected() {
let email = "".to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberEmail::parse(email));
}
#[test]
fn email_missing_at_symbol_is_rejected() {
let email = "ursuladomain.com".to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberEmail::parse(email));
}
#[test]
fn email_missing_subject_is_rejected() {
let email = "@domain.com".to_string();
assert_err!(SubscriberEmail::parse(email));
}
}
Running cargo test domain confirms that all test cases are failing:
failures:
domain::subscriber_email::tests::email_missing_at_symbol_is_rejected
domain::subscriber_email::tests::email_missing_subject_is_rejected
domain::subscriber_email::tests::empty_string_is_rejected
153
# [...]
[dependencies]
validator = "0.14"
# [...]
Our parse method will just delegate all the heavy-lifting to validator::validate_email:
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
use validator::validate_email;
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct SubscriberEmail(String);
impl SubscriberEmail {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberEmail, String> {
if validate_email(&s) {
Ok(Self(s))
} else {
Err(format!("{} is not a valid subscriber email.", s))
}
}
}
// [...]
154
fake provides generation logic for both primitive data types (integers, floats, strings) and higher-level
objects (IP addresses, country codes, etc.) - in particular, emails! Let’s add fake as a development
dependency of our project:
# Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
# [...]
# We are not using fake >= 2.4 because it relies on rand 0.8
# which has been recently released and it is not yet used by
# quickcheck (solved in its upcoming 1.0 release!)
fake = "~2.3"
Let’s use it in a new test:
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// We are importing the `SafeEmail` faker!
// We also need the `Fake` trait to get access to the
// `.fake` method on `SafeEmail`
use fake::faker::internet::en::SafeEmail;
use fake::Fake;
// [...]
#[test]
fn valid_emails_are_parsed_successfully() {
let email = SafeEmail().fake();
claim::assert_ok!(SubscriberEmail::parse(email));
}
}
Every time we run our test suite, SafeEmail().fake() generates a new random valid email which
we then use to test our parsing logic.
This is already a major improvement compared to a hard-coded valid email, but we would have to
run our test suite several times to catch an issue with an edge case. A fast-and-dirty solution would
be to add a for loop to the test, but, once again, we can use this as an occasion to delve deeper and
explore one of the available testing crates designed around property-based testing.
155
rev
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
#[quickcheck_macros::quickcheck]
fn prop(xs: Vec<u32>) -> bool {
/// A property that is always true, regardless
/// of the vector we are applying the function to:
/// reversing it twice should return the original input.
xs == reverse(&reverse(&xs))
}
}
quickcheck calls prop in a loop with a configurable number of iterations (100 by default): on every
iteration, it generates a new Vec<u32> and checks that prop returned true.
If prop returns false, it tries to shrink the generated input to the smallest possible failing example
(the shortest failing vector) to help us debug what went wrong.
In our case, we’d like to have something along these lines:
#[quickcheck_macros::quickcheck]
fn valid_emails_are_parsed_successfully(valid_email: String) -> bool {
SubscriberEmail::parse(valid_email).is_ok()
}
Unfortunately, if we ask for a String type as input we are going to get all sorts of garbage which will
fail validation.
How do we customise the generation routine?
[dev-dependencies]
# [...]
quickcheck = "0.9.2"
156
quickcheck_macros = "0.9.1"
Then
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// We have removed the `assert_ok` import.
use claim::assert_err;
// [...]
#[quickcheck_macros::quickcheck]
fn valid_emails_are_parsed_successfully(valid_email: ValidEmailFixture) -> bool {
SubscriberEmail::parse(valid_email.0).is_ok()
}
}
This is an amazing example of the interoperability you gain by sharing key traits across the Rust
ecosystem.
How do we get fake and quickcheck to play nicely together?
In Arbitrary::arbitrary we get g as input, an argument of type G.
G is constrained by a trait bound, G: quickcheck::Gen, therefore it must implement the Gen trait
in quickcheck, where Gen stands for “generator”.
How is Gen defined?
pub trait Gen: RngCore {
fn size(&self) -> usize;
}
Anything that implements Gen must also implement the RngCore trait from rand-core.
Let’s examine the SafeEmail faker: it implements the Fake trait.
Fake gives us a fake method, which we have already tried out, but it also exposes a fake_with_rng
method, where “rng” stands for “random number generator”.
What does fake accept as a valid random number generator?
pub trait Fake: Sized {
//[...]
You read that right - any type that implements the Rng trait from rand, which is automatically
implemented by all types implementing RngCore!
We can just pass g from Arbitrary::arbitrary as the random number generator for fake_with_rng
and everything just works!
Maybe the maintainers of the two crates are aware of each other, maybe they aren’t, but a community-
157
sanctioned set of traits in rand-core gives us painless interoperability. Pretty sweet!
You can now run cargo test domain - it should come out green, re-assuring us that our email
validation check is indeed not overly prescriptive.
If you want to see the random inputs that are being generated, add a dbg!(&valid_email.0);
statement to the test and run cargo test valid_emails -- --nocapture - tens of valid emails
should pop up in your terminal!
Let’s integrate our shiny SubscriberEmail into the application to benefit from its validation in our
/subscriptions endpoint.
We need to start from NewSubscriber:
//! src/domain/new_subscriber.rs
use crate::domain::SubscriberName;
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
Hell should break loose if you try to compile the project now.
Let’s start with the first error reported by cargo check:
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/routes/subscriptions.rs:28:16
|
28 | email: form.0.email,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^
| expected struct `SubscriberEmail`,
| found struct `std::string::String`
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let name = match SubscriberName::parse(form.0.name) {
Ok(name) => name,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
let new_subscriber = NewSubscriber {
// We are trying to assign a string to a field of type SubscriberEmail!
158
email: form.0.email,
name,
};
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
We need to mimic what we are already doing for the name field: first we parse form.0.email then
we assign the result (if successful) to NewSubscriber.email.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// We added `SubscriberEmail`!
use crate::domain::{NewSubscriber, SubscriberEmail, SubscriberName};
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let name = match SubscriberName::parse(form.0.name) {
Ok(name) => name,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
let email = match SubscriberEmail::parse(form.0.email) {
Ok(email) => email,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
let new_subscriber = NewSubscriber { email, name };
// [...]
}
This is in our insert_subscriber function, where we perform a SQL INSERT query to store the
details of the new subscriber:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
159
// It expects a `&str` but we are passing it
// a `SubscriberEmail` value
new_subscriber.email,
new_subscriber.name.as_ref(),
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
The solution is right there, on the line below - we just need to borrow the inner field of
SubscriberEmail as a string slice using our implementation of AsRef<str>.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4)
"#,
Uuid::new_v4(),
// Using `as_ref` now!
new_subscriber.email.as_ref(),
new_subscriber.name.as_ref(),
Utc::now()
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
running 4 tests
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test health_check_works ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... ok
160
6.14.1 Refactoring With TryFrom
Before we move on let’s spend a few paragraphs to refactor the code we just wrote.
I am referring to our request handler, subscribe:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let name = match SubscriberName::parse(form.0.name) {
Ok(name) => name,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
let email = match SubscriberEmail::parse(form.0.email) {
Ok(email) => email,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
let new_subscriber = NewSubscriber { email, name };
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let new_subscriber = match parse_subscriber(form.0) {
Ok(subscriber) => subscriber,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
161
which consumes the input value.
We need to look at TryFrom:
pub trait TryFrom<T>: Sized {
/// The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
type Error;
Replace T with FormData, Self with NewSubscriber and Self::Error with String - there you have
it, the signature of our parse_subscriber function!
Let’s try it out:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// No need to import the TryFrom trait, it is included
// in Rust's prelude since edition 2021!
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let new_subscriber = match form.0.try_into() {
Ok(form) => form,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
Its signature mirrors the one of TryFrom - the conversion just goes in the other direction!
If you provide a TryFrom implementation, your type automatically gets the corresponding TryInto
implementation, for free.
try_into takes self as first argument, which allows us to do form.0.try_into() instead of going
for NewSubscriber::try_from(form.0) - matter of taste, if you want.
Generally speaking, what do we gain by implementing TryFrom/TryInto?
Nothing shiny, no new functionality - we are “just” making our intent clearer.
We are spelling out “This is a type conversion!”.
Why does it matter? It helps others!
162
When another developer with some Rust exposure jumps in our codebase they will immediately spot
the conversion pattern because we are using a trait that they are already familiar with.
6.15 Summary
Validating that the email in the payload of POST /subscriptions complies with the expected format
is good, but it is not enough.
We now have an email that is syntactically valid but we are still uncertain about its existence: does
anybody actually use that email address? Is it reachable?
We have no idea and there is only one way to find out: sending an actual email.
Confirmation emails (and how to write a HTTP client!) will be the topic of the next chapter.
163
7 Reject Invalid Subscribers #2
7.1 Confirmation Emails
In the previous chapter we introduced validation for the email addresses of new subscribers - they
must comply with the email format.
We now have emails that are syntactically valid but we are still uncertain about their existence: does
anybody actually use those email addresses? Are they reachable?
We have no idea and there is only one way to find out: sending out an actual confirmation email.
164
Once they click on the link, a browser tab will open up and a GET request will be fired to our GET
/subscriptions/confirm endpoint. Our request handler will:
• retrieve subscription_token from the query parameters;
• retrieve the subscriber id associated with subscription_token from the subscription_tokens
table;
• update the subscriber status from pending_confirmation to active in the subscriptions
table;
• return a 200 OK.
There are a few other possible designs (e.g. use a JWT instead of a unique token) and we have a few
corner cases to handle (e.g. what happens if they click on the link twice? What happens if they try
to subscribe twice?) - we will discuss both at the most appropriate time as we make progress with
the implementation.
7.2.1.1 Choosing An Email API There is no shortage of email API providers on the market
and you are likely to know the names of the major ones - AWS SES, SendGrid, MailGun, Mailchimp,
Postmark.
I was looking for a simple enough API (e.g. how easy is it to literally just send an email?), a smooth
onboarding flow and a free plan that does not require entering your credit card details just to test
the service out.
That is how I landed on Postmark.
165
To complete the next sections you will have to sign up to Postmark and, once you are logged into
their portal, authorise a single sender email.
7.2.1.2 The Email Client Interface There are usually two approaches when it comes to a new
piece of functionality: you can do it bottom-up, starting from the implementation details and slowly
working your way up, or you can do it top-down, by designing the interface first and then figuring
out how the implementation is going to work (to an extent).
In this case, we will go for the second route.
What kind of interface do we want for our email client?
We’d like to have some kind of send_email method. At the moment we just need to send a single
email out at a time - we will deal with the complexity of sending emails in batches when we start
working on newsletter issues.
What arguments should send_email accept?
We’ll definitely need the recipient email address, the subject line and the email content. We’ll ask
for both an HTML and a plain text version of the email content - some email clients are not able to
166
render HTML and some users explicitly disable HTML emails. By sending both versions we err on
the safe side.
What about the sender email address?
We’ll assume that all emails sent by an instance of the client are coming from the same address -
therefore we do not need it as an argument of send_email, it will be one of the arguments in the
constructor of the client itself.
We also expect send_email to be an asynchronous function, given that we will be performing I/O to
talk to a remote server.
Stitching everything together, we have something that looks more or less like this:
//! src/email_client.rs
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
impl EmailClient {
pub async fn send_email(
&self,
recipient: SubscriberEmail,
subject: &str,
html_content: &str,
text_content: &str
) -> Result<(), String> {
todo!()
}
}
//! src/lib.rs
There is an unresolved question - the return type. We sketched a Result<(), String> which is a
way to spell “I’ll think about error handling later”.
Plenty of work left to do, but it is a start - we said we were going to start from the interface, not
that we’d nail it down in one sitting!
167
• It does not depend on any system library if you choose to use rustls to back the TLS imple-
mentation (rustls-tls feature flag instead of default-tls), making it extremely portable.
If you look closely, we are already using reqwest!
It is the HTTP client we used to fire off requests at our API in the integration tests. Let’s lift it from
a development dependency to a runtime dependency:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
# [...]
# We need the `json` feature flag to serialize/deserialize JSON payloads
reqwest = { version = "0.11", default-features = false, features = ["json", "rustls-tls"] }
[dev-dependencies]
# Remove `reqwest`'s entry from this list
# [...]
7.2.2.1 reqwest::Client The main type you will be dealing with when working with reqwest is
reqwest::Client - it exposes all the methods we need to perform requests against a REST API.
We can get a new client instance by invoking Client::new or we can go with Client::builder if
we need to tune the default configuration.
We will stick to Client::new for the time being.
Let’s add two fields to EmailClient:
• http_client, to store a Client instance;
• base_url, to store the URL of the API we will be making requests to.
//! src/email_client.rs
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
use reqwest::Client;
impl EmailClient {
pub fn new(base_url: String, sender: SubscriberEmail) -> Self {
Self {
http_client: Client::new(),
base_url,
sender
}
}
// [...]
}
7.2.2.2 Connection Pooling Before executing an HTTP request against an API hosted on a
remote server we need to establish a connection.
It turns out that connecting is a fairly expensive operation, even more so if using HTTPS: creating
a brand-new connection every time we need to fire off a request can impact the performance of our
application and might lead to a problem known as socket exhaustion under load.
To mitigate the issue, most HTTP clients offer connection pooling: after the first request to a remote
server has been completed, they will keep the connection open (for a certain amount of time) and
168
re-use it if we need to fire off another request to the same server, therefore avoiding the need to
re-establish a connection from scratch.
reqwest is no different - every time a Client instance is created reqwest initialises a connection
pool under the hood.
To leverage this connection pool we need to reuse the same Client across multiple requests.
It is also worth pointing out that Client::clone does not create a new connection pool - we just
clone a pointer to the underlying pool.
7.2.2.3 How To Reuse The Same reqwest::Client In actix-web To re-use the same HTTP
client across multiple requests in actix-web we need to store a copy of it in the application context
- we will then be able to retrieve a reference to Client in our request handlers using an extractor
(e.g. actix_web::web::Data).
How do we pull it off? Let’s look at the code where we build a HttpServer:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct EmailClient {
http_client: Client,
base_url: String,
sender: SubscriberEmail
}
// [...]
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
pub fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
db_pool: PgPool,
email_client: EmailClient,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let db_pool = Data::new(db_pool);
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
.wrap(TracingLogger::default())
169
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
.app_data(db_pool.clone())
.app_data(email_client.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
• wrap EmailClient in actix_web::web::Data (an Arc pointer) and pass a pointer to app_data
every time we need to build an App - like we are doing with PgPool:
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
pub fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
db_pool: PgPool,
email_client: EmailClient,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let db_pool = Data::new(db_pool);
let email_client = Data::new(email_client);
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
.wrap(TracingLogger::default())
.route("/health_check", web::get().to(health_check))
.route("/subscriptions", web::post().to(subscribe))
.app_data(db_pool.clone())
.app_data(email_client.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
7.2.2.4 Configuring Our EmailClient If you run cargo check, you will get an error:
error[E0061]: this function takes 3 arguments but 2 arguments were supplied
--> src/main.rs:24:5
|
24 | run(listener, connection_pool)?.await?;
| ^^^ -------- --------------- supplied 2 arguments
| |
| expected 3 arguments
170
Let’s fix it!
What do we have in main right now?
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration.");
let connection_pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
.connect_timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(2))
.connect_lazy_with(configuration.database.with_db());
We are building the dependencies of our application using the values specified in the configuration
we retrieved via get_configuration.
To build an EmailClient instance we need the base URL of the API we want to fire requests to and
the sender email address - let’s add them to our Settings struct:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Settings {
pub database: DatabaseSettings,
pub application: ApplicationSettings,
// New field!
pub email_client: EmailClientSettings,
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct EmailClientSettings {
pub base_url: String,
pub sender_email: String,
}
impl EmailClientSettings {
pub fn sender(&self) -> Result<SubscriberEmail, String> {
SubscriberEmail::parse(self.sender_email.clone())
}
}
// [...]
application:
# [...]
database:
# [...]
email_client:
171
base_url: "localhost"
sender_email: "[email protected]"
#! configuration/production.yaml
application:
# [...]
database:
# [...]
email_client:
# Value retrieved from Postmark's API documentation
base_url: "https://api.postmarkapp.com"
# Use the single sender email you authorised on Postmark!
sender_email: "[email protected]"
We can now build an EmailClient instance in main and pass it to the run function:
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
use zero2prod::email_client::EmailClient;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let configuration = get_configuration().expect("Failed to read configuration.");
let connection_pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
.connect_timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(2))
.connect_lazy_with(configuration.database.with_db());
cargo check should now pass, although there are a few warnings about unused variables - we will
get to those soon enough.
What about our tests?
cargo check --all-targets returns a similar error to the one we were seeing before with cargo
check:
error[E0061]: this function takes 3 arguments but 2 arguments were supplied
--> tests/health_check.rs:36:18
|
36 | let server = run(listener, connection_pool.clone())
| ^^^ -------- ----------------------- supplied 2 arguments
| |
| expected 3 arguments
172
You are right - it is a symptom of code duplication. We will get to refactor the initialisation logic of
our integration tests, but not yet.
Let’s patch it quickly to make it compile:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
use zero2prod::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
// [...]
7.2.3.1 HTTP Mocking With wiremock Let’s add a new module for tests at the bottom of
src/email_client.rs with the skeleton of a new test:
173
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
todo!()
}
}
This will not compile straight-away - we need to add two feature flags to tokio in our Cargo.toml:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
# [...]
tokio = { version = "1", features = ["rt", "macros"] }
We do not know enough about Postmark to make assertions about what we should see in the outgoing
HTTP request.
Nonetheless, as the test name says, it is reasonable to expect a request to be fired to the server at
EmailClient::base_url!
Let’s add wiremock to our development dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
# [...]
wiremock = "0.5"
Using wiremock, we can write send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url as follows:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
use fake::faker::internet::en::SafeEmail;
use fake::faker::lorem::en::{Paragraph, Sentence};
use fake::{Fake, Faker};
use wiremock::matchers::any;
use wiremock::{Mock, MockServer, ResponseTemplate};
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
// Arrange
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let sender = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
let email_client = EmailClient::new(mock_server.uri(), sender);
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
174
let subject: String = Sentence(1..2).fake();
let content: String = Paragraph(1..10).fake();
// Act
let _ = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
// Assert
}
}
7.2.3.3 wiremock::Mock Out of the box, wiremock::MockServer returns 404 Not Found to all
incoming requests.
We can instruct the mock server to behave differently by mounting a Mock.
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
When wiremock::MockServer receives a request, it iterates over all the mounted mocks to check if
the request matches their conditions.
The matching conditions for a mock are specified using Mock::given.
We are passing any() to Mock::Given which, according to wiremock’s documentation,
Match all incoming requests, regardless of their method, path, headers or body. You can use it
to verify that a request has been fired towards the server, without making any other assertion
about it.
Basically, it always matches, regardless of the request - which is what we want here!
When an incoming request matches the conditions of a mounted mock, wiremock::MockServer re-
turns a response following what was specified in respond_with.
We passed ResponseTemplate::new(200) - a 200 OK response without a body.
A wiremock::Mock becomes effective only after it has been mounted on a wiremock::Mockserver -
that’s what our call to Mock::mount is about.
7.2.3.4 The Intent Of A Test Should Be Clear We then have the actual invocation of
EmailClient::send_email:
let subscriber_email = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
let subject: String = Sentence(1..2).fake();
let content: String = Paragraph(1..10).fake();
175
// Act
let _ = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
You’ll notice that we are leaning heavily on fake here: we are generating random data for all the
inputs to send_email (and sender, in the previous section).
We could have just hard-coded a bunch of values, why did we choose to go all the way and make
them random?
A reader, skimming the test code, should be able to identify easily the property that we are trying
to test.
Using random data conveys a specific message: do not pay attention to these inputs, their values do
not influence the outcome of the test, that’s why they are random!
Hard-coded values, instead, should always give you pause: does it matter that subscriber_email is
set to [email protected]? Should the test pass if I set it to another value?
In a test like ours, the answer is obvious. In a more intricate setup, it often isn’t.
7.2.3.5 Mock expectations The end of the test looks a bit cryptic: there is an // Assert
comment… but no assertion afterwards.
Let’s go back to our Mock setup line:
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
Ok, we are not even getting to the end of the test yet because we have a placeholder todo!() as the
body of send_email.
Let’s replace it with a dummy Ok:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
176
Ok(())
}
}
// [...]
The server expected one request, but it received none - therefore the test failed.
The time has come to properly flesh out EmailClient::send_email.
{
"To": "[email protected]",
"SubmittedAt": "2021-01-12T07:25:01.4178645-05:00",
"MessageID": "0a129aee-e1cd-480d-b08d-4f48548ff48d",
"ErrorCode": 0,
"Message": "OK"
}
177
RequestBuilder gives us a fluent API to build out the rest of the request we want to send, piece by
piece.
Let’s give it a go:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
// [...]
7.2.4.2 JSON body We can encode the request body schema as a struct:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
struct SendEmailRequest {
from: String,
to: String,
subject: String,
html_body: String,
text_body: String,
178
}
// [...]
If the json feature flag for reqwest is enabled (as we did), builder will expose a json method that
we can leverage to set request_body as the JSON body of the request:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
It almost works:
error[E0277]: the trait bound `SendEmailRequest: Serialize` is not satisfied
--> src/email_client.rs:34:56
|
34 | let builder = self.http_client.post(&url).json(&request_body);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
the trait `Serialize` is not implemented for `SendEmailRequest`
#[derive(serde::Serialize)]
struct SendEmailRequest {
from: String,
to: String,
subject: String,
html_body: String,
text_body: String,
}
Awesome, it compiles!
The json method goes a bit further than simple serialization: it will also set the Content-Type
header to application/json - matching what we saw in the example!
7.2.4.3 Authorization Token We are almost there - we need to add an authorization header,
X-Postmark-Server-Token, to the request.
Just like the sender email address, we want to store the token value as a field in EmailClient.
179
Let’s amend EmailClient::new and EmailClientSettings:
//! src/email_client.rs
use secrecy::Secret;
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
pub fn new(
// [...]
authorization_token: Secret<String>
) -> Self {
Self {
// [...]
authorization_token
}
}
// [...]
}
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct EmailClientSettings {
// [...]
// New (secret) configuration value!
pub authorization_token: Secret<String>
}
// [...]
We can then let the compiler tell us what else needs to be modified:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use secrecy::Secret;
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let sender = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
// New argument!
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
mock_server.uri(),
sender,
Secret::new(Faker.fake())
);
// [...]
}
}
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
180
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
configuration.email_client.base_url,
sender_email,
// Pass argument from configuration
configuration.email_client.authorization_token,
);
// [...]
}
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
#! configuration/base.yml
# [...]
email_client:
base_url: "localhost"
sender_email: "[email protected]"
# New value!
# We are only setting the development value,
# we'll deal with the production token outside of version control
# (given that it's a sensitive secret!)
authorization_token: "my-secret-token"
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
181
It compiles straight away.
7.2.4.4 Executing The Request We have all the ingredients - we just need to fire the request
now!
We can use the send method:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
The error variant returned by send is of type reqwest::Error, while our send_email uses String
as error type. The compiler has looked for a conversion (an implementation of the From trait), but it
could not find any - therefore it errors out.
If you recall, we used String as error variant mostly as a placeholder - let’s change send_email’s
signature to return Result<(), reqwest::Error>.
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
182
cargo test should pass too: congrats!
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
use fake::faker::internet::en::SafeEmail;
use fake::faker::lorem::en::{Paragraph, Sentence};
use fake::{Fake, Faker};
use wiremock::matchers::any;
use wiremock::{Mock, MockServer, ResponseTemplate};
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
// Arrange
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let sender = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
mock_server.uri(),
sender,
Secret::new(Faker.fake())
);
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// Act
let _ = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
// Assert
// Mock expectations are checked on drop
}
}
To ease ourselves into the world of wiremock we started with something very basic - we are just
asserting that the mock server gets called once. Let’s beef it up to check that the outgoing request
looks indeed like we expect it to.
7.2.5.0.1 Headers, Path And Method any is not the only matcher offered by wiremock out
of the box: there are handful available in wiremock’s matchers module.
We can use header_exists to verify that the X-Postmark-Server-Token is set on the request to the
server:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
183
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
// We removed `any` from the import list
use wiremock::matchers::header_exists;
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
// [...]
Mock::given(header_exists("X-Postmark-Server-Token"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// [...]
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
use wiremock::matchers::{header, header_exists, path, method};
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
// [...]
Mock::given(header_exists("X-Postmark-Server-Token"))
.and(header("Content-Type", "application/json"))
.and(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// [...]
}
}
184
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use wiremock::Request;
// [...]
struct SendEmailBodyMatcher;
// [...]
}
We get the incoming request as input, request, and we need to return a boolean value as output:
true, if the mock matched, false otherwise.
We need to deserialize the request body as JSON - let’s add serde-json to the list of our development
dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
# [...]
serde_json = "1"
We can now write matches’ implementation:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
struct SendEmailBodyMatcher;
185
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url() {
// [...]
Mock::given(header_exists("X-Postmark-Server-Token"))
.and(header("Content-Type", "application/json"))
.and(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
// Use our custom matcher!
.and(SendEmailBodyMatcher)
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// [...]
}
}
It compiles!
But our tests are failing now…
---- email_client::tests::send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url stdout ----
thread 'email_client::tests::send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url' panicked at
'Verifications failed:
- Mock #0.
Expected range of matching incoming requests: == 1
Number of matched incoming requests: 0
'
Why is that?
Let’s add a dbg! statement to our matcher to inspect the incoming request:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
If you run the test again with cargo test send_email you will get something that looks like this:
--- email_client::tests::send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url stdout ----
[src/email_client.rs:71] &body = Object({
"from": String("[...]"),
"to": String("[...]"),
"subject": String("[...]"),
"html_body": String("[...]"),
"text_body": String("[...]"),
})
186
thread 'email_client::tests::send_email_fires_a_request_to_base_url' panicked at '
Verifications failed:
- Mock #0.
Expected range of matching incoming requests: == 1
Number of matched incoming requests: 0
'
It seems we forgot about the casing requirement - field names must be pascal cased!
We can fix it easily by adding an annotation on SendEmailRequest:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Serialize)]
#[serde(rename_all = "PascalCase")]
struct SendEmailRequest {
from: String,
to: String,
subject: String,
html_body: String,
text_body: String,
}
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Serialize)]
#[serde(rename_all = "PascalCase")]
struct SendEmailRequest {
from: String,
to: String,
subject: String,
html_body: String,
text_body: String,
}
For each field we are allocating a bunch of new memory to store a cloned String - it is wasteful. It
187
would be more efficient to reference the existing data without performing any additional allocation.
We can pull it off by restructuring SendEmailRequest: instead of String we have to use a string
slice (&str) as type for all fields.
A string slice is a just pointer to a memory buffer owned by somebody else. To store a reference in
a struct we need to add a lifetime parameter: it keeps track of how long those references are valid
for - it’s the compiler’s job to make sure that references do not stay around longer than the memory
buffer they point to!
Let’s do it!
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Serialize)]
#[serde(rename_all = "PascalCase")]
// Lifetime parameters always start with an apostrophe, `'`
struct SendEmailRequest<'a> {
from: &'a str,
to: &'a str,
subject: &'a str,
html_body: &'a str,
text_body: &'a str,
}
That’s it, quick and painless - serde does all the heavy lifting for us and we are left with more
performant code!
7.2.6.1 Error Status Codes Our current happy path test is only making assertions on the side-
effect performed by send_email - we are not actually inspecting the value it returns!
Let’s make sure that it is an Ok(()) if the server returns a 200 OK:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
188
// [...]
use wiremock::matchers::any;
use claim::assert_ok;
// [...]
// Act
let outcome = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
// Assert
assert_ok!(outcome);
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
use claim::assert_err;
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_fails_if_the_server_returns_500() {
// Arrange
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let sender = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
mock_server.uri(),
189
sender,
Secret::new(Faker.fake())
);
Mock::given(any())
// Not a 200 anymore!
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(500))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// Act
let outcome = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
// Assert
assert_err!(outcome);
}
}
impl EmailClient {
//[...]
pub async fn send_email(
//[...]
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
//[...]
self.http_client
.post(&url)
.header(
"X-Postmark-Server-Token",
self.authorization_token.expose_secret()
)
.json(&request_body)
.send()
.await?;
Ok(())
}
}
//[...]
The only step that might return an error is send - let’s check reqwest’s docs!
This method fails if there was an error while sending request, redirect loop was detected or
redirect limit was exhausted.
Basically, send returns Ok as long as it gets a valid response from the server - no matter the status
190
code!
To get the behaviour we want we need to look at the methods available on reqwest::Response - in
particular, error_for_status:
impl EmailClient {
//[...]
pub async fn send_email(
//[...]
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
//[...]
self.http_client
.post(&url)
.header(
"X-Postmark-Server-Token",
self.authorization_token.expose_secret()
)
.json(&request_body)
.send()
.await?
.error_for_status()?;
Ok(())
}
}
//[...]
7.2.6.2 Timeouts What happens instead if the server returns a 200 OK, but it takes ages to send
it back?
We can instruct our mock server to wait a configurable amount of time before sending a response
back.
Let’s experiment a little with a new integration test - what if the server takes 3 minutes to respond!?
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_times_out_if_the_server_takes_too_long() {
// Arrange
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let sender = SubscriberEmail::parse(SafeEmail().fake()).unwrap();
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
mock_server.uri(),
sender,
Secret::new(Faker.fake())
);
191
let response = ResponseTemplate::new(200)
// 3 minutes!
.set_delay(std::time::Duration::from_secs(180));
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(response)
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// Act
let outcome = email_client
.send_email(subscriber_email, &subject, &content, &content)
.await;
// Assert
assert_err!(outcome);
}
}
This is far from ideal: if the server starts misbehaving we might start to accumulate several “hanging”
requests.
We are not hanging up on the server, so the connection is busy: every time we need to send an email
we will have to open a new connection. If the server does not recover fast enough, and we do not close
any of the open connections, we might end up with socket exhaustion/performance degradation.
As a rule of thumb: every time you are performing an IO operation, always set a timeout!
If the server takes longer than the timeout to respond, we should fail and return an error.
Choosing the right timeout value is often more an art than a science, especially if retries are involved:
set it too low and you might overwhelm the server with retried requests; set it too high and you risk
again to see degradation on the client side.
Nonetheless, better to have a conservative timeout threshold than to have none.
reqwest gives us two options: we can either add a default timeout on the Client itself, which applies
to all outgoing requests, or we can specify a per-request timeout.
Let’s go for a Client-wide timeout: we’ll set it in EmailClient::new.
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
pub fn new(
// [...]
) -> Self {
let http_client = Client::builder()
.timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(10))
.build()
.unwrap();
Self {
http_client,
base_url,
sender,
authorization_token,
}
}
}
// [...]
192
If we run the test again, it should pass (after 10 seconds have elapsed).
7.2.6.3 Refactoring: Test Helpers There is a lot of duplicated code in our four tests for
EmailClient - let’s extract the common bits in a set of test helpers.
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
// [...]
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn send_email_sends_the_expected_request() {
// Arrange
let mock_server = MockServer::start().await;
let email_client = email_client(mock_server.uri());
Mock::given(header_exists("X-Postmark-Server-Token"))
.and(header("Content-Type", "application/json"))
.and(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.and(SendEmailBodyMatcher)
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&mock_server)
.await;
// Act
let _ = email_client
.send_email(email(), &subject(), &content(), &content())
193
.await;
// Assert
}
}
Way less visual noise - the intent of the test is front and center.
Go ahead and refactor the other three!
7.2.6.4 Refactoring: Fail fast The timeout on our HTTP client is currently hard-coded to 10
seconds:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
pub fn new(
// [...]
) -> Self {
let http_client = Client::builder()
.timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(10))
// [...]
}
}
This implies that our timeout test takes roughly 10 seconds to fail - that is a long time, especially if
you are running tests after every little change.
Let’s make the timeout threshold configurable to keep our test suite responsive.
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
impl EmailClient {
pub fn new(
// [...]
// New argument!
timeout: std::time::Duration,
) -> Self {
let http_client = Client::builder()
.timeout(timeout)
// [...]
}
}
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct EmailClientSettings {
// [...]
// New configuration value!
pub timeout_milliseconds: u64
}
impl EmailClientSettings {
// [...]
pub fn timeout(&self) -> std::time::Duration {
std::time::Duration::from_millis(self.timeout_milliseconds)
}
}
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
194
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let timeout = configuration.email_client.timeout();
let email_client = EmailClient::new(
configuration.email_client.base_url,
sender_email,
configuration.email_client.authorization_token,
// Pass new argument from configuration
timeout
);
// [...]
}
#! configuration/base.yaml
# [...]
email_client:
# [...]
timeout_milliseconds: 10000
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
// [...]
fn email_client(base_url: String) -> EmailClient {
EmailClient::new(
base_url,
email(),
Secret::new(Faker.fake()),
// Much lower than 10s!
std::time::Duration::from_millis(200),
)
}
}
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
All tests should succeed - and the overall execution time should be down to less than a second for the
whole test suite.
195
confirmation emails.
Both tasks will have to wait a bit longer.
We have used a test-driven approach to write all new pieces of functionality throughout the book.
While this strategy has served us well, we have not invested a lot of time into refactoring our test
code. As a result, our tests folder is a bit of mess at this point.
Before moving forward, we will restructure our integration test suite to support us as our application
grows in complexity and the number of tests increases.
196
Yet, you are writing fewer tests as the project moves forward.
It’s because of friction - it got progressively more cumbersome to write new tests as the codebase
evolved.
// Ensure that the `tracing` stack is only initialised once using `once_cell`
static TRACING: Lazy<()> = Lazy::new(|| {
// [...]
});
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_works() {
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing() {
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid() {
// [...]
}
197
7.3.5 Test Discovery
There is only one test dealing with our health check endpoint - health_check_works.
The other three tests are probing our POST /subscriptions endpoint while the rest of the code deals
with shared setup steps (spawn_app, TestApp, configure_database, TRACING).
Why have we shoved everything in tests/health_check.rs?
Because it was convenient!
The setup functions were already there - it was easier to add another test case within the same file
than figuring out how to share that code properly across multiple test modules.
Our main goal in this refactoring is discoverability:
• given an application endpoint, it should be easy to find the corresponding integration tests
within the tests folder;
• when writing a test, it should be easy to find the relevant test helper functions.
We will focus on folder structure, but that is definitely not the only tool available when it comes to
test discovery.
Test coverage tools can often tell you which tests triggered the execution of a certain line of application
code.
You can rely on techniques such as coverage marks to create an obvious link between test and
application code.
As always, a multi-pronged approach is likely to give you the best results as the complexity of your
test suite increases.
health_check-fc23645bf877da35
health_check-fc23645bf877da35.d
The trailing hashes will likely be different on your machine, but there should be two entries starting
with health_check-*.
What happens if you try to run it?
./target/debug/deps/health_check-fc23645bf877da35
running 4 tests
test health_check_works ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing ... ok
test subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data ... ok
198
The first option is to define a stand-alone module - e.g. tests/helpers/mod.rs54 .
You can add common functions in mod.rs (or define other sub-modules in there) and then refer to
helpers in your test file (e.g. tests/health_check.rs) with:
//! tests/health_check.rs
// [...]
mod helpers;
// [...]
helpers is bundled in the health_check test executable as a sub-module and we get access to the
functions it exposes in our test cases.
This approach works fairly well to start out, but it leads to annoying function is never used
warnings down the line.
The issue is that helpers is bundled as a sub-module, it is not invoked as a third-party crate: cargo
compiles each test executable in isolation and warns us if, for a specific test file, one or more public
functions in helpers have never been invoked. This is bound to happen as your test suite grows -
not all test files will use all your helper methods.
The second option takes full advantage of that each file under tests is its own executable - we can
create sub-modules scoped to a single test executable!
Let’s create an api folder under tests, with a single main.rs file inside:
tests/
api/
main.rs
health_check.rs
First, we gain clarity: we are structuring api in the very same way we would structure a binary
crate. Less magic - it builds on the same knowledge of the module system you built while working
on application code.
If you run cargo build --tests you should be able to spot
Running target/debug/deps/api-0a1bfb817843fdcf
running 0 tests
in the output - cargo compiled api as a test executable, looking for tests cases.
There is no need to define a main function in main.rs - the Rust test framework adds one for us
behind the scenes55 .
We can now add sub-modules in main.rs:
//! tests/api/main.rs
mod helpers;
mod health_check;
mod subscriptions;
199
use zero2prod::telemetry::{get_subscriber, init_subscriber};
// Ensure that the `tracing` stack is only initialised once using `once_cell`
static TRACING: Lazy<()> = Lazy::new(|| {
// [...]
});
// Public!
pub async fn spawn_app() -> TestApp {
// [...]
}
//! tests/api/health_check.rs
use crate::helpers::spawn_app;
#[tokio::test]
async fn health_check_works() {
// [...]
}
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
use crate::helpers::spawn_app;
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing() {
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid() {
// [...]
}
200
compiling your test suite in CI56 .
If you are running Linux, you might see errors like
thread 'actix-rt:worker' panicked at
'Can not create Runtime: Os { code: 24, kind: Other, message: "Too many open files" }',
// [...]
Most of the code we have here is extremely similar to what we find in our main entrypoint:
56 See this article as an example with some numbers (1.9x speedup!). You should always benchmark the approach on
201
//! src/main.rs
use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
use std::net::TcpListener;
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::email_client::EmailClient;
use zero2prod::startup::run;
use zero2prod::telemetry::{get_subscriber, init_subscriber};
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into(), std::io::stdout);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
Every time we add a dependency or modify the server constructor, we have at least two places to
modify - we have recently gone through the motions with EmailClient. It’s mildly annoying.
More importantly though, the startup logic in our application code is never tested.
As the codebase evolves, they might start to diverge subtly, leading to different behaviour in our tests
compared to our production environment.
We will first extract the logic out of main and then figure out what hooks we need to leverage the
same code paths in our test code.
7.3.8.1 Extracting Our Startup Code From a structural perspective, our startup logic is a
function taking Settings as input and returning an instance of our application as output.
It follows that our main function should look like this:
//! src/main.rs
use zero2prod::configuration::get_configuration;
use zero2prod::startup::build;
use zero2prod::telemetry::{get_subscriber, init_subscriber};
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into(), std::io::stdout);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
202
server.await?;
Ok(())
}
We first perform some binary-specific logic (i.e. telemetry initialisation), then we build a set of con-
figuration values from the supported sources (files + environment variables) and use it to spin up an
application. Linear.
Let’s define that build function then:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
// New imports!
use crate::configuration::Settings;
use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
pub fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
db_pool: PgPool,
email_client: EmailClient,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
}
Nothing too surprising - we have just moved around the code that was previously living in main.
Let’s make it test-friendly now!
7.3.8.2 Testing Hooks In Our Startup Logic Let’s look at our spawn_app function again:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
use zero2prod::startup::build;
// [...]
203
let listener = TcpListener::bind("127.0.0.1:0").expect("Failed to bind random port");
// We retrieve the port assigned to us by the OS
let port = listener.local_addr().unwrap().port();
let address = format!("http://127.0.0.1:{}", port);
// [...]
204
// Launch the application as a background task
let server = build(configuration).await.expect("Failed to build application.");
let _ = tokio::spawn(server);
TestApp {
// How do we get these?
address: todo!(),
db_pool: todo!()
}
}
// [...]
It almost works - the approach falls short at the very end: we have no way to retrieve the random
address assigned by the OS to the application and we don’t really know how to build a connection
pool to the database, needed to perform assertions on side-effects impacting the persisted state.
Let’s deal with the connection pool first: we can extract the initialisation logic from build into a
stand-alone function and invoke it twice.
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
use crate::configuration::DatabaseSettings;
pub fn get_connection_pool(
configuration: &DatabaseSettings
) -> PgPool {
PgPoolOptions::new()
.connect_timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(2))
.connect_lazy_with(configuration.with_db())
}
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
use zero2prod::startup::{build, get_connection_pool};
// [...]
// [...]
You’ll have to add a #[derive(Clone)] to all the structs in src/configuration.rs to make the
compiler happy, but we are done with the database connection pool.
How do we get the application address instead?
actix_web::dev::Server, the type returned by build, does not allow us to retrieve the application
port.
205
We need to do a bit more legwork in our application code - we will wrap actix_web::dev::Server
in a new type that holds on to the information we want.
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
// A new type to hold the newly built server and its port
pub struct Application {
port: u16,
server: Server,
}
impl Application {
// We have converted the `build` function into a constructor for
// `Application`.
pub async fn build(configuration: Settings) -> Result<Self, std::io::Error> {
let connection_pool = get_connection_pool(&configuration.database);
// [...]
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
// New import!
use zero2prod::startup::Application;
206
.expect("Failed to build application.");
// Get the port before spawning the application
let address = format!("http://127.0.0.1:{}", application.port());
let _ = tokio::spawn(application.run_until_stopped());
TestApp {
address,
db_pool: get_connection_pool(&configuration.database),
}
}
// [...]
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
// New import!
use zero2prod::startup::Application;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
// [...]
let application = Application::build(configuration).await?;
application.run_until_stopped().await?;
Ok(())
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
// Act
let response = client
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &app.address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
207
let saved = sqlx::query!("SELECT email, name FROM subscriptions",)
.fetch_one(&app.db_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to fetch saved subscription.");
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let test_cases = vec![
("name=le%20guin", "missing the email"),
("email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com", "missing the name"),
("", "missing both name and email"),
];
// Assert
assert_eq!(
400,
response.status().as_u16(),
// Additional customised error message on test failure
"The API did not fail with 400 Bad Request when the payload was {}.",
error_message
);
}
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let test_cases = vec![
("name=&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com", "empty name"),
("name=Ursula&email=", "empty email"),
("name=Ursula&email=definitely-not-an-email", "invalid email"),
];
208
// Assert
assert_eq!(
400,
response.status().as_u16(),
"The API did not return a 400 Bad Request when the payload was {}.",
description
);
}
}
We have the same calling code in each test - we should pull it out and add a helper method to our
TestApp struct:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
pub async fn post_subscriptions(&self, body: String) -> reqwest::Response {
reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/subscriptions", &self.address))
.header("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.body(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
}
// [...]
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
use crate::helpers::spawn_app;
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// [...]
// Act
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_data_is_missing() {
// [...]
for (invalid_body, error_message) in test_cases {
let response = app.post_subscriptions(invalid_body.into()).await;
// [...]
}
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_400_when_fields_are_present_but_invalid() {
// [...]
for (body, description) in test_cases {
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// [...]
}
}
209
We could add another method for the health check endpoint, but it’s only used once - there is no
need right now.
7.3.10 Summary
We started with a single file test suite, we finished with a modular test suite and a robust set of
helpers.
Just like application code, test code is never finished: we will have to keep working on it as the project
evolves, but we have laid down solid foundations to keep moving forward without losing momentum.
We are now ready to tackle the remaining pieces of functionality needed to dispatch a confirmation
email.
7.4 Refocus
Time to go back to the plan we drafted at the beginning of the chapter:
The first item is done, time to move on to the remaining two on the list.
We had a sketch of how the two handlers should work:
This gives us a fairly precise picture of how the application is going to work once we are done with
the implementation.
It does not help us much to figure out how to get there.
Where should we start from?
Should we immediately tackle the changes to /subscriptions?
Should we get /subscriptions/confirm out of the way?
We need to find an implementation route that can be rolled out with zero downtime.
210
Once an application is serving production traffic, we need to make sure it is reliable.
Reliable means different things in different contexts. If you are selling a data storage solution, for
example, it should not lose (or corrupt!) customers’ data.
In a commercial setting, the definition of reliability for your application will often be encoded in a
Service Level Agreement (SLA).
An SLA is a contractual obligation: you guarantee a certain level of reliability and commit to com-
pensate your customers (usually with discounts or credits) if your service fails to live up to the
expectations.
If you are selling access to an API, for example, you will usually have something related to availability
- e.g. the API should successfully respond to at least 99.99% of well-formed incoming requests, often
referred to as “four nines of availability”.
Phrased differently (and assuming a uniform distribution of incoming requests over time), you can
only afford up to 52 minutes of downtime over a whole year. Achieving four nines of availability is
tough.
There is no silver bullet to build a highly available solution: it requires work from the application
layer all the way down to the infrastructure layer.
One thing is certain, though: if you want to operate a highly available service, you should master
zero downtime deployments - users should be able to use the service before, during and after the
rollout of a new version of the application to production.
This is even more important if you are practising continuous deployment: you cannot release multiple
times a day if every release triggers a small outage.
211
7.5.2.2 Load Balancers We have multiple copies57 of our application running behind a load
balancer.
Each replica of our application is registered with the load balancer as a backend.
Every time somebody sends a request to our API, they hit our load balancer which is then in charge
of choosing one of the available backends to fulfill the incoming request.
Load balancers usually support adding (and removing) backends dynamically.
This enables a few interesting patterns.
7.5.2.2.1 Horizontal Scaling We can add more capacity when experiencing a traffic spike by
spinning up more replicas of our application (i.e. horizontal scaling).
It helps to spread the load until the work expected of a single instance becomes manageable.
We will get back to this topic later in the book when discussing metrics and autoscaling.
7.5.2.2.2 Health Checks We can ask the load balancer to keep an eye on the health of the
registered backends.
Oversimplifying, health checking can be:
• Passive - the load balancer looks at the distribution of status codes/latency for each backend
to determine if they are healthy or not;
• Active - the load balancer is configured to send a health check request to each backend on a
schedule. If a backend fails to respond with a success status code for a long enough time period
it is marked as unhealthy and removed.
This is a critical capability to achieve self-healing in a cloud-native environment: the platform can
detect if an application is not behaving as expected and automatically remove it from the list of
available backends to mitigate or nullify the impact on users58 .
7.5.2.3 Rolling Update Deployments We can leverage our load balancer to perform zero down-
time deployments.
Let’s look at a snapshot of our production environments: we have three replicas of version A of our
application registered as backends for our load balancer.
We want to deploy version B.
if you are running a single replica there is load balancer between your users and your application. Deployments are
still performed using a rolling update strategy.
58 This is true as long as the platform is also capable of automatically provisioning a new replica of the application
212
Figure 4: One operational instance of version B.
We have four replicas of our application now: 3 running version A, 1 running version B. All four are
serving live traffic.
If all is well, we switch off one of the replicas running version A.
We follow the same process to replace all replicas running version A until all registered backends are
running version B.
This deployment strategy is called rolling update: we run the old and the new version of the
application side by side, serving live traffic with both.
Throughout the process we always have three or more healthy backends: users should not experience
any kind of service degradation (assuming version B is not buggy).
7.5.2.4 Digital Ocean App Platform We are running our application on Digital Ocean App
Platform.
Their documentation boasts of offering zero downtime deployments out of the box, but they do not
provide details on how it is achieved.
A few experiments confirmed that they are indeed relying on a rolling update deployment strategy.
A rolling update is not the only possible strategy for a zero downtime deployment - blue-green and
canary deployments are equally popular variations over the same underlying principles.
Choose the most appropriate solution for your application based on the capabilities offered by your
platform and your requirements.
213
7.6 Database Migrations
7.6.1 State Is Kept Outside The Application
Load balancing relies on a strong assumption: no matter which backend is used to serve an incoming
request, the outcome will be the same.
This is something we discussed already in Chapter 3: to ensure high availability in a fault-prone envi-
ronment, cloud-native applications are stateless - they delegate all persistence concerns to external
systems (i.e. databases).
That’s why load balancing works: all backends are talking to the same database to query and manip-
ulate the same state.
Think of a database as a single gigantic global variable. Continuously accessed and mutated by all
replicas of our application.
State is hard.
214
7.6.4 A New Mandatory Column
Let’s start by looking at the status column.
7.6.4.1 Step 1: Add As Optional We start by keeping the application code stable.
On the database side, we generate a new migration script:
sqlx migrate add add_status_to_subscriptions
Creating migrations/20210307181858_add_status_to_subscriptions.sql
We can now edit the migration script to add status as an optional column to subscriptions:
ALTER TABLE subscriptions ADD COLUMN status TEXT NULL;
7.6.4.2 Step 2: Start Using The New Column status now exists: we can start using it!
To be precise, we can start writing to it: every time a new subscriber is inserted, we will set status
to confirmed.
We just need to change our insertion query from
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
to
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
Tests should pass - deploy the new version of the application to production.
7.6.4.3 Step 3: Backfill And Mark As NOT NULL The latest version of the application ensures
that status is populated for all new subscribers.
To mark status as NOT NULL we just need to backfill the value for historical records: we’ll then be
free to alter the column.
Let’s generate a new migration script:
sqlx migrate add make_status_not_null_in_subscriptions
215
Creating migrations/20210307184428_make_status_not_null_in_subscriptions.sql
We can migrate our local database, run our test suite and then deploy our production database.
We made it, we added status as a new mandatory column!
Creating migrations/20210307185410_create_subscription_tokens_table.sql
The migration is similar to the very first one we wrote to add subscriptions:
-- Create Subscription Tokens Table
CREATE TABLE subscription_tokens(
subscription_token TEXT NOT NULL,
subscriber_id uuid NOT NULL
REFERENCES subscriptions (id),
PRIMARY KEY (subscription_token)
);
Pay attention to the details here: the subscriber_id column in subscription_tokens is a foreign
key.
For each row in subscription_tokens there must exist a row in subscriptions whose id field has
the same value of subscriber_id, otherwise the insertion fails. This guarantees that all tokens are
attached to a legitimate subscriber.
Migrate the production database again - we are done!
216
it contains a confirmation link.
7.7.1.1 Red test To write this test we need to enhance our TestApp.
It currently holds our application and a handle to a pool of connections to the database:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
We need to spin up a mock server to stand in for Postmark’s API and intercept outgoing requests,
just like we did when we built the email client.
Let’s edit spawn_app accordingly:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// New import!
use wiremock::MockServer;
// [...]
// [...]
TestApp {
// [...],
email_server,
}
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_sends_a_confirmation_email_for_valid_data() {
217
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
// Mock asserts on drop
}
Notice that, on failure, wiremock gives us a detailed breakdown of what happened: we expected an
incoming request, we received none.
Let’s fix that.
7.7.1.2 Green test Our handler looks like this right now:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(form: web::Form<FormData>, pool: web::Data<PgPool>) -> HttpResponse {
let new_subscriber = match form.0.try_into() {
Ok(form) => form,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
match insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(_) => HttpResponse::Ok().finish(),
Err(_) => HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
}
}
218
// Here!
.app_data(email_client.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
We can therefore access it in our handler using web::Data, just like we did for pool:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// New import!
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Adding a new subscriber",
skip(form, pool, email_client),
fields(
subscriber_email = %form.email,
subscriber_name= %form.name
)
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
// Get the email client from the app context
email_client: web::Data<EmailClient>,
) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
if insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await.is_err() {
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
// Send a (useless) email to the new subscriber.
// We are ignoring email delivery errors for now.
if email_client
.send_email(
new_subscriber.email,
"Welcome!",
"Welcome to our newsletter!",
"Welcome to our newsletter!",
)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
It is trying to send an email but it is failing because we haven’t setup a mock in that test. Let’s fix
it:
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
219
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
// New section!
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
// [...]
}
7.7.2.1 Red Test We don’t care (yet) about the link being dynamic or actually meaningful - we
just want to be sure that there is something in the body that looks like a link.
We should also have the same link in both the plain text and the HTML version of the email body.
How do we get the body of a request intercepted by wiremock::MockServer?
We can use its received_requests method - it returns a vector of all the requests intercepted by
the server as long as request recording was enabled (the default).
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_sends_a_confirmation_email_with_a_link() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
// We are not setting an expectation here anymore
// The test is focused on another aspect of the app
// behaviour.
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
// Get the first intercepted request
let email_request = &app.email_server.received_requests().await.unwrap()[0];
220
// Parse the body as JSON, starting from raw bytes
let body: serde_json::Value = serde_json::from_slice(&email_request.body).unwrap();
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_sends_a_confirmation_email_with_a_link() {
// [...]
let body: serde_json::Value = serde_json::from_slice(&email_request.body).unwrap();
If we run the test suite, we should see the new test case failing:
failures:
thread 'subscriptions::subscribe_sends_a_confirmation_email_with_a_link'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `0`,
right: `1`', tests/api/subscriptions.rs:71:9
7.7.2.2 Green Test We need to tweak our request handler again to satisfy the new test case:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(/* */) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
let confirmation_link =
"https://my-api.com/subscriptions/confirm";
if email_client
.send_email(
221
new_subscriber.email,
"Welcome!",
&format!(
"Welcome to our newsletter!<br />\
Click <a href=\"{}\">here</a> to confirm your subscription.",
confirmation_link
),
&format!(
"Welcome to our newsletter!\nVisit {} to confirm your subscription.",
confirmation_link
),
)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
7.7.2.3 Refactor Our request handler is getting a bit busy - there is a lot of code dealing with
our confirmation email now.
Let’s extract it into a separate function:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe(/* */) -> HttpResponse {
let new_subscriber = match form.0.try_into() {
Ok(form) => form,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::BadRequest().finish(),
};
if insert_subscriber(&pool, &new_subscriber).await.is_err() {
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
if send_confirmation_email(&email_client, new_subscriber)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Send a confirmation email to a new subscriber",
skip(email_client, new_subscriber)
)]
pub async fn send_confirmation_email(
email_client: &EmailClient,
new_subscriber: NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
let confirmation_link = "https://my-api.com/subscriptions/confirm";
let plain_body = format!(
"Welcome to our newsletter!\nVisit {} to confirm your subscription.",
confirmation_link
);
let html_body = format!(
"Welcome to our newsletter!<br />\
222
Click <a href=\"{}\">here</a> to confirm your subscription.",
confirmation_link
);
email_client
.send_email(
new_subscriber.email,
"Welcome!",
&html_body,
&plain_body,
)
.await
}
subscribe is once again focused on the overall flow, without bothering with details of any of its steps.
7.7.3.1 Red test We can start by having a second look at our first “happy path” test:
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
}
The name is a bit of a lie - it is checking the status code and performing some assertions against the
state stored in the database.
Let’s split it into two separate test cases:
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
223
async fn subscribe_returns_a_200_for_valid_form_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
assert_eq!(200, response.status().as_u16());
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_persists_the_new_subscriber() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
let saved = sqlx::query!("SELECT email, name FROM subscriptions",)
.fetch_one(&app.db_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to fetch saved subscription.");
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
}
We can now modify the second test case to check the status as well.
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_persists_the_new_subscriber() {
// [...]
// Assert
let saved = sqlx::query!("SELECT email, name, status FROM subscriptions",)
.fetch_one(&app.db_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to fetch saved subscription.");
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
assert_eq!(saved.status, "pending_confirmation");
}
224
failures:
7.7.3.2 Green Test We can turn it green by touching again our insert query:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber([...]) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at, status)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4, 'confirmed')"#,
// [...]
)
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber([...]) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"INSERT INTO subscriptions (id, email, name, subscribed_at, status)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4, 'pending_confirmation')"#,
// [...]
)
// [...]
}
7.7.4.1 Red Test Let’s add a new module to our tests project to host all test cases dealing with
the confirmation callback.
//! tests/api/main.rs
mod health_check;
mod helpers;
mod subscriptions;
// New module!
mod subscriptions_confirm;
//! tests/api/subscriptions_confirm.rs
use crate::helpers::spawn_app;
225
#[tokio::test]
async fn confirmations_without_token_are_rejected_with_a_400() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
// Act
let response = reqwest::get(&format!("{}/subscriptions/confirm", app.address))
.await
.unwrap();
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 400);
}
7.7.4.2 Green Test Let’s start with a dummy handler that returns 200 OK regardless of the
incoming request:
//! src/routes/mod.rs
mod health_check;
mod subscriptions;
// New module!
mod subscriptions_confirm;
//! src/routes/subscriptions_confirm.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Confirm a pending subscriber",
)]
pub async fn confirm() -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
use crate::routes::confirm;
226
---- subscriptions_confirm::confirmations_without_token_are_rejected_with_a_400 stdout ----
thread 'subscriptions_confirm::confirmations_without_token_are_rejected_with_a_400'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `200`,
right: `400`'
It worked!
Time to turn that 200 OK in a 400 Bad Request.
We want to ensure that there is a subscription_token query parameter: we can rely on another
one actix-web’s extractors - Query.
//! src/routes/subscriptions_confirm.rs
use actix_web::{HttpResponse, web};
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Parameters {
subscription_token: String
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Confirm a pending subscriber",
skip(_parameters)
)]
pub async fn confirm(_parameters: web::Query<Parameters>) -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
The Parameters struct defines all the query parameters that we expect to see in the incoming request.
It needs to implement serde::Deserialize to enable actix-web to build it from the incoming
request path. It is enough to add a function parameter of type web::Query<Parameter> to confirm
to instruct actix-web to only call the handler if the extraction was successful. If the extraction failed
a 400 Bad Request is automatically returned to the caller.
Our test should now pass.
7.7.5.1 Red Test We will behave like a user: we will call POST /subscriptions, we will extract
the confirmation link from the outgoing email request (using the linkify machinery we already built)
and then call it to confirm our subscription - expecting a 200 OK.
We will not be checking the status from the database (yet) - that is going to be our grand finale.
Let’s write it down:
//! tests/api/subscriptions_confirm.rs
// [...]
use reqwest::Url;
use wiremock::{ResponseTemplate, Mock};
use wiremock::matchers::{path, method};
#[tokio::test]
async fn the_link_returned_by_subscribe_returns_a_200_if_called() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
227
.await;
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
let email_request = &app.email_server.received_requests().await.unwrap()[0];
let body: serde_json::Value = serde_json::from_slice(&email_request.body).unwrap();
// Act
let response = reqwest::get(confirmation_link)
.await
.unwrap();
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 200);
}
It fails with
thread 'subscriptions_confirm::the_link_returned_by_subscribe_returns_a_200_if_called'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `"my-api.com"`,
right: `"127.0.0.1"`'
There is a fair amount of code duplication going on here, but we will take care of it in due time.
Our primary focus is getting the test to pass now.
7.7.5.2 Green Test Let’s begin by taking care of that URL issue.
It is currently hard-coded in
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn send_confirmation_email([...]) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
let confirmation_link = "https://my-api.com/subscriptions/confirm";
// [...]
}
The domain and the protocol are going to vary according to the environment the application is
running into: it will be http://127.0.0.1 for our tests, it should be a proper DNS record with
HTTPS when our application is running in production.
The easiest way to get it right is to pass the domain in as a configuration value.
Let’s add a new field to ApplicationSettings:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize, Clone)]
pub struct ApplicationSettings {
#[serde(deserialize_with = "deserialize_number_from_string")]
228
pub port: u16,
pub host: String,
// New field!
pub base_url: String
}
# configuration/local.yaml
application:
base_url: "http://127.0.0.1"
# [...]
#! spec.yaml
# [...]
services:
- name: zero2prod
# [...]
envs:
# We use DO's APP_URL to inject the dynamically
# provisioned base url as an environment variable
- key: APP_APPLICATION__BASE_URL
scope: RUN_TIME
value: ${APP_URL}
# [...]
# [...]
Remember to apply the changes to DigitalOcean every time we touch spec.yaml: grab
your app identifier via doctl apps list --format ID and then run doctl apps update
$APP_ID --spec spec.yaml.
We now need to register the value in the application context - you should be familiar with the process
at this point:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
impl Application {
pub async fn build(configuration: Settings) -> Result<Self, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
let server = run(
listener,
connection_pool,
email_client,
// New parameter!
configuration.application.base_url,
)?;
// [...]
}
fn run(
listener: TcpListener,
db_pool: PgPool,
229
email_client: EmailClient,
// New parameter!
base_url: String,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
let base_url = Data::new(ApplicationBaseUrl(base_url));
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
// [...]
.app_data(base_url.clone())
})
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(
skip(form, pool, email_client, base_url),
[...]
)]
pub async fn subscribe(
// [...]
// New parameter!
base_url: web::Data<ApplicationBaseUrl>,
) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
// Pass the application url
if send_confirmation_email(
&email_client,
new_subscriber,
&base_url.0
)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(
skip(email_client, new_subscriber, base_url)
[...]
)]
pub async fn send_confirmation_email(
// [...]
// New parameter!
base_url: &str,
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
// Build a confirmation link with a dynamic root
let confirmation_link = format!("{}/subscriptions/confirm", base_url);
// [...]
}
230
kind: Request,
url: Url {
scheme: "http",
host: Some(Ipv4(127.0.0.1)),
port: None,
path: "/subscriptions/confirm",
query: None,
fragment: None },
source: hyper::Error(
Connect,
ConnectError(
"tcp connect error",
Os {
code: 111,
kind: ConnectionRefused,
message: "Connection refused"
}
)
)
}'
The host is correct, but the reqwest::Client in our test is failing to establish a connection. What
is going wrong?
If you look closely, you’ll notice port: None - we are sending our request to http://127.0.0.1/subscriptions/confirm
without specifying the port our test server is listening on.
The tricky bit, here, is the sequence of events: we pass in the application_url configuration value
before spinning up the server, therefore we do not know what port it is going to listen to (given that
the port is randomised using 0!).
This is non-issue for production workloads where the DNS domain is enough - we’ll just patch it in
the test.
Let’s store the application port in its own field within TestApp:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
TestApp {
address: format!("http://localhost:{}", application_port),
port: application_port,
db_pool: get_connection_pool(&configuration.database),
email_server,
}
}
We can then use it in the test logic to edit the confirmation link:
//! tests/api/subscriptions_confirm.rs
// [...]
231
#[tokio::test]
async fn the_link_returned_by_subscribe_returns_a_200_if_called() {
// [...]
let mut confirmation_link = Url::parse(raw_confirmation_link).unwrap();
assert_eq!(confirmation_link.host_str().unwrap(), "127.0.0.1");
// Let's rewrite the URL to include the port
confirmation_link.set_port(Some(app.port)).unwrap();
// [...]
}
We get a 400 Bad Request back because our confirmation link does not have a subscription_token
query parameter attached.
Let’s fix it by hard-coding one for the time being:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
7.7.5.3 Refactor The logic to extract the two confirmation links from the outgoing email request
is duplicated across two of our tests - we will likely add more that rely on it as we flesh out the
remaining bits and pieces of this feature. It makes sense to extract it in its own helper function.
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
/// Extract the confirmation links embedded in the request to the email API.
pub fn get_confirmation_links(
&self,
email_request: &wiremock::Request
) -> ConfirmationLinks {
let body: serde_json::Value = serde_json::from_slice(
&email_request.body
).unwrap();
232
let get_link = |s: &str| {
let links: Vec<_> = linkify::LinkFinder::new()
.links(s)
.filter(|l| *l.kind() == linkify::LinkKind::Url)
.collect();
assert_eq!(links.len(), 1);
let raw_link = links[0].as_str().to_owned();
let mut confirmation_link = reqwest::Url::parse(&raw_link).unwrap();
// Let's make sure we don't call random APIs on the web
assert_eq!(confirmation_link.host_str().unwrap(), "127.0.0.1");
confirmation_link.set_port(Some(self.port)).unwrap();
confirmation_link
};
We are adding it as a method on TestApp in order to get access to the application port, which we
need to inject into the links.
It could as well have been a free function taking both wiremock::Request and TestApp (or u16) as
parameters - a matter of taste.
We can now massively simplify our two test cases:
//! tests/api/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_sends_a_confirmation_email_with_a_link() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
let email_request = &app.email_server.received_requests().await.unwrap()[0];
let confirmation_links = app.get_confirmation_links(&email_request);
//! tests/api/subscriptions_confirm.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn the_link_returned_by_subscribe_returns_a_200_if_called() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
233
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
let email_request = &app.email_server.received_requests().await.unwrap()[0];
let confirmation_links = app.get_confirmation_links(&email_request);
// Act
let response = reqwest::get(confirmation_links.html)
.await
.unwrap();
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 200);
}
7.7.6.1 Red Test We will add a new test case which builds on top of the work we just did: instead
of asserting against the returned status code we will check the status of the subscriber stored in the
database.
//! tests/api/subscriptions_confirm.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn clicking_on_the_confirmation_link_confirms_a_subscriber() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
let email_request = &app.email_server.received_requests().await.unwrap()[0];
let confirmation_links = app.get_confirmation_links(&email_request);
// Act
reqwest::get(confirmation_links.html)
.await
.unwrap()
.error_for_status()
.unwrap();
// Assert
let saved = sqlx::query!("SELECT email, name, status FROM subscriptions",)
.fetch_one(&app.db_pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to fetch saved subscription.");
234
assert_eq!(saved.email, "[email protected]");
assert_eq!(saved.name, "le guin");
assert_eq!(saved.status, "confirmed");
}
7.7.6.2 Green Test To get the previous test case to pass, we hard-coded a subscription token in
the confirmation link:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
Let’s refactor send_confirmation_email to take the token as a parameter - it will make it easier to
add the generation logic upstream.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe([...]) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
if send_confirmation_email(
&email_client,
new_subscriber,
&base_url.0,
// New parameter!
"mytoken"
)
.await
.is_err() {
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Send a confirmation email to a new subscriber",
skip(email_client, new_subscriber, base_url, subscription_token)
)]
pub async fn send_confirmation_email(
email_client: &EmailClient,
new_subscriber: NewSubscriber,
base_url: &str,
// New parameter!
subscription_token: &str
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
let confirmation_link = format!(
"{}/subscriptions/confirm?subscription_token={}",
235
base_url,
subscription_token
);
// [...]
}
Our subscription tokens are not passwords: they are single-use and they do not grant access to
protected information.59 We need them to be hard enough to guess while keeping in mind that the
worst-case scenario is an unwanted newsletter subscription landing in someone’s inbox.
Given our requirements it should be enough to use a cryptographically secure pseudo-random number
generator - a CSPRNG, if you are into obscure acronyms.
Every time we need to generate a subscription token we can sample a sufficiently-long sequence of
alphanumeric characters.
To pull it off we need to add rand as a dependency:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
# [...]
# We need the `std_rng` to get access to the PRNG we want
rand = { version = "0.8", features=["std_rng"] }
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use rand::distributions::Alphanumeric;
use rand::{thread_rng, Rng};
// [...]
Using 25 characters we get roughly ~10^45 possible tokens - it should be more than enough for our
use case.
To check if a token is valid in GET /subscriptions/confirm we need POST /subscriptions to store
the newly minted tokens in the database.
The table we added for this purpose, subscription_tokens, has two columns: subscription_token
and subscriber_id.
We are currently generating the subscriber identifier in insert_subscriber but we never return it
to the caller:
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber([...]) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"[...]"#,
// The subscriber id, never returned or bound to a variable
Uuid::new_v4(),
// [...]
)
// [...]
}
236
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn insert_subscriber([...]) -> Result<Uuid, sqlx::Error> {
let subscriber_id = Uuid::new_v4();
sqlx::query!(
r#"[...]"#,
subscriber_id,
// [...]
)
// [...]
Ok(subscriber_id)
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Store subscription token in the database",
skip(subscription_token, pool)
)]
pub async fn store_token(
pool: &PgPool,
subscriber_id: Uuid,
subscription_token: &str,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"INSERT INTO subscription_tokens (subscription_token, subscriber_id)
VALUES ($1, $2)"#,
subscription_token,
subscriber_id
)
.execute(pool)
.await
237
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Parameters {
subscription_token: String
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Confirm a pending subscriber",
skip(_parameters)
)]
pub async fn confirm(_parameters: web::Query<Parameters>) -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
We need to:
• get a reference to the database pool;
• retrieve the subscriber id associated with the token (if one exists);
• change the subscriber status to confirmed.
Nothing we haven’t done before - let’s get cracking!
use actix_web::{web, HttpResponse};
use sqlx::PgPool;
use uuid::Uuid;
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Parameters {
subscription_token: String,
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Confirm a pending subscriber",
skip(parameters, pool)
)]
pub async fn confirm(
parameters: web::Query<Parameters>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
) -> HttpResponse {
let id = match get_subscriber_id_from_token(&pool, ¶meters.subscription_token).await {
Ok(id) => id,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
};
match id {
// Non-existing token!
None => HttpResponse::Unauthorized().finish(),
Some(subscriber_id) => {
if confirm_subscriber(&pool, subscriber_id).await.is_err() {
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
238
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Mark subscriber as confirmed",
skip(subscriber_id, pool)
)]
pub async fn confirm_subscriber(
pool: &PgPool,
subscriber_id: Uuid
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"UPDATE subscriptions SET status = 'confirmed' WHERE id = $1"#,
subscriber_id,
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(())
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Get subscriber_id from token",
skip(subscription_token, pool)
)]
pub async fn get_subscriber_id_from_token(
pool: &PgPool,
subscription_token: &str,
) -> Result<Option<Uuid>, sqlx::Error> {
let result = sqlx::query!(
r#"SELECT subscriber_id FROM subscription_tokens WHERE subscription_token = $1"#,
subscription_token,
)
.fetch_optional(pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
tracing::error!("Failed to execute query: {:?}", e);
e
})?;
Ok(result.map(|r| r.subscriber_id))
}
Running target/debug/deps/api-5a717281b98f7c41
running 10 tests
[...]
239
7.8 Database Transactions
7.8.1 All Or Nothing
It is too soon to declare victory though.
Our POST /subscriptions handler has grown in complexity - we are now performing two INSERT
queries against our Postgres database: one to store the details of the new subscriber, one to store the
newly generated subscription token.
What happens if the application crashes between those two operations?
The first query might complete successfully, but the second one might never be executed.
There are three possible states for our database after an invocation of POST /subscriptions:
• a new subscriber and its token have been persisted;
• a new subscriber has been persisted, without a token;
• nothing has been persisted.
The more queries you have, the worse it gets to reason about the possible end states of our database.
Relational databases (and a few others) provide a mechanism to mitigate this issue: transactions.
Transactions are a way to group together related operations in a single unit of work.
The database guarantees that all operations within a transaction will succeed or fail together: the
database will never be left in a state where the effect of only a subset of the queries in a transaction
is visible.
Going back to our example, if we wrap the two INSERT queries in a transaction we now have two
possible end states:
• a new subscriber and its token have been persisted;
• nothing has been persisted.
Much easier to deal with.
If any of the queries within a transaction fails the database rolls back: all changes performed by
previous queries are reverted, the operation is aborted.
You can also explicitly trigger a rollback with the ROLLBACK statement.
Transactions are a deep topic: they not only provide a way to convert multiple statements into an
all-or-nothing operation, they also hide the effect of uncommitted changes from other queries that
might be running, concurrently, against the same tables.
As your needs evolves, you will often want to explicitly choose the isolation level of your transactions
to fine-tune the concurrency guarantees provided by the database on your operations. Getting a
good grip on the different kinds of concurrency-related issues (e.g. dirty reads, phantom reads, etc.)
becomes more and more important as your system grows in scale and complexity.
I can’t recommend “Designing Data Intensive Applications” enough if you want to learn more about
these topics.
240
7.8.3 Transactions In Sqlx
Back to the code: how do we leverage transactions in sqlx?
You don’t have to manually write a BEGIN statement: transactions are so central to the usage of
relational databases that sqlx provides a dedicated API.
By calling begin on our pool we acquire a connection from the pool and kick off a transaction:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe([...]) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
let mut transaction = match pool.begin().await {
Ok(transaction) => transaction,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
};
let subscriber_id = match insert_subscriber(&mut transaction, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(subscriber_id) => subscriber_id,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
};
let subscription_token = generate_subscription_token();
if store_token(&mut transaction, subscriber_id, &subscription_token)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Saving new subscriber details in the database",
skip(new_subscriber, transaction)
)]
pub async fn insert_subscriber(
transaction: &mut Transaction<'_, Postgres>,
new_subscriber: &NewSubscriber,
) -> Result<Uuid, sqlx::Error> {
let subscriber_id = Uuid::new_v4();
sqlx::query!([...])
.execute(transaction)
// [...]
}
241
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Store subscription token in the database",
skip(subscription_token, transaction)
)]
pub async fn store_token(
transaction: &mut Transaction<'_, Postgres>,
subscriber_id: Uuid,
subscription_token: &str,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!([..])
.execute(transaction)
// [...]
}
If you run cargo test now you will see something funny: some of our tests are failing!
Why is that happening?
As we discussed, a transaction has to either be committed or rolled back.
Transaction exposes two dedicated methods: Transaction::commit, to persist changes, and
Transaction::rollback, to abort the whole operation.
We are not calling either - what happens in that case?
We can look at sqlx’s source code to understand better.
In particular, Transaction’s Drop implementation:
impl<'c, DB> Drop for Transaction<'c, DB>
where
DB: Database,
{
fn drop(&mut self) {
if self.open {
// starts a rollback operation
self.open is an internal boolean flag attached to the connection used to begin the transaction and
run the queries attached to it.
When a transaction is created, using begin, it is set to true until either rollback or commit are
called:
impl<'c, DB> Transaction<'c, DB>
where
DB: Database,
{
pub(crate) fn begin(
conn: impl Into<MaybePoolConnection<'c, DB>>,
) -> BoxFuture<'c, Result<Self, Error>> {
let mut conn = conn.into();
Box::pin(async move {
DB::TransactionManager::begin(&mut conn).await?;
Ok(Self {
connection: conn,
open: true,
242
})
})
}
Ok(())
}
Ok(())
}
}
In other words: if commit or rollback have not been called before the Transaction object goes
out of scope (i.e. Drop is invoked), a rollback command is queued to be executed as soon as an
opportunity arises.60
That is why our tests are failing: we are using a transaction but we are not explicitly committing the
changes. When the connection goes back into the pool, at the end of our request handler, all changes
are rolled back and our test expectations are not met.
We can fix it by adding a one-liner to subscribe:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use sqlx::{Postgres, Transaction};
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument([...])]
pub async fn subscribe([...]) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
let mut transaction = match pool.begin().await {
Ok(transaction) => transaction,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
};
let subscriber_id = match insert_subscriber(&mut transaction, &new_subscriber).await {
Ok(subscriber_id) => subscriber_id,
Err(_) => return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish(),
};
let subscription_token = generate_subscription_token();
if store_token(&mut transaction, subscriber_id, &subscription_token)
.await
.is_err()
{
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
if transaction.commit().await.is_err() {
return HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish();
}
// [...]
}
on the topic, but there is no consensus yet. This is a constraint on sqlx: when Transaction goes out of scope it can
enqueue a rollback operation, but it cannot execute it immediately! Is it ok? Is it a sound API? There are different
views - see diesel’s async issue for an overview. My personal view is that the benefits brought by sqlx to the table
offset the risks, but you should make an informed decision taking into account the tradeoffs of your application and
use case.
243
Go ahead and deploy the application: seeing a feature working in a live environment adds a whole
new level of satisfaction!
7.9 Summary
This chapter was a long journey, but you have come a long way as well!
The skeleton of our application has started to shape up, starting with our test suite. Features are
moving along as well: we now have a functional subscription flow, with a proper confirmation email.
More importantly: we are getting into the rhythm of writing Rust code.
The very end of the chapter has been a long pair programming session where we have made significant
progress without introducing many new concepts.
This is a great moment to go off and explore a bit on your own: improve on what we built so far!
There are plenty of opportunities:
• What happens if a user tries to subscribe twice? Make sure that they receive two confirmation
emails;
• What happens if a user clicks on a confirmation link twice?
• What happens if the subscription token is well-formatted but non-existent?
• Add validation on the incoming token, we are currently passing the raw user input straight into
a query (thanks sqlx for protecting us from SQL injections <3);
• Use a proper templating solution for our emails (e.g. tera);
• Anything that comes to your mind!
It takes deliberate practice to achieve mastery.
244
8 Error Handling
To send a confirmation email we had to stitch together multiple operations: validation of user input,
email dispatch, various database queries.
They all have one thing in common: they may fail.
In Chapter 6 we discussed the building blocks of error handling in Rust - Result and the ? operator.
We left many questions unanswered: how do errors fit within the broader architecture of our appli-
cation? What does a good error look like? Who are errors for? Should we use a library? Which
one?
An in-depth analysis of error handling patterns in Rust will be the sole focus of this chapter.
We are trying to insert a row into the subscription_tokens table in order to store a newly-generated
token against a subscriber_id.
execute is a fallible operation: we might have a network issue while talking to the database, the row
we are trying to insert might violate some table constraints (e.g. uniqueness of the primary key), etc.
The caller is then forced by the compiler to express how they plan to handle both scenarios - success
and failure.
245
If our only goal was to communicate to the caller that an error happened, we could use a simpler
definition for Result:
pub enum ResultSignal<Success> {
Ok(Success),
Err
}
There would be no need for a generic Error type - we could just check that execute returned the
Err variant, e.g.
let outcome = sqlx::query!(/* ... */)
.execute(transaction)
.await;
if outcome == ResultSignal::Err {
// Do something if it failed
}
This works if there is only one failure mode. Truth is, operations can fail in multiple ways and we
might want to react differently depending on what happened.
Let’s look at the skeleton of sqlx::Error, the error type for execute:
//! sqlx-core/src/error.rs
8.1.1.2 Help An Operator To Troubleshoot What if an operation has a single failure mode
- should we just use () as error type?
Err(()) might be enough for the caller to determine what to do - e.g. return a 500 Internal Server
Error to the user.
But control flow is not the only purpose of errors in an application.
We expect errors to carry enough context about the failure to produce a report for an operator
(e.g. the developer) that contains enough details to go and troubleshoot the issue.
What do we mean by report?
In a backend API like ours it will usually be a log event.
In a CLI it could be an error message shown in the terminal when a --verbose flag is used.
The implementation details may vary, the purpose stays the same: help a human understand what
is going wrong.
That’s exactly what we are doing in the initial code snippet:
246
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
If the query fails, we grab the error and emit a log event. We can then go and inspect the error logs
when investigating the database issue.
They receive an HTTP response with no body and a 500 Internal Server Error status code.
The status code fulfills the same purpose of the error type in store_token: it is a machine-parsable
piece of information that the caller (e.g. the browser) can use to determine what to do next (e.g. retry
the request assuming it’s a transient failure).
What about the human behind the browser? What are we telling them?
Not much, the response body is empty.
That is actually a good implementation: the user should not have to care about the internals of the
API they are calling - they have no mental model of it and no way to determine why it is failing.
That’s the realm of the operator.
We are omitting those details by design.
In other circumstances, instead, we need to convey additional information to the human user. Let’s
look at our input validation for the same endpoint:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
email: String,
name: String,
247
}
We received an email address and a name as data attached to the form submitted by the user.
Both fields are going through an additional round of validation - SubscriberName::parse and
SubscriberEmail::parse. Those two methods are fallible - they return a String as error type
to explain what has gone wrong:
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
// [...]
impl SubscriberEmail {
pub fn parse(s: String) -> Result<SubscriberEmail, String> {
if validate_email(&s) {
Ok(Self(s))
} else {
Err(format!("{} is not a valid subscriber email.", s))
}
}
}
It is, I must admit, not the most useful error message: we are telling the user that the email address
they entered is wrong, but we are not helping them to determine why.
In the end, it doesn’t matter: we are not sending any of that information to the user as part of the
response of the API - they are getting a 400 Bad Request with no body.
//! src/routes/subscription.rs
// [...]
This is a poor error: the user is left in the dark and cannot adapt their behaviour as required.
8.1.3 Summary
Let’s summarise what we uncovered so far.
Errors serve two61 main purposes:
• Control flow (i.e. determine what do next);
• Reporting (e.g. investigate, after the fact, what went wrong on).
We can also distinguish errors based on their location:
• Internal (i.e. a function calling another function within our application);
• At the edge (i.e. an API request that we failed to fulfill).
61 We are borrowing the terminology introduced by Jane Lusby in “Error handling Isn’t All About Errors”, a talk
from RustConf 2020. If you haven’t watched it yet, close the book and open YouTube - you will not regret it.
248
Control flow is scripted: all information required to take a decision on what to do next must be
accessible to a machine.
We use types (e.g. enum variants), methods and fields for internal errors.
We rely on status codes for errors at the edge.
Error reports, instead, are primarily consumed by humans.
The content has to be tuned depending on the audience.
An operator has access to the internals of the system - they should be provided with as much context
as possible on the failure mode.
A user sits outside the boundary of the application62 : they should only be given the amount of
information required to adjust their behaviour if necessary (e.g. fix malformed inputs).
We can visualise this mental model using a 2x2 table with Location as columns and Purpose as rows:
We will spend the rest of the chapter improving our error handling strategy for each of the cells in
the table.
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_fails_if_there_is_a_fatal_database_error() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
// Sabotage the database
sqlx::query!("ALTER TABLE subscription_tokens DROP COLUMN subscription_token;",)
.execute(&app.db_pool)
.await
.unwrap();
// Act
let response = app.post_subscriptions(body.into()).await;
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 500);
}
The test passes straight away - let’s look at the log emitted by the application63 .
62 It is good to keep in mind that the line between a user and an operator can be blurry - e.g. a user might have
access to the source code or they might be running the software on their own hardware. They might have to wear the
operator’s hat at times. For similar scenarios there should be configuration knobs (e.g. --verbose or an environment
variable for a CLI) to clearly inform the software of the human intent so that it can provide diagnostics at the right
level of detail and abstraction.
63 In an ideal scenario we would actually be writing a test to verify the properties of the logs emitted by our application.
This is somewhat cumbersome to do today - I am looking forward to revising this chapter when better tooling becomes
available (or I get nerd-sniped into writing it).
249
Make sure you are running on tracing-actix-web 0.4.0-beta.8,
tracing-bunyan-formatter 0.2.4 and actix-web 4.0.0-beta.8!
# sqlx logs are a bit spammy, cutting them out to reduce noise
export RUST_LOG="sqlx=error,info"
export TEST_LOG=enabled
cargo t subscribe_fails_if_there_is_a_fatal_database_error | bunyan
250
No actionable information whatsoever. Logging “Oops! Something went wrong!” would have been
just as useful.
We need to keep looking, all the way to the last remaining error log:
ERROR: [STORE SUBSCRIPTION TOKEN IN THE DATABASE - EVENT] Failed to execute query:
Database(PgDatabaseError {
severity: Error,
code: "42703",
message:
"column 'subscription_token' of relation
'subscription_tokens' does not exist",
...
})
target=zero2prod::routes::subscriptions
Something went wrong when we tried talking to the database - we were expecting to see a
subscription_token column in the subscription_tokens table but, for some reason, it was not
there.
This is actually useful!
Is it the cause of the 500 though?
Difficult to say just by looking at the logs - a developer will have to clone the codebase, check where
that log line is coming from and make sure that it’s indeed the cause of the issue.
It can be done, but it takes time: it would be much easier if the [HTTP REQUEST - END] log
record reported something useful about the underlying root cause in exception.details and
exception.message.
The useful error log we found is indeed the one emitted by that tracing::error call - the error
message includes the sqlx::Error returned by execute.
We propagate the error upwards using the ? operator, but the chain breaks in subscribe - we discard
the error we received from store_token and build a bare 500 response.
251
HttpResponse::InternalServerError().finish() is the only thing that actix_web and
tracing_actix_web::TracingLogger get to access when they are about to emit their respective log
records. The error does not contain any context about the underlying root cause, therefore the
log records are equally useless.
How do we fix it?
We need to start leveraging the error handling machinery exposed by actix_web - in particular,
actix_web::Error. According to the documentation:
It sounds exactly like what we are looking for. How do we build an instance of actix_web::Error?
The documentation states that
64 I pinky-swear that I am going to submit a PR to actix_web to improve this section of the documentation.
252
|
162 | impl ResponseError for sqlx::Error {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-----------
| | |
| | `sqlx::Error` is not defined in the current crate
| impl doesn't use only types from inside the current crate
|
= note: define and implement a trait or new type instead
We just bumped into Rust’s orphan rule: it is forbidden to implement a foreign trait for a foreign
type, where foreign stands for “from another crate”.
This restriction is meant to preserve coherence: imagine if you added a dependency that defined its
own implementation of ResponseError for sqlx::Error - which one should the compiler use when
the trait methods are invoked?
Orphan rule aside, it would still be a mistake for us to implement ResponseError for sqlx::Error.
We want to return a 500 Internal Server Error when we run into a sqlx::Error while trying to
persist a subscriber token.
In another circumstance we might wish to handle a sqlx::Error differently.
We should follow the compiler’s suggestion: define a new type to wrap sqlx::Error.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
253
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
`StoreTokenError` cannot be formatted using `{:?}`
|
|
59 | pub trait ResponseError: fmt::Debug + fmt::Display {
| ----------
required by this bound in `ResponseError`
|
= help: the trait `std::fmt::Debug` is not implemented for `StoreTokenError`
= note: add `#[derive(Debug)]` or manually implement `std::fmt::Debug`
It compiles!
We can now leverage it in our request handler:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
254
cargo t subscribe_fails_if_there_is_a_fatal_database_error | bunyan
...
INFO: [HTTP REQUEST - END]
exception.details= StoreTokenError(
Database(
PgDatabaseError {
severity: Error,
code: "42703",
message:
"column 'subscription_token' of relation
'subscription_tokens' does not exist",
...
}
)
)
exception.message=
"A database failure was encountered while
trying to store a subscription token.",
target=tracing_actix_web::root_span_builder,
http.status_code=500
Much better!
The log record emitted at the end of request processing now contains both an in-depth and brief
description of the error that caused the application to return a 500 Internal Server Error to the
user.
It is enough to look at this log record to get a pretty accurate picture of everything that matters for
this request.
The Error trait is, first and foremost, a way to semantically mark our type as being an error. It
255
helps a reader of our codebase to immediately spot its purpose.
It is also a way for the Rust community to standardise on the minimum requirements for a good
error:
• it should provide different representations (Debug and Display), tuned to different audiences;
• it should be possible to look at the underlying cause of the error, if any (source).
This list is still evolving - e.g. there is an unstable backtrace method.
Error handling is an active area of research in the Rust community - if you are interested in staying
on top of what is coming next I strongly suggest you to keep an eye on the Rust Error Handling
Working Group.
By providing a good implementation of all the optional methods we can fully leverage the error
handling ecosystem - functions that have been designed to work with errors, generically. We will be
writing one in a couple of sections!
8.2.2.1 Trait Objects Before we work on implementing source, let’s take a closer look at its
return - Option<&(dyn Error + 'static)>.
dyn Error is a trait object65 - a type that we know nothing about apart from the fact that it
implements the Error trait.
Trait objects, just like generic type parameters, are a way to achieve polymorphism in Rust: invoke
different implementations of the same interface. Generic types are resolved at compile-time (static
dispatch), trait objects incur a runtime cost (dynamic dispatch).
Why does the standard library return a trait object?
It gives developers a way to access the underlying root cause of current error while keeping it opaque.
It does not leak any information about the type of the underlying root cause - you only get access to
the methods exposed by the Error trait66 : different representations (Debug, Display), the chance to
go one level deeper in the error chain using source.
source is useful when writing code that needs to handle a variety of errors: it provides a structured
way to navigate the error chain without having to know anything about the specific error type you
are working with.
If we look at our log record, the causal relationship between StoreTokenError and sqlx::Error is
somewhat implicit - we infer one is the cause of the other because it is a part of it.
...
INFO: [HTTP REQUEST - END]
exception.details= StoreTokenError(
Database(
PgDatabaseError {
severity: Error,
code: "42703",
message:
65 Check out the relevant chapter in the Rust book for an in-depth introduction to trait objects.
66 The Error trait provides a downcast_ref which can be used to obtain a concrete type back from dyn Error,
assuming you know what type to downcast to. There are legitimate usecases for downcasting, but if you find yourself
reaching for it too often it might be a sign that something is not quite right in your design/error handling strategy.
256
"column 'subscription_token' of relation
'subscription_tokens' does not exist",
...
}
)
)
exception.message=
"A database failure was encountered while
trying to store a subscription token.",
target=tracing_actix_web::root_span_builder,
http.status_code=500
Let’s go for something more explicit:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
Caused by:
error returned from database: column 'subscription_token'
of relation 'subscription_tokens' does not exist"
exception.message=
"A database failure was encountered while
trying to store a subscription token.",
target=tracing_actix_web::root_span_builder,
http.status_code=500
exception.details is easier to read and still conveys all the relevant information we had there
before.
Using source we can write a function that provides a similar representation for any type that imple-
ments Error:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
fn error_chain_fmt(
e: &impl std::error::Error,
f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>,
) -> std::fmt::Result {
writeln!(f, "{}\n", e)?;
let mut current = e.source();
while let Some(cause) = current {
writeln!(f, "Caused by:\n\t{}", cause)?;
current = cause.source();
}
Ok(())
257
}
It iterates over the whole chain of errors67 that led to the failure we are trying to print.
We can then change our implementation of Debug for StoreTokenError to use it:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
The result is identical - and we can reuse it when working with other errors if we want a similar Debug
representation.
// Nuke it!
impl ResponseError for StoreTokenError {}
To enforce a proper separation of concerns we need to introduce another error type, SubscribeError.
We will use it as failure variant for subscribe and it will own the HTTP-related logic
(ResponseError’s implementation).
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[derive(Debug)]
struct SubscribeError {}
258
}
If you run cargo check you will see an avalanche of '?' couldn't convert the error to
'SubscribeError' - we need to implement conversions from the error types returned by our
functions and SubscribeError.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
ValidationError(String),
DatabaseError(sqlx::Error),
StoreTokenError(StoreTokenError),
SendEmailError(reqwest::Error),
}
We can then leverage the ? operator in our handler by providing a From implementation for each of
wrapped error types:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
We can now clean up our request handler by removing all those match / if fallible_function().is_err()
lines:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
259
let new_subscriber = form.0.try_into()?;
let mut transaction = pool.begin().await?;
let subscriber_id = insert_subscriber(/* */).await?;
let subscription_token = generate_subscription_token();
store_token(/* */).await?;
transaction.commit().await?;
send_confirmation_email(/* */).await?;
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok().finish())
}
We are still using the default implementation of ResponseError - it always returns 500.
This is where enums shine: we can use a match statement for control flow - we behave differently
depending on the failure scenario we are dealing with.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
use actix_web::http::StatusCode;
// [...]
...
INFO: [HTTP REQUEST - END]
exception.details="StoreTokenError(
A database failure was encountered while trying to
store a subscription token.
Caused by:
error returned from database: column 'subscription_token'
of relation 'subscription_tokens' does not exist)"
exception.message="Failed to create a new subscriber.",
target=tracing_actix_web::root_span_builder,
http.status_code=500
We are still getting a great representation for the underlying StoreTokenError in exception.details,
but it shows that we are now using the derived Debug implementation for SubscribeError. No loss
of information though.
260
The same cannot be said for exception.message - no matter the failure mode, we always get Failed
to create a new subscriber. Not very useful.
Let’s refine our Debug and Display implementations:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
Debug is easily sorted: we implemented the Error trait for SubscribeError, including source, and
we can use again the helper function we wrote earlier for StoreTokenError.
We have a problem when it comes to Display - the same DatabaseError variant is used for errors
encountered when:
• acquiring a new Postgres connection from the pool;
• inserting a subscriber in the subscribers table;
• committing the SQL transaction.
When implementing Display for SubscribeError we have no way to distinguish which of those three
cases we are dealing with - the underlying error type is not enough.
Let’s disambiguate by using a different enum variant for each operation:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
261
PoolError(sqlx::Error),
InsertSubscriberError(sqlx::Error),
TransactionCommitError(sqlx::Error),
}
The type alone is not enough to distinguish which of the new variants should be used; we cannot
262
implement From for sqlx::Error.
We have to use map_err to perform the right conversion in each case.
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [..]
Caused by:
A database failure was encountered while trying to store
a subscription token.
Caused by:
error returned from database: column 'subscription_token'
of relation 'subscription_tokens' does not exist"
exception.message="Failed to store the confirmation token for a new subscriber.",
target=tracing_actix_web::root_span_builder,
http.status_code=500
[dependencies]
# [...]
thiserror = "1"
It provides a derive macro to generate most of the code we just wrote by hand.
Let’s see it in action:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
263
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("{0}")]
ValidationError(String),
#[error("Failed to acquire a Postgres connection from the pool")]
PoolError(#[source] sqlx::Error),
#[error("Failed to insert new subscriber in the database.")]
InsertSubscriberError(#[source] sqlx::Error),
#[error("Failed to store the confirmation token for a new subscriber.")]
StoreTokenError(#[from] StoreTokenError),
#[error("Failed to commit SQL transaction to store a new subscriber.")]
TransactionCommitError(#[source] sqlx::Error),
#[error("Failed to send a confirmation email.")]
SendEmailError(#[from] reqwest::Error),
}
264
• Determine the response that should be returned to the caller of our API (ResponseError);
• Provide relevant diagnostic (Error::source, Debug, Display).
SubscribeError, as currently defined, exposes a lot of the implementation details of subscribe: we
have a variant for every fallible function call we make in the request handler!
It is not a strategy that scales very well.
We need to think in terms of abstraction layers: what does a caller of subscribe need to know?
They should be able to determine what response to return to a user (via ResponseError). That’s it.
The caller of subscribe does not understand the intricacies of the subscription flow: they don’t
know enough about the domain to behave differently for a SendEmailError compared to a
TransactionCommitError (by design!). subscribe should return an error type that speaks at the
right level of abstraction.
The ideal error type would look like this:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("{0}")]
ValidationError(String),
#[error(/* */)]
UnexpectedError(/* */),
}
ValidationError maps to a 400 Bad Request, UnexpectedError maps to an opaque 500 Internal
Server Error.
What should we store in the UnexpectedError variant?
We need to map multiple error types into it - sqlx::Error, StoreTokenError, reqwest::Error.
We do not want to expose the implementation details of the fallible routines that get mapped to
UnexpectedError by subscribe - it must be opaque.
We bumped into a type that fulfills those requirements when looking at the Error trait from Rust’s
standard library: Box<dyn std::error::Error>!68
Let’s give it a go:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("{0}")]
ValidationError(String),
// Transparent delegates both `Display`'s and `source`'s implementation
// to the type wrapped by `UnexpectedError`.
#[error(transparent)]
UnexpectedError(#[from] Box<dyn std::error::Error>),
}
trait objects can be used to store different types which will most likely have a different layout in memory. To use Rust’s
terminology, they are unsized - they do not implement the Sized marker trait. A Box stores the trait object itself on
the heap, while we store the pointer to its heap location in SubscribeError::UnexpectedError - the pointer itself has
a known size at compile-time - problem solved, we are Sized again.
265
SubscribeError::ValidationError(_) => StatusCode::BAD_REQUEST,
SubscribeError::UnexpectedError(_) => StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
}
}
}
We just need to adapt subscribe to properly convert our errors before using the ? operator:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn subscribe_fails_if_there_is_a_fatal_database_error() {
// [...]
// Break `subscriptions` instead of `subscription_tokens`
sqlx::query!("ALTER TABLE subscriptions DROP COLUMN email;",)
.execute(&app.db_pool)
.await
.unwrap();
// [..]
}
The test passes, but we can see that our logs have regressed:
INFO: [HTTP REQUEST - END]
exception.details:
"error returned from database: column 'email' of
relation 'subscriptions' does not exist"
exception.message:
"error returned from database: column 'email' of
266
relation 'subscriptions' does not exist"
We do not see a cause chain anymore.
We lost the operator-friendly error message that was previously attached to the InsertSubscriberError
via thiserror:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("Failed to insert new subscriber in the database.")]
InsertSubscriberError(#[source] sqlx::Error),
// [...]
}
That is to be expected: we are forwarding the raw error now to Display (via #[error(transparent)]),
we are not attaching any additional context to it in subscribe.
We can fix it - let’s add a new String field to UnexpectedError to attach contextual information
to the opaque error we are storing:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("{0}")]
ValidationError(String),
#[error("{1}")]
UnexpectedError(#[source] Box<dyn std::error::Error>, String),
}
We need to adjust our mapping code in subscribe accordingly - we will reuse the error descriptions
we had before refactoring SubscribeError:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
267
// [..]
store_token(/* */)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
SubscribeError::UnexpectedError(
Box::new(e),
"Failed to store the confirmation token for a new subscriber.".into(),
)
})?;
transaction.commit().await.map_err(|e| {
SubscribeError::UnexpectedError(
Box::new(e),
"Failed to commit SQL transaction to store a new subscriber.".into(),
)
})?;
send_confirmation_email(/* */)
.await
.map_err(|e| {
SubscribeError::UnexpectedError(
Box::new(e),
"Failed to send a confirmation email.".into()
)
})?;
// [..]
}
Caused by:
error returned from database: column 'email' of
relation 'subscriptions' does not exist"
exception.message="Failed to insert new subscriber in the database."
[dependencies]
# [...]
anyhow = "1"
The type we are looking for is anyhow::Error. Quoting the documentation:
anyhow::Error is a wrapper around a dynamic error type. anyhow::Error works a lot like
Box<dyn std::error::Error>, but with these differences:
• anyhow::Error requires that the error is Send, Sync, and 'static.
• anyhow::Error guarantees that a backtrace is available, even if the underlying error
type does not provide one.
• anyhow::Error is represented as a narrow pointer — exactly one word in size instead
of two.
69 It turns out that we are speaking of the same person that authored serde, syn, quote and many other foundational
crates in the Rust ecosystem - @dtolnay. Consider sponsoring their OSS work.
268
The additional constraints (Send, Sync and 'static) are not an issue for us.
We appreciate the more compact representation and the option to access a backtrace, if we were to
be interested in it.
Let’s replace Box<dyn std::error::Error> with anyhow::Error in SubscribeError:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum SubscribeError {
#[error("{0}")]
ValidationError(String),
#[error(transparent)]
UnexpectedError(#[from] anyhow::Error),
}
269
context is provided by the Context trait - anyhow implements it for Result70 , giving us access to a
fluent API to easily work with fallible functions of all kinds.
types exposed by the standard library (or other common crates in the ecosystem).
270
• one emitted by tracing_actix_web::TracingLogger, our telemetry middleware.
We do not need to see the same information three times - we are emitting unnecessary log records
which, instead of helping, make it more confusing for operators to understand what is happening (are
those logs reporting the same error? Am I dealing with three different errors?).
As a rule of thumb,
If your function is propagating the error upstream (e.g. using the ? operator), it should not log the
error. It can, if it makes sense, add more context to it.
If the error is propagated all the way up to the request handler, delegate logging to a dedicated
middleware - tracing_actix_web::TracingLogger in our case.
The log record emitted by actix_web is going to be removed in the next release. Let’s ignore it for
now.
Let’s review the tracing::error statements in our own code:
//! src/routes/subscriptions.rs
// [...]
8.6 Summary
We used this chapter to learn error handling patterns “the hard way” - building an ugly but working
prototype first, refining it later using popular crates from the ecosystem.
You should now have:
• a solid grasp on the different purposes fulfilled by errors in an application;
• the most appropriate tools to fulfill them.
Internalise the mental model we discussed (Location as columns, Purpose as rows):
271
Internal At the edge
Control Flow Types, methods, fields Status codes
Reporting Logs/traces Response body
Practice what you learned: we worked on the subscribe request handler, tackle confirm as an
exercise to verify your understanding of the concepts we covered. Improve the response returned to
the user when validation of form data fails.
You can look at the code in the GitHub repository as a reference implementation.
Some of the themes we discussed in this chapter (e.g. layering and abstraction boundaries) will make
another appearance when talking about the overall layout and structure of our application. Something
to look forward to!
272
9 Naive Newsletter Delivery
Our project is not yet a viable newsletter service: it cannot send out a new episode!
We will use this chapter to boostrap newsletter delivery using a naive implementation.
It will be an opportunity to deepen our understanding of techniques we touched upon in pre-
vious chapters while building the foundation for tackling more advanced topics (e.g. authentica-
tion/authorization, fault tolerance).
It looks simple, at least on the surface. The devil, as always, is in the details.
For example, in Chapter 7 we refined our domain model of a subscriber - we now have confirmed
and unconfirmed subscribers.
Which ones should receive our newsletter issues?
That user story, as it stands, cannot help us - it was written before we started to make the distinction!
Make a habit of revisiting user stories throughout the lifecycle of a project.
When you spend time working on a problem you end up deepening your understanding of its domain.
You often acquire a more precise language that can be used to refine earlier attempts of describing
the desired functionality.
For this specific case: we only want newsletter issues to be sent to confirmed subscribers. Let’s
amend the user story accordingly:
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
use crate::helpers::{spawn_app, TestApp};
use wiremock::matchers::{any, method, path};
use wiremock::{Mock, ResponseTemplate};
#[tokio::test]
273
async fn newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
create_unconfirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
Mock::given(any())
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
// We assert that no request is fired at Postmark!
.expect(0)
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 200);
// Mock verifies on Drop that we haven't sent the newsletter email
}
/// Use the public API of the application under test to create
/// an unconfirmed subscriber.
async fn create_unconfirmed_subscriber(app: &TestApp) {
let body = "name=le%20guin&email=ursula_le_guin%40gmail.com";
It fails, as expected:
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `404`,
right: `200`'
There is no handler in our API for POST /newsletters: actix-web returns a 404 Not Found instead
of the 200 OK the test is expecting.
274
9.2.1 Set Up State Using The Public API
Let’s take a moment to look at the Arrange section for the test we just wrote.
Our test scenario makes some assumptions on the state of our application: we need to have one
subscriber and they must be unconfirmed.
Each test spins up a brand-new application running on top of an empty database.
let app = spawn_app().await;
We use the API client we built as part of TestApp to make a POST call to the /subscriptions
endpoint.
With mount, the behaviour we specify remains active as long as the underlying MockServer is up and
running.
With mount_as_scoped, instead, we get back a guard object - a MockGuard.
MockGuard has a custom Drop implementation: when it goes out of scope, wiremock instructs the
underlying MockServer to stop honouring the specified mock behaviour. In other words, we stop
returning 200 to POST /email at the end of create_unconfirmed_subscriber.
The mock behaviour needed for our test helper stays local to the test helper itself.
275
One more thing happens when a MockGuard is dropped - we eagerly check that expectations on the
scoped mock are verified.
This creates a useful feedback loop to keep our test helpers clean and up-to-date.
We have already witnessed how black-box testing pushes us to write an API client for our own appli-
cation to keep our tests concise.
Over time, you build more and more helper functions to drive the application state - just like we just
did with create_unconfirmed_subscriber. These helpers rely on mocks but, as the application
evolves, some of those mocks end up no longer being necessary - a call gets removed, you stop using
a certain provider, etc.
Eager evaluation of expectations for scoped mocks helps us to keep helper code in check and proac-
tively clean up where possible.
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
// Dummy implementation
pub async fn publish_newsletter() -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::Ok().finish()
}
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
use crate::routes::{confirm, health_check, publish_newsletter, subscribe};
276
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
Nothing needs to change in our existing test and we can immediately leverage create_confirmed_subscriber
in the new one:
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
create_confirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
// Act
let newsletter_request_body = serde_json::json!({
277
"title": "Newsletter title",
"content": {
"text": "Newsletter body as plain text",
"html": "<p>Newsletter body as HTML</p>",
}
});
let response = reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/newsletters", &app.address))
.json(&newsletter_request_body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 200);
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email
}
It fails, as it should:
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers' panicked at
Verifications failed:
- Mock #1.
Expected range of matching incoming requests: == 1
Number of matched incoming requests: 0
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct BodyData {
title: String,
content: Content
}
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct Content {
html: String,
278
text: String
}
serde does not have any issue with our nested layout given that all field types in BodyData imple-
ment serde::Deserialize. We can then use an actix-web extractor to parse BodyData out of the
incoming request body. There is just one question to answer: what serialization format are we using?
For POST /subscriptions, given that we were dealing with HTML forms, we used application/x-www-form-urlencode
as Content-Type.
For POST /newsletters we are not tied to a form embedded in a web page: we will use JSON, a
common choice when building REST APIs.
The corresponding extractor is actix_web::web::Json:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::web;
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_returns_400_for_invalid_data() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let test_cases = vec![
(
serde_json::json!({
"content": {
"text": "Newsletter body as plain text",
"html": "<p>Newsletter body as HTML</p>",
}
}),
"missing title",
),
(
serde_json::json!({"title": "Newsletter!"}),
"missing content",
),
];
// Assert
assert_eq!(
400,
279
response.status().as_u16(),
"The API did not fail with 400 Bad Request when the payload was {}.",
error_message
);
}
}
The new test passes - you can add a few more cases if you want to.
Let’s seize the occasion to refactor a bit and remove some code duplication - we can extract the logic
to fire a request to POST /newsletters into a shared helper method on TestApp, as we did for POST
/subscriptions:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
pub async fn post_newsletters(&self, body: serde_json::Value) -> reqwest::Response {
reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/newsletters", &self.address))
.json(&body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
}
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
let response = app.post_newsletters(newsletter_request_body).await;
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
let response = app.post_newsletters(newsletter_request_body).await;
// [...]
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_returns_400_for_invalid_data() {
// [...]
for (invalid_body, error_message) in test_cases {
let response = app.post_newsletters(invalid_body).await;
// [...]
}
}
280
struct ConfirmedSubscriber {
email: String,
}
SQL queries may fail and so does get_confirmed_subscribers - we need to change the return type
of publish_newsletter.
We need to return a Result with an appropriate error type, just like we did in the last chapter:
281
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::ResponseError;
use sqlx::PgPool;
use crate::routes::error_chain_fmt;
use actix_web::http::StatusCode;
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum PublishError {
#[error(transparent)]
UnexpectedError(#[from] anyhow::Error),
}
Using what we learned in Chapter 8 it doesn’t take that much to roll out a new error type!
Let me remark that we are future-proofing our code a bit: we modelled PublishError as an enumera-
tion, but we only have one variant at the moment. A struct (or actix_web::error::InternalError)
would have been more than enough for the time being.
cargo check should succeed now.
282
.send_email(
subscriber.email,
&body.title,
&body.content.html,
&body.content.text,
)
.await?;
}
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok().finish())
}
It almost works:
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/routes/newsletters.rs
|
48 | subscriber.email,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| expected struct `SubscriberEmail`,
| found struct `std::string::String`
283
string. Using context, we would be allocating that string every time we send an email out.
Using with_context, instead, we only invoke format! if email delivery fails.
We are not performing any validation on the data we retrieve from the database - ConfirmedSubscriber::email
is of type String.
EmailClient::send_email, instead, expects a validated email address - a SubscriberEmail
instance.
We can try the naive solution first - change ConfirmedSubscriber::email to be of type
SubscriberEmail.
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
struct ConfirmedSubscriber {
email: SubscriberEmail,
}
sqlx doesn’t like it - it does not know how to convert a TEXT column into SubscriberEmail.
284
We could scan sqlx’s documentation for a way to implement support for custom type - a lot of trouble
for a minor upside.
We can follow a similar approach to the one we deployed for our POST /subscriptions endpoint -
we use two structs:
• one encodes the data layout we expect on the wire (FormData);
• the other one is built by parsing the raw representation, using our domain types
(NewSubscriber).
For our query, it looks like this:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
struct ConfirmedSubscriber {
email: SubscriberEmail,
}
285
of our application.
The emails we are retrieving from our database were marked as a valid by a previous version of our
application. The current version might disagree.
We might discover, for example, that our email validation logic is too lenient - some invalid emails are
slipping through the cracks, leading to issues when attempting to deliver newsletters. We implement
a stricter validation routine, deploy the patched version and, suddenly, email delivery does not work
at all!
get_confirmed_subscribers panics when processing stored emails that were previously considered
valid, but no longer are.
What should we do, then?
Should we skip validation entirely when retrieving data from the database?
There is no one-size-fits-all answer.
You need to evaluate the issue on a case by case basis given the requirements of your domain.
Sometimes it is unacceptable to process invalid records - the routine should fail and an operator must
intervene to rectify the corrupt records.
Sometimes we need to process all historical records (e.g. analytics) and we should make minimal
assumptions about the data - String is our safest bet.
In our case, we can meet half-way: we can skip invalid emails when fetching the list of recipients
for our next newsletter issue. We will emit a warning for every invalid address we find, allowing an
operator to identify the issue and correct the stored records at a certain point in the future.
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
async fn get_confirmed_subscribers(
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<Vec<ConfirmedSubscriber>, anyhow::Error> {
// [...]
filter_map is a handy combinator - it returns a new iterator containing only the items for which
our closure returned a Some variant.
286
domain layer. It deals with the database-specific bits (i.e. the query) and the mapping logic, but it
delegates to the caller the decision on what to do if the mapping or the query fail.
Let’s refactor:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
async fn get_confirmed_subscribers(
pool: &PgPool,
// We are returning a `Vec` of `Result`s in the happy case.
// This allows the caller to bubble up errors due to network issues or other
// transient failures using the `?` operator, while the compiler
// forces them to handle the subtler mapping error.
// See http://sled.rs/errors.html for a deep-dive about this technique.
) -> Result<Vec<Result<ConfirmedSubscriber, anyhow::Error>>, anyhow::Error> {
// [...]
287
tracing::warn!(
// We record the error chain as a structured field
// on the log record.
error.cause_chain = ?error,
// Using `\` to split a long string literal over
// two lines, without creating a `\n` character.
"Skipping a confirmed subscriber. \
Their stored contact details are invalid",
);
}
}
}
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok().finish())
}
This is caused by our type change for email in ConfirmedSubscriber, from String to
SubscriberEmail.
Let’s implement Display for our new type:
//! src/domain/subscriber_email.rs
// [...]
Progress! Different compiler error, this time from the borrow checker!
error[E0382]: borrow of partially moved value: `subscriber`
--> src/routes/newsletters.rs
|
52 | subscriber.email,
| ---------------- value partially moved here
...
58 | .with_context(|| {
| ^^ value borrowed here after partial move
59 | format!("Failed to send newsletter issue to {}", subscriber.email)
| ----------
borrow occurs due to use in closure
We could just slap a .clone() on the first usage and call it a day.
But let’s try to be sophisticated: do we really need to take ownership of SubscriberEmail in
EmailClient::send_email?
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
288
&self,
recipient: SubscriberEmail,
/* */
) -> Result<(), reqwest::Error> {
// [...]
let request_body = SendEmailRequest {
to: recipient.as_ref(),
// [...]
};
// [...]
}
We just need to be able to call as_ref on it - a &SubscriberEmail would work just fine.
Let’s change the signature accordingly:
//! src/email_client.rs
// [...]
There are a few calling sites that need to be updated - the compiler is gentle enough to point them
out. I’ll leave the fixes to you, the reader, as an exercise.
The test suite should pass when you are done.
289
}
290
5. Retry Safety
Many things can go wrong when communicating over the network. What should a consumer of
our API do if they experience a timeout or a 500 Internal Server Error when calling our
service?
They cannot retry - they risk sending the newsletter issue twice to the entire mailing list.
Number 2. and 3. are annoying, but we could live with them for a while.
Number 4. and 5. are fairly serious limitations, with a visible impact on our audience.
Number 1. is simply non-negotiable: we must protect the endpoint before releasing our API.
9.10 Summary
We built a prototype of our newsletter delivery logic: it satisfies our functional requirements, but it
is not yet ready for prime time.
The shortcomings of our MVP will become the focus of the next chapters, in priority order: we will
tackle authentication/authorization first before moving on to fault tolerance.
291
10 Securing Our API
In Chapter 9 we added a new endpoint to our API - POST /newsletters.
It takes a newsletter issue as input and sends emails out to all our subscribers.
We have an issue though - anybody can hit the API and broadcast whatever they want to our entire
mailing list.
It is time to level up our API security toolbox.
We will introduce the concepts of authentication and authorization, evaluate various approaches
(Basic auth, session-based auth, OAuth 2.0, OpenId Connect) and discuss the benefits (and pitfalls)
of one of the most used token formats, JSON Web Tokens (JWTs).
This chapter, like others in the book, chooses to “do it wrong” first for teaching purposes.
Make sure to read until the end if you don’t want to pick up bad security habits!
10.1 Authentication
We need a way to verify who is calling POST /newsletters.
Only a handful of people, the ones in charge of the content, should be able to send emails out to the
entire mailing list.
We need to find a way to verify the identity of API callers - we must authenticate them.
How?
By asking for something they are uniquely positioned to provide.
There are various approaches, but they all boil down to three categories:
1. Something they know (e.g. passwords, PINs, security questions);
2. Something they have (e.g. a smartphone, using an authenticator app);
3. Something they are (e.g. fingerprints, Apple’s Face ID).
Each approach has its weaknesses.
10.1.1 Drawbacks
10.1.1.1 Something They Know Passwords must be long - short ones are vulnerable to brute-
force attacks.
Passwords must be unique - publicly available information (e.g. date of birth, names of family mem-
bers, etc.) should not give an attacker any chance to “guess” a password.
Passwords should not be reused across multiple services - if any of them gets compromised you risk
granting access to all the other services sharing the same password.
On average, a person has 100 or more online accounts - they cannot be asked to remember hundreds
of long unique passwords by heart.
Password managers help, but they are not mainstream yet and the user experience is often sub-
optimal.
10.1.1.2 Something They Have Smartphones and U2F keys can be lost, locking the user out
of their accounts.
They can also be stolen or compromised, giving an attacker a window of opportunity to impersonate
the victim.
10.1.1.3 Something They Are Biometrics, unlike passwords, cannot be changed - you cannot
“rotate” your fingerprint or change the pattern of your retina’s blood vessel.
Forging a fingerprint turns out to be easier than most would imagine - it is also information often
available to government agencies who might abuse it or lose it.
292
10.1.2 Multi-factor Authentication
What should we do then, given that each approach has its own flaws?
Well, we could combine them!
That is pretty much what multi-factor authentication (MFA) boils down to - it requires the user
to provide at least two different types of authentication factors in order to get access.
10.2.1.1 Extracting Credentials Extracting username and password from the incoming request
will be our first milestone.
Let’s start with an unhappy case - an incoming request without an Authorization header is rejected.
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn requests_missing_authorization_are_rejected() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
293
"text": "Newsletter body as plain text",
"html": "<p>Newsletter body as HTML</p>",
}
}))
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.");
// Assert
assert_eq!(401, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(r#"Basic realm="publish""#, response.headers()["WWW-Authenticate"]);
}
struct Credentials {
username: String,
password: Secret<String>,
}
To extract the credentials we will need to deal with the base64 encoding.
Let’s add the base64 crate as a dependency:
[dependencies]
# [...]
base64 = "0.13"
We can now write down the body of basic_authentication:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
294
.context("The 'Authorization' header was not a valid UTF8 string.")?;
let base64encoded_segment = header_value
.strip_prefix("Basic ")
.context("The authorization scheme was not 'Basic'.")?;
let decoded_bytes = base64::decode_config(base64encoded_segment, base64::STANDARD)
.context("Failed to base64-decode 'Basic' credentials.")?;
let decoded_credentials = String::from_utf8(decoded_bytes)
.context("The decoded credential string is not valid UTF8.")?;
Ok(Credentials {
username,
password: Secret::new(password)
})
}
Take a moment to go through the code, line by line, and fully understand what is happening. Many
operations that could go wrong!
Having the RFC open, side to side with the book, helps!
We are not done yet - our test is still failing.
We need to act on the error returned by basic_authentication:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum PublishError {
// New error variant!
#[error("Authentication failed.")]
AuthError(#[source] anyhow::Error),
#[error(transparent)]
UnexpectedError(#[from] anyhow::Error),
}
295
Our status code assertion is now happy, the header one not yet:
thread 'newsletter::requests_missing_authorization_are_rejected' panicked at
'no entry found for key "WWW-Authenticate"'
So far it has been enough to specify which status code to return for each error - now we need
something more, a header.
We need to change our focus from ResponseError::status_code to ResponseError::error_response:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::http::{StatusCode, header};
use actix_web::http::header::{HeaderMap, HeaderValue};
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `401`,
right: `200`'
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `401`,
right: `200`'
POST /newsletters is now rejecting all unauthenticated requests, including the ones we were making
in our happy-path black-box tests.
We can stop the bleeding by providing a random combination of username and password:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
pub async fn post_newsletters(&self, body: serde_json::Value) -> reqwest::Response {
296
reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/newsletters", &self.address))
// Random credentials!
// `reqwest` does all the encoding/formatting heavy-lifting for us.
.basic_auth(Uuid::new_v4().to_string(), Some(Uuid::new_v4().to_string()))
.json(&body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
// [...]
}
We can then update our handler to query it every time we perform authentication:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let user_id: Option<_> = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT user_id
FROM users
WHERE username = $1 AND password = $2
"#,
credentials.username,
credentials.password.expose_secret()
)
.fetch_optional(pool)
.await
.context("Failed to perform a query to validate auth credentials.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?;
user_id
.map(|row| row.user_id)
.ok_or_else(|| anyhow::anyhow!("Invalid username or password."))
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)
}
297
pub async fn publish_newsletter(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, PublishError> {
let credentials = basic_authentication(request.headers())
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)?;
let user_id = validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await?;
// [...]
}
It would be a good idea to record who is calling POST /newsletters - let’s add a tracing span
around our handler:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Publish a newsletter issue",
skip(body, pool, email_client, request),
fields(username=tracing::field::Empty, user_id=tracing::field::Empty)
)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, PublishError> {
let credentials = basic_authentication(request.headers())
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)?;
tracing::Span::current().record(
"username",
&tracing::field::display(&credentials.username)
);
let user_id = validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await?;
tracing::Span::current().record("user_id", &tracing::field::display(&user_id));
// [...]
}
We now need to update our happy-path tests to specify a username-password pair that is accepted
by validate_credentials.
We will generate a test user for every instance of our test application. We have not yet implemented
a sign-up flow for newsletter editors, therefore we cannot go for a fully black-box approach - for the
time being we will inject the test user details directly into the database:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
TestApp will provide a helper method to retrieve its username and password
298
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
which we will then be calling from our post_newsletters method, instead of using random creden-
tials:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
10.2.3.1 No Need To Store Raw Passwords Why are we even storing passwords in the first
place?
We need to perform an equality check - every time a user tries to authenticate we verify that the
password they provided matches the password we were expecting.
If equality is all we care about, we can start devising a more sophisticated strategy.
We could, for example, transform the passwords by applying a function before comparing them.
All deterministic functions return the same output given the same input.
Let f be our deterministic function: psw_candidate == expected_psw implies f(psw_candidate)
== f(expected_psw).
This is not enough though - what if f returned hello for every possible input string? Password
verification would succeed no matter the input provided.
We need to go in the opposite direction: if f(psw_candidate) == f(expected_psw) then
psw_candidate == expected_psw.
299
This is possible assuming that our function f has an additional property: it must be injective - if x
!= y then f(x) != f(y).
If we had such a function f, we could avoid storing the raw password altogether: when a user signs
up, we compute f(password) and store it in our database. password is discarded.
When the same user tries to sign in, we compute f(psw_candidate) and check that it matches the
f(password) value we stored during sign-up. The raw password is never persisted.
Does this actually improve our security posture?
It depends on f!
It is not that difficult to define an injective function - the reverse function, f("hello") = "olleh",
satisfies our criteria. It is equally easy to guess how to invert the transformation to recover the
original password - it doesn’t hinder an attacker.
We could make the transformation a lot more complicated - complicated enough to make it cumber-
some for an attacker to find the inverse transformation.
Even that might not be enough. It is often sufficient for an attacker to be able to recover some
properties of the input (e.g. length) from the output to mount, for example, a targeted brute-force
attack.
We need something stronger - there should be no relationship between how similar two inputs x and
y are and how similar the corresponding outputs f(x) and f(y) are.
We want a cryptographic hash function.
Hash functions map strings from the input space to fixed-length outputs.
The adjective cryptographic refers to the uniformity property we were just discussing, also known
as avalanche effect: a tiny difference in inputs leads to outputs so different to the point of looking
uncorrelated.
There is a caveat: hash functions are not injective72 , there is a tiny risk of collisions - if f(x) ==
f(y) there is a high probability (not 100%!) that x == y.
10.2.3.2 Using A Cryptographic Hash Enough with the theory - let’s update our implemen-
tation to hash passwords before storing them.
There are several cryptographic hash functions out there - MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2, SHA-3, Kanga-
rooTwelve, etc.
We are not going to delve deep into the pros and cons of each algorithm - it is pointless when it comes
to passwords, for reasons that will become clear in a few pages.
For the sake of this section, let’s move forward with SHA-3, the latest addition to the Secure Hash
Algorithms family.
On top of the algorithm, we also need to choose the output size - e.g. SHA3-224 uses the SHA-3
algorithm to produce a fixed-sized output of 224 bits.
The options are 224, 256, 384 and 512. The longer the output, the more unlikely we are to experience
a collision. On the flip side, we will need more storage and consume more bandwidth by using longer
hashes.
SHA3-256 should be more than enough for our usecase.
The Rust Crypto organization provides an implementation of SHA-3, the sha3 crate. Let’s add it to
our dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
#! [...]
[dependencies]
# [...]
sha3 = "0.9"
For clarity, let’s rename our password column to password_hash:
72 Assuming that the input space is finite (i.e. password length is capped), it is theoretically possible to find a perfect
300
sqlx migrate add rename_password_column
-- migrations/20210815112028_rename_password_column.sql
ALTER TABLE users RENAME password TO password_hash;
sqlx::query! spotted that one of our queries is using a column that no longer exists in the current
schema.
Compile-time verification of SQL queries is quite neat, isn’t it?
Our validate_credentials function looks like this:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
//! [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let user_id: Option<_> = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT user_id
FROM users
WHERE username = $1 AND password = $2
"#,
credentials.username,
credentials.password.expose_secret()
)
// [...]
}
301
// [...]
}
Digest::digest returns a fixed-length array of bytes, while our password_hash column is of type
TEXT, a string.
We could change the schema of the users table to store password_hash as binary. Alternatively, we
can encode the bytes returned by Digest::digest in a string using the hexadecimal format.
Let’s spare ourselves another migration by using the second option:
//! [...]
The application code should compile now. The test suite, instead, requires a bit more work.
The test_user helper method was recovering a set of valid credentials by querying the users table
- this is no longer viable now that we are storing hashes instead of raw passwords!
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
//! [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
302
Uuid::new_v4().to_string(),
Uuid::new_v4().to_string(),
)
.execute(pool)
.await
.expect("Failed to create test users.");
}
We need TestApp to store the randomly generated password in order for us to access it in our helper
methods.
Let’s start by creating a new helper struct, TestUser:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
//! [...]
use sha3::Digest;
impl TestUser {
pub fn generate() -> Self {
Self {
user_id: Uuid::new_v4(),
username: Uuid::new_v4().to_string(),
password: Uuid::new_v4().to_string()
}
}
303
test_user: TestUser::generate()
};
test_app.test_user.store(&test_app.db_pool).await;
test_app
}
impl TestApp {
// [..]
pub async fn post_newsletters(&self, body: serde_json::Value) -> reqwest::Response {
reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/newsletters", &self.address))
.basic_auth(&self.test_user.username, Some(&self.test_user.password))
// [...]
}
}
10.2.3.3 Preimage Attack Is SHA3-256 enough to protect our users’ passwords if an attacker
gets their hands on our users table?
Let’s imagine that the attack wants to crack a specific password hash in our database.
The attacker does not even need to retrieve the original password. To authenticate successfully they
just need to find an input string s whose SHA3-256 hash matches the password they are trying to
crack - in other words, a collision.
This is known as a preimage attack.
How hard is it?
The math is a bit tricky, but a brute-force attack has an exponential time complexity - 2^n, where
n is the hash length in bits.
If n > 128, it is considered unfeasible to compute.
Unless a vulnerability is found in SHA-3, we do not need to worry about preimage attacks against
SHA3-256.
10.2.3.4 Naive Dictionary Attack We are not hashing arbitrary inputs though - we can reduce
the search space by making some assumptions on the original password: how long was it? What
symbols were used?
Let’s imagine we are looking for an alphanumeric password that is shorter than 17 characters73 .
We can count the number of password candidates:
// (26 letters + 10 number symbols) ^ Password Length
// for all allowed password lengths
36^1 +
36^2 +
... +
36^16
304
Even if we were to parallelise our search using a million GPUs, it would still take ~10^9 seconds -
roughly 30 years74 .
10.2.3.5 Dictionary Attack Let’s go back to what we discussed at the very beginning of this
chapter - it is impossible for a person to remember a unique password for hundreds of online services.
Either they rely on a password manager, or they are re-using one or more passwords across multiple
accounts.
Furthermore, most passwords are far from being random, even when reused - common words, full
names, dates, names of popular sport teams, etc.
An attacker could easily design a simple algorithm to generate thousands of plausible passwords - but
they do not have to. They can look at a password dataset from one of the many security breaches
from the last decade to find the most common passwords in the wild.
In a couple of minutes they can pre-compute the SHA3-256 hash of the most commonly used 10
million passwords. Then they start scanning our database looking for a match.
This is known as dictionary attack - and it’s extremely effective.
All the cryptographic hash functions we mentioned so far are designed to be fast.
Fast enough to enable anybody to pull off a dictionary attack without having to use specialised
hardware.
We need something much slower, but with the same set of mathematical properties of cryptographic
hash functions.
10.2.3.6 Argon2 The Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP)75 provides useful guid-
ance on safe password storage - with a whole section on how to choose the correct hashing algorithm:
All these options - Argon2, bcrypt, scrypt, PBKDF2 - are designed to be computationally de-
manding.
They also expose configuration parameters (e.g. work factor for bcrypt) to further slow down hash
computation: application developers can tune a few knobs to keep up with hardware speed-ups - no
need to migrate to newer algorithms every couple of years.
Let’s replace SHA-3 with Argon2id, as recommended by OWASP.
The Rust Crypto organization got us covered once again - they provide a pure-Rust implementation,
argon2.
Let’s add it to our dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
74 This back-of-the-envelope calculation should make it clear that using a randomly-generated password provides you,
as a user, with a significant level of protection against brute-force attacks even if the server is using fast hashing
algorithms for password storage. Consistent usage of a password manager is indeed one of the easiest ways to boost
your security profile.
75 OWASP is, generally speaking, a treasure trove of great educational material about security for web applications.
You should get as familiar as possible with OWASP’s material, especially if you do not have an application security
specialist in your team/organization to support you. On top of the cheatsheet we linked, make sure to browse their
Application Security Verification Standard.
305
#! [...]
[dependencies]
# [...]
argon2 = { version = "0.3", features = ["std"] }
To hash a password we need to create an Argon2 struct instance.
The new method signature looks like this:
//! argon2/lib.rs
/// [...]
impl<'key> Argon2<'key> {
/// Create a new Argon2 context.
pub fn new(algorithm: Algorithm, version: Version, params: Params) -> Self {
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
Algorithm is an enum: it lets us select which variant of Argon2 we want to use - Argon2d, Argon2i,
Argon2id. To comply with OWASP’s recommendation we will go for Algorithm::Argon2id.
Version fulfills a similar purpose - we will go for the most recent, Version::V0x13.
What about Params?
Params::new specifies all the mandatory parameters we need to provide to build one:
//! argon2/params.rs
// [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let hasher = Argon2::new(
Algorithm::Argon2id,
Version::V0x13,
Params::new(15000, 2, 1, None)
.context("Failed to build Argon2 parameters")
306
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?,
);
let password_hash = sha3::Sha3_256::digest(
credentials.password.expose_secret().as_bytes()
);
// [...]
}
It is a re-export from the password-hash crate, a unified interface to work with password hashes
backed by a variety of algorithm (currently Argon2, PBKDF2 and scrypt).
PasswordHasher::hash_password is a bit different from Sha3_256::digest - it is asking for an
additional parameter on top of the raw password, a salt.
10.2.3.7 Salting Argon2 is a lot slower than SHA-3, but this is not enough to make a dictionary
attack unfeasible. It takes longer to hash the most common 10 million passwords, but not prohibitively
long.
What if, though, the attacker had to rehash the whole dictionary for every user in our database?
It becomes a lot more challenging!
That is what salting accomplishes. For each user, we generate a unique random string - the salt.
The salt is prepended to the user password before generating the hash. PasswordHasher::hash_password
takes care of the prepending business for us.
The salt is stored next to the password hash, in our database.
If an attacker gets their hands on a database backup, they will have access to all salts76 .
But they have to compute dictionary_size * n_users hashes instead of dictionary_size. Fur-
thermore, pre-computing the hashes is no longer an option - this buys us time to detect the breach
and take action (e.g. force a password reset for all users).
Let’s add a password_salt column to our users table:
sqlx migrate add add_salt_to_users
-- migrations/20210815112111_add_salt_to_users.sql
ALTER TABLE users ADD COLUMN salt TEXT NOT NULL;
We can no longer compute the hash before querying the users table - we need to retrieve the salt
first.
Let’s shuffle operations around:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
76 This is why OWASP recommends an additional layer of defence - peppering. All hashes stored in the database are
encrypted using a shared secret, only known to the application. Encryption, though, brings its own set of challenges:
where are we going to store the key? How do we rotate it? The answer usually involves a Hardware Security Module
(HSM) or a secret vault, such as AWS CloudHSM, AWS KMS or Hashicorp Vault. A thorough overview of key
management is beyond the scope of this book.
307
use argon2::PasswordHasher;
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let hasher = argon2::Argon2::new(/* */);
let row: Option<_> = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT user_id, password_hash, salt
FROM users
WHERE username = $1
"#,
credentials.username,
)
.fetch_optional(pool)
.await
.context("Failed to perform a query to retrieve stored credentials.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?;
if password_hash != expected_password_hash {
Err(PublishError::AuthError(anyhow::anyhow!(
"Invalid password."
)))
} else {
Ok(user_id)
}
}
Output provides other methods to obtain a string representation - e.g. Output::b64_encode. It would
work, as long as we are happy to change the assumed encoding for hashes stored in our database.
Given that a change is necessary, we can shoot for something better than base64-encoding.
308
10.2.3.8 PHC String Format To authenticate a user, we need reproducibility: we must run
the very same hashing routine every single time.
Salt and password are just a subset of the inputs for Argon2id. All the other load parameters
(t_cost, m_cost, p_cost) are equally important to obtain the same hash given the same pair of salt
and password.
If we store a base64-encoded representation of the hash, we are making a strong implicit assumption:
all values stored in the password_hash column have been computed using the same load parameters.
As we discussed a few sections ago, hardware capabilities evolve over time: application developers are
expected to keep up by increasing the computational cost of hashing using higher load parameters.
What happens when you have to migrate your stored passwords to a newer hashing configuration?
To keep authenticating old users we must store, next to each hash, the exact set of load parameters
used to compute it.
This allows for a seamless migration between two different load configurations: when an old user
authenticates, we verify password validity using the stored load parameters; we then recompute the
password hash using the new load parameters and update the stored information accordingly.
We could go for the naive approach - add three new columns to our users table: t_cost, m_cost
and p_cost.
It would work, as long as the algorithm remains Argon2id.
What happens if a vulnerability is found in Argon2id and we are forced to migrate away from it?
We’d probably want to add an algorithm column, as well as new columns to store the load parameters
of Argon2id’s replacement.
It can be done, but it is tedious.
Luckily enough, there is a better solution: the PHC string format. The PHC string format provides
a standard representation for a password hash: it includes the hash itself, the salt, the algorithm and
all its associated parameters.
Using the PHC string format, an Argon2id password hash looks like this:
# ${algorithm}${algorithm version}${$-separated algorithm parameters}${hash}${salt}
$argon2id$v=19$m=65536,t=2,p=1$gZiV/M1gPc22ElAH/Jh1Hw$CWOrkoo7oJBQ/iyh7uJ0LO2aLEfrHwTWllSAxT0zRno
The argon2 crate exposes PasswordHash, a Rust implementation of the PHC format:
//! argon2/lib.rs
// [...]
Storing password hashes in PHC string format spares us from having to initialise the Argon2 struct
using explicit parameters77 .
We can rely on Argon2’s implementation of the PasswordVerifier trait:
pub trait PasswordVerifier {
fn verify_password(
&self,
password: &[u8],
hash: &PasswordHash<'_>
) -> Result<()>;
}
77 I have not delved too deep into the source code of the different hash algorithms that implement PasswordVerifier,
but I do wonder why verify_password needs to take &self as a parameter. Argon2 has absolutely no use for it, but it
forces us to go through an Argon2::default in order to call verify_password.
309
By passing the expected hash via PasswordHash, Argon2 can automatically infer what load parame-
ters and salt should be used to verify if the password candidate is a match78 .
Let’s update our implementation:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
use argon2::{Argon2, PasswordHash, PasswordVerifier};
// [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let row: Option<_> = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT user_id, password_hash
FROM users
WHERE username = $1
"#,
credentials.username,
)
.fetch_optional(pool)
.await
.context("Failed to perform a query to retrieve stored credentials.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?;
Argon2::default()
.verify_password(
credentials.password.expose_secret().as_bytes(),
&expected_password_hash
)
.context("Invalid password.")
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)?;
Ok(user_id)
}
It compiles successfully.
You might have also noticed that we no longer deal with the salt directly - PHC string format takes
care of it for us, implicitly.
We can get rid of the salt column entirely:
78 PasswordVerifier::verify_password does one more thing - it leans on Output to compare the two hashes, instead of
working with raw bytes. Output’s implementations of PartialEq and Eq are designed to be evaluated in constant-time
- no matter how different or similar the inputs are, function execution will take the same amount of time. Assuming
an attacker had perfect knowledge of the hashing algorithm configuration the server is using, they could analyze the
response time for each authentication attempt to infer the first bytes of the password hash - combined with a dictionary,
this could help them to crack the password. The feasibility of such an attack is debatable, even more so when salting
is in place. Nonetheless, it costs us nothing - so better safe than sorry.
310
sqlx migrate add remove_salt_from_users
-- migrations/20210815112222_remove_salt_from_users.sql
ALTER TABLE users DROP COLUMN salt;
Caused by:
password hash string invalid
Let’s look at the password generation code for our test user:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestUser {
// [...]
async fn store(&self, pool: &PgPool) {
let password_hash = sha3::Sha3_256::digest(
credentials.password.expose_secret().as_bytes()
);
let password_hash = format!("{:x}", password_hash);
// [...]
}
}
impl TestUser {
// [...]
async fn store(&self, pool: &PgPool) {
let salt = SaltString::generate(&mut rand::thread_rng());
// We don't care about the exact Argon2 parameters here
// given that it's for testing purposes!
let password_hash = Argon2::default()
.hash_password(self.password.as_bytes(), &salt)
.unwrap()
.to_string();
311
// [...]
}
}
Ok(user_id)
}
// We extracted the db-querying logic in its own function with its own span.
#[tracing::instrument(name = "Get stored credentials", skip(username, pool))]
async fn get_stored_credentials(
username: &str,
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<Option<(uuid::Uuid, Secret<String>)>, anyhow::Error> {
let row = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT user_id, password_hash
FROM users
WHERE username = $1
"#,
username,
)
312
.fetch_optional(pool)
.await
.context("Failed to perform a query to retrieve stored credentials.")?
.map(|row| (row.user_id, Secret::new(row.password_hash)));
Ok(row)
}
We can now look at the logs from one of our integration tests:
TEST_LOG=true cargo test --quiet --release \
newsletters_are_delivered | grep "VERIFY PASSWORD" | bunyan
Roughly 10ms.
This is likely to cause issues under load - the infamous blocking problem.
async/await in Rust is built around a concept called cooperative scheduling.
How does it work?
Let’s look at an example:
async fn my_fn() {
a().await;
b().await;
c().await;
}
Every time poll is called, it tries to make progress by reaching the next state. E.g. if a.await()
has returned, we start awaiting b()79 .
We have a different state in MyFnFuture for each .await in our async function body.
This is why .await calls are often named yield points - our future progresses from the previous
.await to the next one and then yields control back to the executor.
The executor can then choose to poll the same future again or to prioritise making progress on another
task. This is how async runtimes, like tokio, manage to make progress concurrently on multiple
tasks - by continuously parking and resuming each of them.
In a way, you can think of async runtimes as great jugglers.
The underlying assumption is that most async tasks are performing some kind of input-output (IO)
work - most of their execution time will be spent waiting on something else to happen (e.g. the
operating system notifying us that there is data ready to be read on a socket), therefore we can
effectively perform many more tasks concurrently than we what we would achieve by dedicating a
parallel unit of execution (e.g. one thread per OS core) to each task.
This model works great assuming tasks cooperate by frequently yielding control back to the executor.
79 Our example is oversimplified, on purpose. In reality, each of those states will have sub-states in turn - one for each
.await in the body of the function we are calling. A future can turn into a deeply nested state machine!
313
In other words, poll is expected to be fast - it should return in less than 10-100 microseconds80 .
If a call to poll takes longer (or, even worse, never returns), then the async executor cannot make
progress on any other task - this is what people refer to when they say that “a task is blocking the
executor/the async thread”.
You should always be on the lookout for CPU-intensive workloads that are likely to take longer than
1ms - password hashing is a perfect example.
To play nicely with tokio, we must offload our CPU-intensive task to a separate threadpool using
tokio::task::spawn_blocking. Those threads are reserved for blocking operations and do not
interfere with the scheduling of async tasks.
Let’s get to work!
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
We are launching a computation on a separate thread - the thread itself might outlive the async
task we are spawning it from. To avoid the issue, spawn_blocking requires its argument to have a
'static lifetime - which is preventing us from passing references to the current function context into
the closure.
You might argue - “We are using move || {}, the closure should be taking ownership of
expected_password_hash!”.
80 This heuristic is reported in “Async: What is blocking?” by Alice Rhyl, one of tokio’s maintainers. An article I’d
strongly suggest you to read to understand better the underlying mechanics of tokio and async/await in general!
314
You would be right! But that is not enough.
Let’s look again at how PasswordHash is defined:
pub struct PasswordHash<'a> {
pub algorithm: Ident<'a>,
pub salt: Option<Salt<'a>>,
// [...]
}
Ok(user_id)
}
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Verify password hash",
skip(expected_password_hash, password_candidate)
)]
fn verify_password_hash(
expected_password_hash: Secret<String>,
password_candidate: Secret<String>,
) -> Result<(), PublishError> {
let expected_password_hash = PasswordHash::new(
expected_password_hash.expose_secret()
)
.context("Failed to parse hash in PHC string format.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?;
Argon2::default()
.verify_password(
password_candidate.expose_secret().as_bytes(),
&expected_password_hash
)
.context("Invalid password.")
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)
}
It compiles!
315
10.2.4.1 Tracing Context Is Thread-Local Let’s look again at the logs for the verify
password hash span:
TEST_LOG=true cargo test --quiet --release \
newsletters_are_delivered | grep "VERIFY PASSWORD" | bunyan
We are missing all the properties that are inherited from the root span of the corresponding request
- e.g. request_id, http.method, http.route, etc. Why?
Let’s look at tracing’s documentation:
Spans form a tree structure — unless it is a root span, all spans have a parent, and may have
one or more children. When a new span is created, the current span becomes the new span’s
parent.
The current span is the one returned by tracing::Span::current() - let’s check its documentation:
Returns a handle to the span considered by the Collector to be the current span.
If the collector indicates that it does not track the current span, or that the thread from
which this function is called is not currently inside a span, the returned span will be
disabled.
“Current span” actually means “active span for the current thread”.
That is why we are not inheriting any property: we are spawning our computation on a separate
thread and tracing::info_span! does not find any active Span associated with it when it executes.
We can work around the issue by explicitly attaching the current span to the newly spawn thread:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
You can verify that it works - we are now getting all the properties we care about.
It is a bit verbose though - let’s write a helper function:
//! src/telemetry.rs
use tokio::task::JoinHandle;
// [...]
316
// Just copied trait bounds and signature from `spawn_blocking`
pub fn spawn_blocking_with_tracing<F, R>(f: F) -> JoinHandle<R>
where
F: FnOnce() -> R + Send + 'static,
R: Send + 'static,
{
let current_span = tracing::Span::current();
tokio::task::spawn_blocking(move || current_span.in_scope(f))
}
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
use crate::telemetry::spawn_blocking_with_tracing;
// [...]
We can now easily reach for it every time we need to offload some CPU-intensive computation to a
dedicated threadpool.
#[tokio::test]
async fn non_existing_user_is_rejected() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
// Random credentials
let username = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
let password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
// Assert
assert_eq!(401, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(
317
r#"Basic realm="publish""#,
response.headers()["WWW-Authenticate"]
);
}
Roughly 1ms.
Let’s add another test: this time we pass a valid username with an incorrect password.
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn invalid_password_is_rejected() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let username = &app.test_user.username;
// Random password
let password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
assert_ne!(app.test_user.password, password);
// Assert
assert_eq!(401, response.status().as_u16());
assert_eq!(
r#"Basic realm="publish""#,
response.headers()["WWW-Authenticate"]
);
}
This one should pass as well. How long does the request take to fail?
TEST_LOG=true cargo test --quiet --release \
invalid_password_is_rejected | grep "HTTP REQUEST" | bunyan
318
We can use this difference to our advantage to perform a timing attack, a member of the broader
class of side-channel attacks.
If an attacker knows at least one valid username, they can inspect the server response times81 to con-
firm if another username exists or not - we are looking at a potential user enumeration vulnerability.
Is this an issue?
It depends.
If you are running Gmail, there are plenty of other ways to find out if a @gmail.com email address
exists or not. The validity of an email address is not a secret!
If you are running a SaaS product, the situation might be more nuanced.
Let’s go for a fictional scenario: your SaaS product provides payroll services and uses email addresses
as usernames. There are separate employee and admin login pages.
My goal is to get access to payroll data - I need to compromise an employee with privileged access.
We can scrape LinkedIn to get the name and surnames of all employees in the Finance department.
Corporate emails follow a predictable structure ([email protected]), so we have a list
of candidates.
We can now perform a timing attack against the admin login page to narrow down the list to those
who have access.
Even in our fictional example, user enumeration is not enough, on its own, to escalate our privileges.
But it can be used as a stepping stone to narrow down a set of targets for a more precise attack.
How do we prevent it?
Two strategies:
1. Remove the timing difference between an auth failure due to an invalid password and an auth
failure due to a non-existent username;
2. Limit the number of failed auth attempts for a given IP/username.
The second is generally valuable as a protection against brute-force attacks, but it requires holding
some state - we will leave it for later.
Let’s focus on the first one.
To eliminate the timing difference, we need to perform the same amount of work in both cases.
Right now, we follow this recipe:
• Fetch stored credentials for given username;
• If they do not exist, return 401;
• If they exist, hash the password candidate and compare with the stored hash.
We need to remove that early exit - we should have a fallback expected password (with salt and load
parameters) that can be compared to the hash of the password candidate.
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
to mask the speed difference on a limited set of attempts, but if you collect enough data points it should be possible
to notice a statistically significant difference in latency.
319
if let Some((stored_user_id, stored_password_hash)) =
get_stored_credentials(&credentials.username, &pool)
.await
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?
{
user_id = Some(stored_user_id);
expected_password_hash = stored_password_hash;
}
spawn_blocking_with_tracing(move || {
verify_password_hash(expected_password_hash, credentials.password)
})
.await
.context("Failed to spawn blocking task.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)??;
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
use argon2::{Algorithm, Argon2, Params, PasswordHasher, Version};
// [...]
impl TestUser {
async fn store(&self, pool: &PgPool) {
let salt = SaltString::generate(&mut rand::thread_rng());
// Match parameters of the default password
let password_hash = Argon2::new(
Algorithm::Argon2id,
Version::V0x13,
Params::new(15000, 2, 1, None).unwrap(),
)
.hash_password(self.password.as_bytes(), &salt)
.unwrap()
.to_string();
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
10.3 Is it safe?
We went to great lengths to follow all most common best practices while building our password-based
authentication flow.
Time to ask ourselves: is it safe?
320
client and server to compromise the user credentials (a man-in-the-middle attack - MITM)82 .
Our API is already served via HTTPS, so nothing to do here.
10.3.4.1 Client Credentials via OAuth2 Another option is using the OAuth2 client credentials
flow.
APIs no longer have to manage passwords (client secrets, in OAuth2 terminology) - the concern is
delegated to a centralised authorization server. There are multiple turn-key implementations of an
authorization server out there - both OSS and commercial. You can lean on them instead of rolling
your own.
The caller authenticates with the authorization server - if successful, the auth server grants them a
set of temporary credentials (a JWT access token) which can be used to call our API.
Our API can verify the validity of the access token using public key cryptography, without having to
keep any state. Our API never sees the actual password, the client secret.
JWT validation is not without its risks - the specification is riddled with dangerous edge cases.
321
A user is asked to authenticate once, via a login form83 : if successful, the server generates a one-time
secret - an authenticated session token. The token is stored in the browser as a secure cookie.
Sessions, unlike passwords, are designed to expire - this reduces the likelihood that a valid session
token is compromised (especially if inactive users are automatically logged out). It also prevents the
user from having to reset their password if there is a suspicion that their session has been hijacked -
a forced log out is much more acceptable than an automated password reset.
This approach is often referred to as session-based authentication.
322
Let’s get to work!
// [...]
// New module!
mod home;
pub use home::*;
//! src/routes/home/mod.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::home;
// [...]
Not much to be seen here - we are just returning a 200 OK without a body.
Let’s add a very simple HTML landing page84 to the mix:
<!-- src/routes/home/home.html -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>Home</title>
</head>
<body>
<p>Welcome to our newsletter!</p>
</body>
</html>
We want to read this file and return it as the body of our GET / endpoint.
We can use include_str!, a macro from Rust’s standard library: it reads the file at the provided
path and returns its content as a &'static str.
84 An in-depth introduction to HTML and CSS is beyond the scope of this book. We will avoid CSS entirely while
explaining the required basics of HTML as we introduce new elements to build the pages we need for our newsletter
application. Check out Interneting is hard (but it doesn't have to be) for an excellent introduction to these
topics.
323
This is possible because include_str! operates at compile-time - the file content is stored as
part of the application binary, therefore ensuring that a pointer to its content (&str) remains valid
indefinitely ('static)85 .
//! src/routes/home/mod.rs
// [...]
If you launch your application with cargo run and visit http://localhost:8000 in the browser you
should see the Welcome to our newsletter! message.
The browser is not entirely happy though - if you open the browser’s console86 , you should see a
warning.
On Firefox 93.0:
In other words - the browser has inferred that we are returning HTML content, but it would very
much prefer to be told explicitly.
We have two options:
• Add a special HTML meta tag in the document;
• Set the Content-Type HTTP header (“transfer protocol”).
Better to use both.
Embedding the information inside the document works nicely for browsers and bot crawlers
(e.g. Googlebot) while the Content-Type HTTP header is understood by all HTTP clients, not just
browsers.
When returning an HTML page, the content type should be set to text/html; charset=utf-8.
Let’s add it in:
<!-- src/routes/home/home.html -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<!-- This is equivalent to a HTTP header -->
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
<title>Home</title>
</head>
<!-- [...] -->
</html>
//! src/routes/home/mod.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
excellent piece on common Rust lifetime misconceptions if you want to learn more about the topic.
86 Throughout this chapter we will rely on the introspection tools made available by browsers. For Firefox, follow this
324
The warning should have disappeared from your browsers’ console.
Congrats, you have just served your first well-formed web page!
10.6 Login
Let’s start working on our login form.
We need to wire up an endpoint placeholder, just like we did for GET /. We will serve the login form
at GET /login.
//! src/routes/mod.rs
// [...]
// New module!
mod login;
pub use login::*;
//! src/routes/login/mod.rs
mod get;
pub use get::login_form;
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::{/* */, login_form};
// [...]
325
<label>Password
<input
type="password"
placeholder="Enter Password"
name="password"
>
</label>
<button type="submit">Login</button>
</form>
</body>
</html>
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
form is the HTML element doing the heavy-lifting here. Its job is to collect a set of data fields and
send them over for processing to a backend server.
The fields are defined using the input element - we have two here: username and password.
Inputs are given a type attribute - it tells the browser how to display them.
text and password will both be rendered as a single-line free-text field, with one key difference: the
characters entered into a password field are obfuscated.
Each input is wrapped in a label element:
• clicking on the label name toggles the input field;
• it improves accessibility for screen-readers users (it is read out loud when the user is focused
on the element).
On each input we have set two other attributes:
• placeholder, whose value is shown as a suggestion within the text field before the user starts
filling the form;
• name, the key that we must use in the backend to identify the field value within the submitted
form data.
At the end of the form, there is a button - it will trigger the submission of the provided input to the
backend.
What happens if you enter a random username and password and try to submit it?
The page refreshes, the input fields are reset - the URL has changed though!
It should now be localhost:8000/login?username=myusername&password=mysecretpassword.
This is form’s default behaviour87 - form submits the data to the very same page it is being served
from (i.e. /login) using the GET HTTP verb. This is far from ideal - as you have just witnessed,
a form submitted via GET encodes all input data in clear text as query parameters. Being part of
the URL, they end up stored as part of the browser’s navigation history. Query parameters are also
captured in logs (e.g. http.route property in our own backend).
We really do not want passwords or any type of sensitive data there.
We can change this behaviour by setting a value for action and method on form:
87 It begs the question of why GET was chosen as default method, considering it is strictly less secure. We also do not
see any warnings in the browser’s console, even though we are obviously transmitting sensitive data in clear text via
query parameters (a field with type password, form using GET as method).
326
<!-- src/routes/login/login.html -->
<!-- [...] -->
<form action="/login" method="post">
<!-- [...] -->
We could technically omit action, but the default behaviour is not particularly well-documented
therefore it is clearer to define it explicitly.
Thanks to method="post" the input data will be passed to the backend using the request body, a
much safer option.
If you try to submit the form again, you should see a 404 in the API logs for POST /login. Let’s
define the endpoint!
//! src/routes/login/mod.rs
// [...]
mod post;
pub use post::login;
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::login;
// [...]
327
pub async fn login() -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/"))
.finish()
}
You should now see Welcome to our newsletter! after form submission.
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
username: String,
password: Secret<String>,
}
We built the foundation of password-based authentication in the earlier part of this chapter - let’s
look again at the auth code in the handler for POST /newsletters:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Publish a newsletter issue",
skip(body, pool, email_client, request),
fields(username=tracing::field::Empty, user_id=tracing::field::Empty)
)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(
body: web::Json<BodyData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
email_client: web::Data<EmailClient>,
request: HttpRequest,
) -> Result<HttpResponse, PublishError> {
let credentials = basic_authentication(request.headers())
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)?;
tracing::Span::current()
.record("username", &tracing::field::display(&credentials.username));
let user_id = validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await?;
tracing::Span::current()
.record("user_id", &tracing::field::display(&user_id));
// [...]
basic_authentication deals with the extraction of credentials from the Authorization header
when using the ‘Basic’ authentication scheme - not something we are interested in reusing in login.
validation_credentials, instead, is what we are looking for: it takes username and password as
328
input, returning either the corresponding user_id (if authentication is successful) or an error (if
credentials are invalid).
The current definition of validation_credentials is polluted by the concerns of publish_newsletters:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
credentials: Credentials,
pool: &PgPool,
// We are returning a `PublishError`,
// which is a specific error type detailing
// the relevant failure modes of `POST /newsletters`
// (not just auth!)
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, PublishError> {
let mut user_id = None;
let mut expected_password_hash = Secret::new(
"$argon2id$v=19$m=15000,t=2,p=1$\
gZiV/M1gPc22ElAH/Jh1Hw$\
CWOrkoo7oJBQ/iyh7uJ0LO2aLEfrHwTWllSAxT0zRno"
.to_string()
);
spawn_blocking_with_tracing(move || {
verify_password_hash(expected_password_hash, credentials.password)
})
.await
.context("Failed to spawn blocking task.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)??;
//! src/authentication.rs
#[derive(thiserror::Error, Debug)]
pub enum AuthError {
#[error("Invalid credentials.")]
InvalidCredentials(#[source] anyhow::Error),
#[error(transparent)]
UnexpectedError(#[from] anyhow::Error),
}
We are using an enumeration because, just like we did in POST /newsletters, we want to empower
the caller to react differently depending on the error type - i.e. return a 500 for UnexpectedError,
329
while AuthErrors should result into a 401.
Let’s change the signature of validate_credentials to return Result<uuid::Uuid, AuthError>
now:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
use crate::authentication::AuthError;
// [...]
async fn validate_credentials(
// [...]
) -> Result<uuid::Uuid, AuthError> {
// [...]
spawn_blocking_with_tracing(/* */)
.await
.context("Failed to spawn blocking task.")??;
user_id
.ok_or_else(|| anyhow::anyhow!("Unknown username."))
.map_err(AuthError::InvalidCredentials)
}
The first error comes from validate_credentials itself - we are calling verify_password_hash,
which is still returning a PublishError.
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
fn verify_password_hash(
expected_password_hash: Secret<String>,
password_candidate: Secret<String>,
) -> Result<(), PublishError> {
let expected_password_hash = PasswordHash::new(
expected_password_hash.expose_secret()
)
.context("Failed to parse hash in PHC string format.")
.map_err(PublishError::UnexpectedError)?;
Argon2::default()
.verify_password(
password_candidate.expose_secret().as_bytes(),
&expected_password_hash
)
330
.context("Invalid password.")
.map_err(PublishError::AuthError)
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
fn verify_password_hash(/* */) -> Result<(), AuthError> {
let expected_password_hash = PasswordHash::new(/* */)
.context("Failed to parse hash in PHC string format.")?;
Argon2::default()
.verify_password(/* */)
.context("Invalid password.")
.map_err(AuthError::InvalidCredentials)
}
This comes from the call to verify_credentials inside publish_newsletters, the request handler.
AuthError does not implement a conversion into PublishError, therefore the ? operator cannot be
used.
We will call map_err to perform the mapping inline:
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
331
pub struct Credentials {
// These two fields were not marked as `pub` before!
pub username: String,
pub password: Secret<String>,
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn validate_credentials(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
fn verify_password_hash(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
async fn get_stored_credentials(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
}
//! src/routes/newsletters.rs
// [...]
use crate::authentication::{validate_credentials, AuthError, Credentials};
// There will be warnings about unused imports, follow the compiler to fix them!
// [...]
10.6.3.2 Rejecting Invalid Credentials The extracted authentication module is now ready
to be used in our login function.
Let’s plug it in:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use crate::authentication::{validate_credentials, Credentials};
use actix_web::http::header::LOCATION;
use actix_web::web;
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
use secrecy::Secret;
use sqlx::PgPool;
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
username: String,
password: Secret<String>,
}
#[tracing::instrument(
skip(form, pool),
fields(username=tracing::field::Empty, user_id=tracing::field::Empty)
)]
// We are now injecting `PgPool` to retrieve stored credentials from the database
pub async fn login(form: web::Form<FormData>, pool: web::Data<PgPool>) -> HttpResponse {
let credentials = Credentials {
username: form.0.username,
password: form.0.password,
};
tracing::Span::current()
.record("username", &tracing::field::display(&credentials.username));
match validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
tracing::Span::current()
.record("user_id", &tracing::field::display(&user_id));
332
HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/"))
.finish()
}
Err(_) => {
todo!()
}
}
}
A login attempt using random credentials should now fail: the request handler panics due to
validation_credentials returning an error, which in turn leads to actix-web dropping the
connection. It is not a graceful failure - the browser is likely to show something along the lines of
The connection was reset.
We should try as much as possible to avoid panics in request handlers - all errors should be handled
gracefully.
Let’s introduce a LoginError:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
use crate::authentication::AuthError;
use crate::routes::error_chain_fmt;
use actix_web::http::StatusCode;
use actix_web::{web, ResponseError};
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, LoginError> {
// [...]
let user_id = validate_credentials(credentials, &pool)
.await
.map_err(|e| match e {
AuthError::InvalidCredentials(_) => LoginError::AuthError(e.into()),
AuthError::UnexpectedError(_) => LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into()),
})?;
tracing::Span::current().record("user_id", &tracing::field::display(&user_id));
Ok(HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/"))
.finish())
}
#[derive(thiserror::Error)]
pub enum LoginError {
#[error("Authentication failed")]
AuthError(#[source] anyhow::Error),
#[error("Something went wrong")]
UnexpectedError(#[from] anyhow::Error),
}
333
The code is very similar to what we wrote a few sections ago while refactoring POST /newsletters.
What is the effect on the browser?
Submission of the form triggers a page load, resulting in Authentication failed being shown on
screen88 .
Much better than before, we are making progress!
88 The default implementation of error_response provided by actix_web’s ResponseError trait populates the body
using the Display representation of the error returned by the request handler.
334
fn status_code(&self) -> StatusCode {
match self {
LoginError::UnexpectedError(_) => StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
LoginError::AuthError(_) => StatusCode::UNAUTHORIZED,
}
}
}
Unfortunately a vanilla redirect is not enough - the browser would show the login form to the user
again, with no feedback explaining that their login attempt was unsuccessful.
We need to find a way to instruct GET /login to show an error message.
Let’s explore a few options.
10.6.4.2 Query Parameters The value of the Location header determines the URL the user
will be redirected to.
It does not end there though - we can also specify query parameters!
Let’s encode the authentication error message in an error query parameter.
Query parameters are part of the URL - therefore we need to URL-encode the display representation
of LoginError.
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
urlencoding = "2"
# [...]
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
335
HttpResponse::build(self.status_code())
.insert_header((LOCATION, format!("/login?error={}", encoded_error)))
.finish()
}
// [...]
}
The error query parameter can then be extracted in the request handler for GET /login.
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use actix_web::{web, HttpResponse, http::header::ContentType};
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct QueryParams {
error: Option<String>,
}
Finally, we can customise the returned HTML page based on its value:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
336
</html>"#,
))
}
It works89 !
10.6.4.3 Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) Query parameters are not private - our backend server
cannot prevent users from tweaking the URL.
In particular, it cannot prevent attackers from playing with them.
Try to navigate to the following URL:
http://localhost:8000/login?error=Your%20account%20has%20been%20locked%2C%20
please%20submit%20your%20details%20%3Ca%20href%3D%22https%3A%2F%2Ffanyv88.com%3A443%2Fhttps%2Fzero2prod.com
%22%3Ehere%3C%2Fa%3E%20to%20resolve%20the%20issue.
On top of the login form you will see
Your account has been locked, please submit your details here to resolve the issue.
89 Our web pages are not particularly dynamic - we are mostly looking at the injection of a few elements, format!
does the job without breaking a sweat. The same approach does not scale very well when working on more complex
user interfaces - you will need to build reusable components to be shared across multiple pages while performing loops
and conditionals on many different pieces of dynamic data. Template engines are a common approach to handle this
new level of complexity - tera and askama are popular options in the Rust ecosystem.
337
pub async fn login_form(/* */) -> HttpResponse {
let error_html = match query.0.error {
None => "".into(),
Some(error_message) => format!(
"<p><i>{}</i></p>",
htmlescape::encode_minimal(&error_message)
),
};
// [...]
}
Load the compromised URL again - you will see a different message:
Your account has been locked, please submit your details <a
href=“https://zero2prod.com”>here</a> to resolve the issue.
The HTML a element is no longer rendered by the browser - the user has now reasons to suspect that
something fishy is going on.
Is it enough?
At the very least, users are less likely to copy-paste and navigate to the link compared to just clicking
on here. Nonetheless, attackers are not naive - they will amend the injected message as soon as they
notice that our website is performing HTML entity encoding. It could be as simple as
Your account has been locked, please call +CC3332288777 to resolve the issue.
This might be good enough to lure in a couple of victims. We need something stronger than character
escaping.
10.6.4.4 Message Authentication Codes We need a mechanism to verify that the query pa-
rameters have been set by our API and that they have not been altered by a third party.
This is known as message authentication - it guarantees that the message has not been modified
in transit (integrity) and it allows you to verify the identity of the sender (data origin authenti-
cation).
Message authentication codes (MACs) are a common technique to provide message authentication -
a tag is added to the message allowing verifiers to check its integrity and origin.
HMAC are a well-known family of MACs - hash-based message authentication codes.
HMACs are built around a secret and a hash function.
The secret is prepended to the message and the resulting string is fed into the hash function. The
resulting hash is then concatenated to the secret and hashed again - the output is the message tag.
In pseudo-code:
let hmac_tag = hash(
concat(
key,
hash(concat(key, message))
)
);
We are deliberately omitting a few nuances around key padding - you can find all the details in RFC
2104.
10.6.4.5 Add An HMAC Tag To Protect Query Parameters Let’s try to use a HMAC to
verify integrity and provenance for our query parameters.
The Rust Crypto organization provides an implementation of HMACs, the hmac crate. We will also
need a hash function - let’s go for SHA-256.
#! Cargo.toml
338
# [...]
[dependencies]
hmac = { version = "0.12", features = ["std"] }
sha2 = "0.10"
# [...]
Let’s add another query parameter to our Location header, tag, to store the HMAC of our error
message.
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use hmac::{Hmac, Mac}
// [...]
The code snippet is almost perfect - we just need a way to get our secret!
Unfortunately it will not be possible from within ResponseError - we only have access to the error
type (LoginError) that we are trying to convert into an HTTP response. ResponseError is just a
specialised Into trait.
In particular, we do not have access to the application state (i.e. we cannot use the web::Data
extractor), which is where we would be storing the secret.
Let’s move our code back into the request handler:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use secret::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
skip(form, pool, secret),
fields(username=tracing::field::Empty, user_id=tracing::field::Empty)
)]
pub async fn login(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
// Injecting the secret as a secret string for the time being.
secret: web::Data<Secret<String>>,
// No longer returning a `Result<HttpResponse, LoginError>`!
) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
339
match validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
tracing::Span::current()
.record("user_id", &tracing::field::display(&user_id));
HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/"))
.finish()
}
Err(e) => {
let e = match e {
AuthError::InvalidCredentials(_) => LoginError::AuthError(e.into()),
AuthError::UnexpectedError(_) => LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into()),
};
let query_string = format!(
"error={}",
urlencoding::Encoded::new(e.to_string())
);
let hmac_tag = {
let mut mac = Hmac::<sha2::Sha256>::new_from_slice(
secret.expose_secret().as_bytes()
).unwrap();
mac.update(query_string.as_bytes());
mac.finalize().into_bytes()
};
HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((
LOCATION,
format!("/login?{}&tag={:x}", query_string, hmac_tag),
))
.finish()
}
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
// Returning a `Result` again!
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(credentials, &pool).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
// [...]
// We need to Ok-wrap again
Ok(/* */)
}
Err(e) => {
340
// [...]
let response = HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((
LOCATION,
format!("/login?{}&tag={:x}", query_string, hmac_tag),
))
.finish();
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response))
}
}
}
//! src/startup.rs
use secrecy::Secret;
// [...]
impl Application {
pub async fn build(configuration: Settings) -> Result<Self, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
let server = run(
// [...]
configuration.application.hmac_secret,
)?;
// [...]
}
}
fn run(
// [...]
hmac_secret: Secret<String>,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
// [...]
.app_data(Data::new(hmac_secret.clone()))
})
// [...]
}
#! configuration/base.yml
application:
# [...]
# You need to set the `APP_APPLICATION__HMAC_SECRET` environment variable
# on Digital Ocean as well for production!
hmac_secret: "super-long-and-secret-random-key-needed-to-verify-message-integrity"
# [...]
Using Secret<String> as the type injected into the application state is far from ideal. String is a
primitive type and there is a significant risk of conflict - i.e. another middleware or service registering
another Secret<String> against the application state, overriding our HMAC secret (or vice versa).
Let’s create a wrapper type to sidestep the issue:
341
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
fn run(
// [...]
hmac_secret: HmacSecret,
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
// [...]
.app_data(Data::new(HmacSecret(hmac_secret.clone())))
})
// [...]
}
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct HmacSecret(pub Secret<String>);
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use crate::startup::HmacSecret;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(
// [...]
// Inject the wrapper type!
secret: web::Data<HmacSecret>,
) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => {/* */}
Err(/* */) => {
// [...]
let hmac_tag = {
let mut mac = Hmac::<sha2::Sha256>::new_from_slice(
secret.0.expose_secret().as_bytes()
).unwrap();
// [...]
};
// [...]
}
}
}
10.6.4.6 Verifying The HMAC Tag Time to validate that tag in GET /login!
Let’s start by extracting the tag query parameter.
We are currently using the Query extractor to parse the incoming query parameters into a
QueryParams struct, which features an optional error field.
Going forward, we foresee two scenarios:
• There is no error (e.g. you just landed on the login page), therefore we do not expect any query
parameter;
• There is an error to be reported, therefore we expect to see both an error and a tag query
parameter.
Changing QueryParams from
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct QueryParams {
error: Option<String>,
}
to
342
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct QueryParams {
error: Option<String>,
tag: Option<String>,
}
would not capture the new requirements accurately - it would allow callers to pass a tag parameter
while omitting the error one, or vice versa. We would need to do extra validation in the request
handler to make sure this is not the case.
We can avoid this issue entirely by making all fields in QueryParams required while QueryParams
itself becomes optional:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct QueryParams {
error: String,
tag: String,
}
A neat little reminder to make illegal state impossible to represent using types!
To verify the tag we will need access to the HMAC shared secret - let’s inject it:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use crate::startup::HmacSecret;
// [...]
tag was a byte slice encoded as a hex string. We will need the hex crate to decode it back to bytes
in GET /login. Let’s add it as a dependency:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
# [...]
hex = "0.4"
We can now define a verify method on QueryParams itself: it will return the error string if the
message authentication code matches our expectations, an error otherwise.
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use hmac::{Hmac, Mac};
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
impl QueryParams {
343
fn verify(self, secret: &HmacSecret) -> Result<String, anyhow::Error> {
let tag = hex::decode(self.tag)?;
let query_string = format!("error={}", urlencoding::Encoded::new(&self.error));
Ok(self.error)
}
}
We now need to amend the request handler to call it, which raises a question: what do we want to
do if the verification fails?
One approach is to fail the entire request by returning a 400. Alternatively, we can log the verification
failure as a warning and skip the error message when rendering the HTML.
Let’s go for the latter - a user being redirected with some dodgy query parameters will see our login
page, an acceptable scenario.
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
10.6.4.7 Error Messages Must Be Ephemeral Implementation-wise, we are happy: the error
is rendered as expected and nobody can tamper with our messages thanks to the HMAC tag. Should
we deploy it?
We chose a query parameter to pass along the error message because query parameters are a part of
the URL - it is easy to pass them along in the value of the Location header when redirecting back
to the login form on failures. This is both their strength and their weakness: URLs are stored in the
browser history, which is in turn used to provide autocomplete suggestions when typing a URL into
the address bar. You can experiment with this yourself: try to type localhost:8000 in your address
bar - what are the suggestions?
344
Most of them will be URLs including the error query parameter due to all the experiments we have
been doing so far. If you pick one with a valid tag, the login form will feature an Authentication
failed error message… even though it has been a while since your last login attempt. This is
undesirable.
We would like the error message to be ephemeral.
It is shown right after a failed login attempt, but it is not stored in your browser history. The only
way to trigger the error message again should be to… fail to log in one more time.
We established that query parameters do not meet our requirements. Do we have other options?
Yes, cookies!
[…] a small piece of data that a server sends to a user’s web browser. The browser may store
the cookie and send it back to the same server with later requests.
We can use cookies to implement the same strategy we tried with query parameters:
• The user enters invalid credentials and submits the form;
• POST /login sets a cookie containing the error message and redirects the user back to GET
/login;
• The browser calls GET /login, including the values of the cookies currently set for the user;
• GET /login’s request handler checks the cookies to see if there is an error message to be
rendered;
• GET /login returns the HTML form to the caller and deletes the error message from the cookie.
The URL is never touched - all error-related information is exchanged via a side-channel (cookies),
invisible to the browser history. The last step in the algorithm ensures that the error message is
indeed ephemeral - the cookie is “consumed” when the error message is rendered. If the page is
reloaded, the error message will not be shown again.
One-time notifications, the technique we just described, are known as flash messages.
10.6.4.9 An Integration Test For Login Failures So far we have experimented quite freely -
we wrote some code, launched the application, played around with it.
We are now approaching the final iteration of our design and it would be nice to capture the desired
behaviour using some black-box tests, as we did so far for all the user flows supported by our project.
Writing a test will also help us to get familiar with cookies and their behaviour.
We want to verify what happens on login failures, the topic we have been obsessing over for a few
sections now.
Let’s start by adding a new login module to our test suite:
//! tests/main.rs
// [...]
mod login;
//! tests/api/login.rs
// Empty for now
We will need to send a POST /login request - let’s add a little helper to our TestApp, the HTTP
client used to interact with our application in our tests:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
345
impl TestApp {
pub async fn post_login<Body>(&self, body: &Body) -> reqwest::Response
where
Body: serde::Serialize,
{
reqwest::Client::new()
.post(&format!("{}/login", &self.address))
// This `reqwest` method makes sure that the body is URL-encoded
// and the `Content-Type` header is set accordingly.
.form(body)
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
// [...]
}
We can now start to sketch our test case. Before touching cookies, we will begin with a simple
assertion - it returns a redirect, status code 303.
//! tests/api/login.rs
use crate::helpers::spawn_app;
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
// Act
let login_body = serde_json::json!({
"username": "random-username",
"password": "random-password"
});
let response = app.post_login(&login_body).await;
// Assert
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 303);
}
Our endpoint already returns a 303 - both in case of failure and success! What is going on?
The answer can be found in reqwest’s documentation:
By default, a Client will automatically handle HTTP redirects, having a maximum redirect
chain of 10 hops. To customize this behavior, a redirect::Policy can be used with a
ClientBuilder.
reqwest::Client sees the 303 status code and automatically proceeds to call GET /login, the path
specified in the Location header, which return a 200 - the status code we see in the assertion panic
message.
For the purpose of our testing, we do not want reqwest::Client to follow redirects - let’s customise
the HTTP client behaviour by following the guidance provided in its documentation:
346
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
pub async fn post_login<Body>(&self, body: &Body) -> reqwest::Response
where
Body: serde::Serialize,
{
reqwest::Client::builder()
.redirect(reqwest::redirect::Policy::none())
.build()
.unwrap()
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
// Little helper function - we will be doing this check several times throughout
// this chapter and the next one.
pub fn assert_is_redirect_to(response: &reqwest::Response, location: &str) {
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 303);
assert_eq!(response.headers().get("Location").unwrap(), location);
}
//! tests/api/login.rs
use crate::helpers::assert_is_redirect_to;
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// [...]
// Assert
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/login");
}
The endpoint is still using query parameters to pass along the error message. Let’s remove that
functionality from the request handler:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// A few imports are now unused and can be removed.
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
// We no longer need `HmacSecret`!
) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
// [...]
347
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => {/* */}
Err(e) => {
let e = match e {
AuthError::InvalidCredentials(_) => LoginError::AuthError(e.into()),
AuthError::UnexpectedError(_) => LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into()),
};
let response = HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/login"))
.finish();
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response))
}
}
}
I know, it feels like we are going backwards - you need have a bit of patience!
The test should pass. We can now start looking at cookies, which begs the question - what does “set
a cookie” actually mean?
Cookies are set by attaching a special HTTP header to the response - Set-Cookie.
In its simplest form it looks like this:
Set-Cookie: <cookie-name>=<cookie-value>
Set-Cookie can be specified multiple times - one for each cookie you want to set.
reqwest provides the get_all method to deal with multi-value headers:
//! tests/api/login.rs
// [...]
use reqwest::header::HeaderValue;
use std::collections::HashSet;
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// [...]
let cookies: HashSet<_> = response
.headers()
.get_all("Set-Cookie")
.into_iter()
.collect();
assert!(cookies
.contains(&HeaderValue::from_str("_flash=Authentication failed").unwrap())
);
}
Truth be told, cookies are so ubiquitous to deserve a dedicated API, sparing us the pain of working
with the raw headers. reqwest locks this functionality behind the cookies feature-flag - let’s enable
it:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
# Using multi-line format for brevity
[dependencies.reqwest]
version = "0.11"
default-features = false
features = ["json", "rustls-tls", "cookies"]
//! tests/api/login.rs
// [...]
use reqwest::header::HeaderValue;
use std::collections::HashSet;
#[tokio::test]
348
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// [...]
let flash_cookie = response.cookies().find(|c| c.name() == "_flash").unwrap();
assert_eq!(flash_cookie.value(), "Authentication failed");
}
As you can see, the cookie API is significantly more ergonomic. Nonetheless there is value in touching
directly what it abstracts away, at least once.
The test should fail, as expected.
10.6.4.10 How To Set A Cookie In actix-web How do we set a cookie on the outgoing
response in actix-web?
We can work with headers directly:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => {/* */}
Err(e) => {
// [...]
let response = HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/login"))
.insert_header(("Set-Cookie", format!("_flash={e}")))
.finish();
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response))
}
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => {/* */}
Err(e) => {
// [...]
let response = HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/login"))
.cookie(Cookie::new("_flash", e.to_string()))
.finish();
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response))
}
}
}
10.6.4.11 An Integration Test For Login Failures - Part 2 Let’s focus on the other side of
the story now - GET /login. We want to verify that the error message, passed along in the _flash
cookie, is actually rendered above the login form shown to the user after the redirect.
Let’s start by adding a get_login_html helper method on TestApp:
349
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// Our tests will only look at the HTML page, therefore
// we do not expose the underlying reqwest::Response
pub async fn get_login_html(&self) -> String {
reqwest::Client::new()
.get(&format!("{}/login", &self.address))
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
.text()
.await
.unwrap()
}
// [...]
}
We can then extend our existing test to call get_login_html after having submitted invalid creden-
tials to POST /login:
//! tests/api/login.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// [...]
// Act
let login_body = serde_json::json!({
"username": "random-username",
"password": "random-password"
});
let response = app.post_login(&login_body).await;
// Assert
// [...]
// Act - Part 2
let html_page = app.get_login_html().await;
assert!(html_page.contains(r#"<p><i>Authentication failed</i></p>"#));
}
350
pub api_client: reqwest::Client
}
impl TestApp {
pub async fn post_subscriptions(/* */) -> reqwest::Response {
self.api_client
.post(/* */)
// [...]
}
10.6.4.12 How To Read A Cookie In actix-web It’s time to look again at our request handler
for GET /login:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use crate::startup::HmacSecret;
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
use actix_web::{web, HttpResponse};
use hmac::{Hmac, Mac, NewMac};
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct QueryParams {
351
error: String,
tag: String,
}
impl QueryParams {
fn verify(self, secret: &HmacSecret) -> Result<String, anyhow::Error> {
/* */
}
}
Let’s begin by ripping out all the code related to query parameters and their (cryptographic) valida-
tion:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
Back to the basics. Let’s seize this opportunity to remove the dependencies we added during our
HMAC adventure - sha2, hmac and hex.
To access cookies on an incoming request we need to get our hands on HttpRequest itself. Let’s add
it as an input to login_form:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::HttpRequest;
352
pub async fn login_form(request: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse {
let error_html = match request.cookie("_flash") {
None => "".into(),
Some(cookie) => {
format!("<p><i>{}</i></p>", cookie.value())
}
};
// [...]
}
10.6.4.13 How To Delete A Cookie In actix-web What happens if you refresh the page after
a failed login attempt? The error message is still there!
The same thing happens if you open a new tab and navigate straight to localhost:8000/login -
Authentication failed will show up on top of the login form.
This is not what we had in mind when we said that error messages should be ephemeral. How do
we fix it? There is no Unset-cookie header - how do we delete the _flash cookie from the user’s
browser?
Let’s zoom in on the lifecycle of a cookie.
When it comes to durability, there are two types of cookies: session cookies and persistent cookies.
Session cookies are stored in memory - they are deleted when the session ends (i.e. the browser is
closed). Persistent cookies, instead, are saved to disk and will still be there when you re-open the
browser.
A vanilla Set-Cookie header creates a session cookie. To set a persistent cookie you must specify an
expiration policy using a cookie attribute - either Max-Age or Expires.
Max-Age is interpreted as the number of seconds remaining until the cookie expires - e.g. Set-Cookie:
_flash=omg; Max-Age=5 creates a persistent _flash cookie that will be valid for the next 5 seconds.
Expires, instead, expects a date - e.g. Set-Cookie: _flash=omg; Expires=Thu, 31 Dec 2022
23:59:59 GMT; creates a persistent cookie that will be valid until the end of 2022.
Setting Max-Age to 0 instructs the browser to immediately expire the cookie - i.e. to unset it, which
is exactly what we want! A bit hacky? Yes, but it is what it is.
Let’s kick-off the implementation work. We can start by modifying our integration test to account
for this scenario - the error message should not be shown if we reload the login page after the first
redirect:
//! tests/api/login.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// Arrange
// [...]
// Act - Part 1 - Try to login
// [...]
// Act - Part 2 - Follow the redirect
// [...]
// Act - Part 3 - Reload the login page
let html_page = app.get_login_html().await;
assert!(!html_page.contains(r#"<p><i>Authentication failed</i></p>"#));
}
cargo test should report a failure. We now need to change our request handler - we must set the
_flash cookie on the response with Max-Age=0 to remove the flash messages stored in the user’s
browser.:
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
use actix_web::cookie::{Cookie, time::Duration};
353
//! [...]
Under the hood, it performs the exact same operation but it does not require the reader to piece
together the meaning of setting Max-Age to zero.
10.6.4.14 Cookie Security What security challenges do we face when working with cookies?
It is still possible to perform a XSS attack using cookies, but it requires a bit more effort compared to
query parameters - you cannot craft a link to our website that sets or manipulates cookies. Nonethe-
less, using cookies naively can expose us to bad actors.
What type of attacks can be mounted against cookies?
Broadly speaking, we want to prevent attackers from tampering with our cookies (i.e. integrity) or
sniffing their content (i.e. confidentiality).
First and foremost, transmitting cookies over an insecure connection (i.e. HTTP instead of HTTPS)
exposes us to man in the middle attacks - the request sent to the server by the browser can be
intercepted, read and its content modified arbitrarily.
The first line of defense is our API - it should reject requests sent over unencrypted channels. We
can benefit from an additional layer of defense by marking newly created cookies as Secure: this
instructs browsers to only attach the cookie to requests transmitted over secure connections.
The second major threat to the confidentiality and integrity of our cookies is JavaScript: scripts
running client-side can interact with the cookie store, read/modify existing cookies or set new ones.
As a rule of thumb, a least-privilege policy is a good default: cookies should not be visible to scripts
unless there is a compelling reason to do otherwise. We can mark newly created cookies as Http-Only
to hide them from client-side code - the browser will store them and attach them to outgoing requests,
as usual, but scripts will not be able to see them.
Http-Only is a good default, but it is not a panacea - JavaScript code might not be able to access
our Http-Only cookie, but there are ways to overwrite them90 and trick the backend to perform some
90 An attack known as “cookie jar overflow” can be used to delete pre-existing Http-Only cookies. The cookies can
354
unexpected or undesired actions.
Last but not least, users can be a threat as well! They can freely manipulate the content of their
cookie storage using the developer tools provided by their browser. While this might not be an issue
when looking at flash messages, it definitely becomes a concern when working with other types of
cookies (e.g. auth sessions, which we will be looking at shortly).
We should have multiple layers of defense.
We already know of an approach to ensure integrity, no matter what happens in the front-channel,
don’t we?
Message authentication codes (MAC), the ones we used to secure our query parameters! A cookie
value with an HMAC tag attached is often referred to as a signed cookie. By verifying the tag on
the backend we can be confident that the value of a signed cookie has not been tampered with, just
like we did for query parameters.
355
fn run(/* */) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
let message_store = CookieMessageStore::builder(todo!()).build();
let message_framework = FlashMessagesFramework::builder(message_store).build();
// [...]
}
CookieMessageStore enforces that the cookie used as storage is signed, therefore we must provide a
Key to its builder. We can reuse the hmac_secret we introduced when working on HMAC tags for
query parameters:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
use actix_web::cookie::Key;
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => { /* */ }
Err(e) => {
let e = /* */;
FlashMessage::error(e.to_string()).send();
let response = HttpResponse::SeeOther()
// No cookies here now!
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/login"))
.finish();
// [...]
}
}
}
The FlashMessagesFramework middleware takes care of all the heavy-lifting behind the scenes -
creating the cookie, signing it, setting the right properties, etc.
We can also attach multiple flash messages to a single response - the framework takes care of how
they should be combined and represented in the storage layer.
How does the receiving side work? How do we read incoming flash messages in GET /login?
We can use the IncomingFlashMessages extractor:
356
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
use actix_web_flash_messages::{IncomingFlashMessages, Level};
use std::fmt::Write;
The code needs to change a bit to accommodate the chance of having received multiple flash messages,
but overall it is almost equivalent. In particular, we no longer have to deal with the cookie API, neither
to retrieve incoming flash messages nor to make sure that they get erased after having been read -
actix-web-flash-messages takes care of it. The validity of the cookie signature is verified in the
background as well, before the request handler is invoked.
What about our tests?
They are failing:
---- login::an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure stdout ----
thread 'login::an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure' panicked at
'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `"Ik4JlkXTiTlc507ERzy2Ob4Xc4qXAPzJ7MiX6EB04c4%3D%5B%7B%2[...]"`,
right: `"Authentication failed"`'
Our assertions are a bit too close to the implementation details - we should only verify that the
rendered HTML contains (or does not contain) the expected error message. Let’s amend the test
code:
//! tests/api/login.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn an_error_flash_message_is_set_on_failure() {
// Arrange
// [...]
// Act - Part 1 - Try to login
// [...]
// Assert
// No longer asserting facts related to cookies
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/login");
357
10.7 Sessions
We focused for a while on what should happen on a failed login attempt. Time to swap: what do we
expect to see after a successful login?
Authentication is meant to restrict access to functionality that requires higher privileges - in our case,
the capability to send out a new issue of the newsletter to the entire mailing list. We want to build
an administration panel - we will have a /admin/dashboard page, restricted to logged-in users, to
access all admin functionality.
We will get there in stages. As the very first milestone, we want to:
• redirect to /admin/dashboard after a successful login attempt to show a Welcome <username>!
greeting message;
• if a user tries to navigate directly to /admin/dashboard and they are not logged in, they will
be redirected to the login form.
This plan requires sessions.
cookie associated to a user session. Later in this chapter, we will talk about the lifecycle of cookies, where session
cookie refers to a cookie whose lifetime is tied to a browser session. I’d love to change the naming to be clearer, but
this ambiguity is now part of the industry terminology and there is no point in shielding you.
93 A common example of poorly implemented sessions uses a monotonically increasing integer as session token - e.g. 6,
7, 8, etc. It is easy enough to “explore” nearby numbers by modifying the cookie stored in your browser until you
manage to find another logged-in user - bingo, you are in! Not great.
358
• creation, when a user logs in;
• retrieval, using the session tokens extracted from the cookie attached to the incoming requests;
• update, when a logged-in user performs some actions that lead to a change in their session
state;
• deletion, when the user logs out.
These are commonly known as CRUD (create, delete, read, update).
We also need some form of expiration - sessions are meant to be short-lived. Without a clean-up
mechanism we are going to end up using more space for outdated/stale session than active ones.
10.7.3.2 Redis Redis is another popular option when it comes to session storage.
Redis is an in-memory database - it uses RAM instead of disk for storage, trading off durability for
speed. It is great fit, in particular, for data that can be modelled as a collection of key-value pairs.
It also provides native support for expiration - we can attach a time-to-live to all values and Redis
will take care of disposal.
How would it work for sessions?
Our application never manipulates sessions in bulk - we always work on a single session at a time,
identified using its token. Therefore, we can use the session token as key while the value is the JSON
representation of the session state - the application takes care of serialization/deserialization.
Sessions are meant to be short-lived - no reason to be concerned by the usage of RAM instead of disk
for persistence, the speed boost is a nice side effect!
As you might have guessed at this point, we will be using Redis as our session storage backend!
10.7.4 actix-session
actix-session provides session management for actix-web applications. Let’s add it to our depen-
dencies:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies.actix-session]
# We are using an unreleased version of `actix-session` that provides a more
# composable API for session storage backends + TLS/auth support
# when using the Redis backend
git = "https://github.com/actix/actix-extras"
branch = "master"
# [...]
The key type in actix-session is SessionMiddleware - it that takes care of loading the session
data, tracking changes to the state and persisting them at the end of the request/response lifecycle.
To build an instance of SessionMiddleware we need to provide a storage backend and a secret
key to sign (or encrypt) the session cookie. The approach is quite similar to the one used by
FlashMessagesFramework in actix-web-flash-messages.
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
use actix_session::SessionMiddleware;
359
fn run(
// [...]
) -> Result<Server, std::io::Error> {
// [...]
let secret_key = Key::from(hmac_secret.expose_secret().as_bytes());
let message_store = CookieMessageStore::builder(secret_key.clone()).build();
// [...]
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
.wrap(message_framework.clone())
.wrap(SessionMiddleware::new(todo!(), secret_key.clone()))
.wrap(TracingLogger::default())
// [...]
})
// [...]
}
actix-session is quite flexible when it comes to storage - you can provide your own by implementing
the SessionStore trait. It also offers some implementations out of the box, hidden behind a set of
feature flags - including a Redis backend. Let’s enable it:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies.actix-session]
# [...]
features = ["redis-rs-tls-session"]
We can now access RedisSessionStore. To build one we will have to pass a Redis connection string
as input - let’s add redis_uri to our configuration struct:
//! src/configuration.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize, Clone)]
pub struct Settings {
// [...]
// We have not created a stand-alone settings struct for Redis,
// let's see if we need more than the uri first!
// The URI is marked as secret because it may embed a password.
pub redis_uri: Secret<String>,
}
# configuration/base.yaml
# 6379 is Redis' default port
redis_uri: "redis://127.0.0.1:6379"
# [...]
impl Application {
// Async now! We also return anyhow::Error instead of std::io::Error
pub async fn build(configuration: Settings) -> Result<Self, anyhow::Error> {
// [...]
let server = run(
// [...]
configuration.redis_uri
).await?;
// [...]
}
360
}
//! src/main.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
// anyhow::Result now instead of std::io::Error
async fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> {
// [...]
}
10.7.4.1 Redis In Our Development Setup We need to run a Redis container alongside the
Postgres container in our CI pipeline - check out the updated YAML in the book repository.
We also need a running Redis container on our development machine to execute the test suite and
launch the application. Let’s add a script to launch it:
# scripts/init_redis.sh
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -x
set -eo pipefail
361
10.7.4.2 Redis On Digital Ocean Digital Ocean does not support the creation of a development
Redis cluster via the spec.yaml file. You need to go through their dashboard - create a new Redis
cluster here. Make sure to select the datacenter where you deployed the application. Once the cluster
has been created, you have to go through a quick “Get started” flow to configure a few knobs (trusted
sources, eviction policy, etc.).
At the end of the “Get started” flow you will be able to copy a connection string to your newly
provisioned Redis instance. The connection string embeds a username and a password, therefore we
must treat it as a secret. We will inject its value into the application using an environment value -
set APP_REDIS_URI from the Settings panel in your application console.
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
//! src/routes/mod.rs
// [...]
mod admin;
pub use admin::*;
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::admin_dashboard;
// [...]
async fn run(/* */) -> Result<Server, anyhow::Error> {
// [...]
let server = HttpServer::new(move || {
App::new()
// [...]
.route("/admin/dashboard", web::get().to(admin_dashboard))
// [...]
})
// [...]
}
10.7.5.1 Redirect On Login Success Let’s start to work on the first milestone:
#[tokio::test]
async fn redirect_to_admin_dashboard_after_login_success() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
362
// Act - Part 1 - Login
let login_body = serde_json::json!({
"username": &app.test_user.username,
"password": &app.test_user.password
});
let response = app.post_login(&login_body).await;
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/admin/dashboard");
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
pub async fn get_admin_dashboard(&self) -> String {
self.api_client
.get(&format!("{}/admin/dashboard", &self.address))
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
.text()
.await
.unwrap()
}
}
Getting past the first assertion is easy enough - we just need to change the Location header in the
response returned by POST /login:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(/* */) => {
// [...]
Ok(HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/admin/dashboard"))
.finish())
}
// [...]
}
}
363
Time to put those sessions to work.
10.7.5.2 Session We need to identify the user once it lands on GET /admin/dashboard after
following the redirect returned by POST /login - this is a perfect usecase for sessions.
We will store the user identifier into the session state in login and then retrieve it from the session
state in admin_dashboard.
We need to become familiar with Session, the second key type from actix_session.
SessionMiddleware does all the heavy lifting of checking for a session cookie in incoming requests -
if it finds one, it loads the corresponding session state from the chosen storage backend. Otherwise,
it creates a new empty session state.
We can then use Session as an extractor to interact with that state in our request handlers.
Let’s see it in action in POST /login:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
use actix_session::Session;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
skip(form, pool, session),
// [...]
)]
pub async fn login(
// [...]
session: Session,
) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
// [...]
session.insert("user_id", user_id);
Ok(HttpResponse::SeeOther()
.insert_header((LOCATION, "/admin/dashboard"))
.finish())
}
// [...]
}
}
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
# We need to add the `serde` feature
uuid = { version = "0.8.1", features = ["v4", "serde"] }
You can think of Session as a handle on a HashMap - you can insert and retrieve values against
String keys.
The values you pass in must be serializable - actix-session converts them into JSON behind the
scenes. That’s why we had to add the serde feature to our uuid dependency.
Serialisation implies the possibility of failure - if you run cargo check you will see that the compiler
warns us that we are not handling the Result returned by session.insert. Let’s take care of that:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
// [...]
session
364
.insert("user_id", user_id)
.map_err(|e| login_redirect(LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into())))?;
// [...]
}
Err(e) => {
let e = match e {
AuthError::InvalidCredentials(_) => LoginError::AuthError(e.into()),
AuthError::UnexpectedError(_) => LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into()),
};
Err(login_redirect(e))
}
}
}
If something goes wrong, the user will be redirected back to the /login page with an appropriate
error message.
What does Session::insert actually do, though?
All operations performed against Session are executed in memory - they do not affect the state of
the session as seen by the storage backend. After the handler returns a response, SessionMiddleware
will inspect the in-memory state of Session - if it changed, it will call Redis to update (or create)
the state. It will also take care of setting a session cookie on the client, if there wasn’t one already.
Does it work though? Let’s try to get the user_id on the other side!
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
use actix_session::Session;
use actix_web::{web, HttpResponse};
use uuid::Uuid;
// Return an opaque 500 while preserving the error's root cause for logging.
fn e500<T>(e: T) -> actix_web::Error
where
T: std::fmt::Debug + std::fmt::Display + 'static
{
actix_web::error::ErrorInternalServerError(e)
}
When using Session::get we must specify what type we want to deserialize the session state entry
into - a Uuid in our case. Deserialization may fail, so we must handle the error case.
365
Now that we have the user_id, we can use it to fetch the username and return the “Welcome
{username}!” message we talked about before.
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// [...]
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
use actix_web::web;
use anyhow::Context;
use sqlx::PgPool;
366
anonymous session and, after they authenticate, to a privileged session. This can be leveraged by
attackers.
Websites go to great lengths to prevent malicious actors from sniffing session tokens, leading to
another attack strategy - seed the user’s browser with a known session token before they log in,
wait for authentication to happen and, boom, you are in!
There is a simple countermeasure we can take to disrupt this attack - rotating the session token when
the user logs in.
This is such a common practice that you will find it supported in the session management API of all
major web frameworks - including actix-session, via Session::renew. Let’s add it in:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, InternalError<LoginError>> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
// [...]
session.renew();
session
.insert("user_id", user_id)
.map_err(|e| login_redirect(LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into())))?;
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
}
10.7.5.3 A Typed Interface To Session Session is powerful but, taken as is, it is a brittle
foundation to build your application state-handling on. We are accessing data using a string-based
API, being careful to use the same keys and types on both sides - insertion and retrieval. It works
when the state is very simple, but it quickly degrades into a mess if you have several routes accessing
the same data - how can you be sure that you updated all of them when you want to evolve the
schema? How do we prevent a key typo from causing a production outage?
Tests can help, but we can use the type system to make the problem go away entirely. We will build
a strongly-typed API on top of Session to access and modify the state - no more string keys and
type casting in our request handlers.
Session is a foreign type (defined in actix-session) therefore we must use the extension trait
pattern:
//! src/lib.rs
// [...]
pub mod session_state;
//! src/session_state.rs
use actix_session::Session;
use uuid::Uuid;
impl TypedSession {
const USER_ID_KEY: &'static str = "user_id";
pub fn renew(&self) {
self.0.renew();
}
367
self.0.insert(Self::USER_ID_KEY, user_id)
}
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
serde_json = "1"
# [...]
How will the request handlers build an instance of TypedSession?
We could provide a constructor that takes a Session as argument. Another option is to make
TypedSession itself an actix-web extractor - let’s try that out!
//! src/session_state.rs
// [...]
use actix_session::SessionExt;
use actix_web::dev::Payload;
use actix_web::{FromRequest, HttpRequest};
use std::future::{Ready, ready};
It is just three lines long, but it does probably expose you to a few new Rust concepts/constructs.
Take the time you need to go line by line and properly understand what is happening - or, if you
prefer, understand the gist and come back later to deep dive!
We can now swap Session for TypedSession in our request handlers:
//! src/routes/login/post.rs
// You can now remove the `Session` import
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn login(
// [...]
// Changed from `Session` to `TypedSession`!
session: TypedSession,
) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
match validate_credentials(/* */).await {
Ok(user_id) => {
368
// [...]
session.renew();
session
.insert_user_id(user_id)
.map_err(|e| login_redirect(LoginError::UnexpectedError(e.into())))?;
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
}
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// You can now remove the `Session` import
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
// [...]
10.7.5.4 Reject Unauthenticated Users We can now take care of the second milestone:
If a user tries to navigate directly to /admin/dashboard and they are not logged in, they will
be redirected to the login form.
#[tokio::test]
async fn you_must_be_logged_in_to_access_the_admin_dashboard() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
// Act
let response = app.get_admin_dashboard().await;
// Assert
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/login");
}
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
//!
impl TestApp {
// [...]
pub async fn get_admin_dashboard(&self) -> reqwest::Response {
self.api_client
.get(&format!("{}/admin/dashboard", &self.address))
.send()
.await
369
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
operator when they trigger the first deployment of the newsletter - e.g. they could be prompted to provide both by a
command-line application used to provide a streamlined installation process.
370
Pick your favourite UUID generator to get a valid user id. We will use admin as username.
Getting a PHC string is a bit more cumbersome - we will use everythinghastostartsomewhere as
a password, but how do we generate the corresponding PHC string?
We can cheat by leveraging the code we wrote in our test suite:
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestUser {
pub fn generate() -> Self {
Self {
// [...]
// password: Uuid::new_v4().to_string(),
password: "everythinghastostartsomewhere".into(),
}
}
This is just a temporary edit - it is then enough to run cargo test -- --nocapture to get a well-
formed PHC string for our migration script. Revert the changes once you have it.
The migration script will look like this:
--- 20211217223217_seed_user.sql
INSERT INTO users (user_id, username, password_hash)
VALUES (
'ddf8994f-d522-4659-8d02-c1d479057be6',
'admin',
'$argon2id$v=19$m=15000,t=2,p=1$OEx/rcq+3ts//WUDzGNl2g$Am8UFBA4w5NJEmAtquGvBmAlu92q/VQcaoL5AyJPfc8'
);
Run the migration and then launch your application with cargo run - you should finally be able to
log in successfully!
If everything works as expected, a “Welcome admin!” message should greet you at /admin/dashboard.
Congrats!
10.8.2.1 Form Skeleton Let’s start by putting in place the required scaffolding. It is a form-
based flow, just like the login one - we need a GET endpoint to return the HTML form and a POST
endpoint to process the submitted information:
//! src/routes/admin/mod.rs
// [...]
371
mod password;
pub use password::*;
//! src/routes/admin/password/mod.rs
mod get;
pub use get::change_password_form;
mod post;
pub use post::change_password;
//! src/routes/admin/password/get.rs
use actix_web::http::header::ContentType;
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
use actix_web::{HttpResponse, web};
use secrecy::Secret;
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
current_password: Secret<String>,
372
new_password: Secret<String>,
new_password_check: Secret<String>,
}
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::{change_password, change_password_form};
// [...]
Just like the admin dashboard itself, we do not want to show the change password form to users who
are not logged in. Let’s add two integration tests:
//! tests/api/main.rs
mod change_password;
// [...]
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
pub async fn get_change_password(&self) -> reqwest::Response {
self.api_client
.get(&format!("{}/admin/password", &self.address))
.send()
.await
.expect("Failed to execute request.")
}
//! tests/api/change_password.rs
use crate::helpers::{spawn_app, assert_is_redirect_to};
use uuid::Uuid;
373
#[tokio::test]
async fn you_must_be_logged_in_to_see_the_change_password_form() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
// Act
let response = app.get_change_password().await;
// Assert
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/login");
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn you_must_be_logged_in_to_change_your_password() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let new_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
// Act
let response = app
.post_change_password(&serde_json::json!({
"current_password": Uuid::new_v4().to_string(),
"new_password": &new_password,
"new_password_check": &new_password,
}))
.await;
// Assert
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/login");
}
We can then satisfy the requirements by adding a check in the request handlers96 :
//! src/routes/admin/password/get.rs
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
use crate::utils::{e500, see_other};
// [...]
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
use crate::utils::{e500, see_other};
// [...]
96 An alternative approach, to spare us the repetition, is to create a middleware that wraps all the endpoints nested
under the /admin/ prefix. The middleware checks the session state and redirects the visitor to /login if they are not
logged in. If you like a challenge, give it a try! Beware though: actix-web’s middlewares can be tricky to implement
due to the lack of async syntax in traits.
374
};
todo!()
}
//! src/utils.rs
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
use actix_web::http::header::LOCATION;
// Return an opaque 500 while preserving the error root's cause for logging.
pub fn e500<T>(e: T) -> actix_web::Error
where
T: std::fmt::Debug + std::fmt::Display + 'static,
{
actix_web::error::ErrorInternalServerError(e)
}
//! src/lib.rs
// [...]
pub mod utils;
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// The definition of e500 has been moved to src/utils.rs
use crate::utils::e500;
// [...]
We do not want the change password form to be an orphan page either - let’s add a list of available
actions to our admin dashboard, with a link to our new page:
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// [...]
10.8.2.2 Unhappy Path: New Passwords Do Not Match We have taken care of all the
preliminary steps, it is time to start working on the core functionality.
Let’s start with an unhappy case - we asked the user to write the new password twice and the two
375
entries do not match. We expect to be redirected back to the form with an appropriate error message.
//! tests/api/change_password.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn new_password_fields_must_match() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let new_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
let another_new_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
The test fails because the request handler panics. Let’s fix it:
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
use secrecy::ExposeSecret;
// [...]
376
That takes care of the redirect, the first part of the test, but it does not handle the error message:
---- change_password::new_password_fields_must_match stdout ----
thread 'change_password::new_password_fields_must_match' panicked at
'assertion failed: html_page.contains(...)',
We have gone through this journey before for the login form - we can use a flash message again!
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
// [...]
use actix_web_flash_messages::FlashMessage;
//! src/routes/admin/password/get.rs
// [...]
use actix_web_flash_messages::IncomingFlashMessages;
use std::fmt::Write;
Ok(HttpResponse::Ok()
.content_type(ContentType::html())
.body(format!(
r#"<!-- [...] -->
<body>
{msg_html}
<!-- [...] -->
</body>
</html>"#,
)))
}
10.8.2.3 Unhappy Path: The Current Password Is Invalid You might have noticed that
we require the user to provide its current password as part of the form. This is to prevent an attacker
who managed to acquire a valid session token from locking the legitimate user out of their account.
Let’s add an integration test to specify what we expect to see when the provided current password is
invalid:
//! tests/api/change_password.rs
// [...]
377
#[tokio::test]
async fn current_password_must_be_valid() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let new_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
let wrong_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
// Assert
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/admin/password");
To validate the value passed as current_password we need to retrieve the username and then invoke
the validate_credentials routine, the one powering our login form.
Let’s start with the username:
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
use crate::routes::admin::dashboard::get_username;
use sqlx::PgPool;
// [...]
if form.new_password.expose_secret() != form.new_password_check.expose_secret() {
// [...]
}
let username = get_username(user_id, &pool).await.map_err(e500)?;
// [...]
todo!()
}
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// [...]
378
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
// Marked as `pub`!
pub async fn get_username(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
// [...]
}
We can now pass the username and password combination to validate_credentials - if the valida-
tion fails, we need to take different actions depending on the returned error:
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
// [...]
use crate::authentication::{validate_credentials, AuthError, Credentials};
10.8.2.4 Unhappy Path: The New Password Is Too Short We do not want our users to
choose a weak password - it exposes their account to attackers.
OWASP’s provides a minimum set of requirements when it comes to password strength - passwords
should be longer than 12 characters but shorter than 128 characters.
Add these validation checks to our POST /admin/password endpoint as an exercise!
10.8.2.5 Logout It is finally time to look at the happy path - a user successfully changing their
password.
We will use the following scenario to check that everything behaves as expected:
• Log in;
• Change password by submitting the change password form;
• Log out;
• Log in again using the new password.
There is just one roadblock left - we do not have a log-out endpoint yet!
Let’s work to bridge this functionality gap before moving forward.
Let’s start by encoding our requirements in a test:
//! tests/api/admin_dashboard.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn logout_clears_session_state() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
379
// Act - Part 1 - Login
let login_body = serde_json::json!({
"username": &app.test_user.username,
"password": &app.test_user.password
});
let response = app.post_login(&login_body).await;
assert_is_redirect_to(&response, "/admin/dashboard");
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
// [...]
impl TestApp {
// [...]
A log-out is a state-alerting operation: we need to use the POST method via a HTML button:
//! src/routes/admin/dashboard.rs
// [...]
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We now need to add the corresponding POST /admin/logout request handler.
What does it actually mean to log out?
We are using session-based authentication - a user is “logged in” if there is a valid user id associated
with the user_id key in the session state. To log out it is enough to delete the session - remove the
state from the storage backend and unset the client-side cookie.
actix-session has a dedicated method for this purpose - Session::purge. We need to expose it in
our TypedSession abstraction and then call it in POST /logout’s request handler:
//! src/session_state.rs
// [...]
impl TypedSession {
// [...]
pub fn log_out(self) {
self.0.purge()
}
}
//! src/routes/admin/logout.rs
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
use crate::utils::{e500, see_other};
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
use actix_web_flash_messages::FlashMessage;
//! src/routes/login/get.rs
// [...]
pub async fn login_form(/* */) -> HttpResponse {
// [...]
// Display all messages levels, not just errors!
for m in flash_messages.iter() {
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
//! src/routes/admin/mod.rs
// [...]
mod logout;
pub use logout::log_out;
//! src/startup.rs
use crate::routes::log_out;
// [...]
381
// [...]
}
10.8.2.6 Happy Path: The Password Was Changed Successfully We can now get back to
the happy path scenario in our change password flow:
• Log in;
• Change password by submitting the change password form;
• Log out;
• Log in again, successfully, using the new password.
Let’s add an integration test:
//! tests/api/change_password.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn changing_password_works() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let new_password = Uuid::new_v4().to_string();
This is the most complex user scenario we have written so far - a grand total of six steps. This is far
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from being a record - enterprise applications often require tens of steps to execute real world business
processes. It takes a lot of work to keep the test suite readable and maintainable in those scenarios.
The test currently fails at the third step - POST /admin/password panics because we left a todo!()
invocation after the preliminary input validation steps. To implement the required functionality we
will need to compute the hash of the new password and then store it in the database - we can add a
new dedicated routine to our authentication module:
//! src/authentication.rs
use argon2::password_hash::SaltString;
use argon2::{
Algorithm, Argon2, Params, PasswordHash,
PasswordHasher, PasswordVerifier, Version
};
// [...]
fn compute_password_hash(
password: Secret<String>
) -> Result<Secret<String>, anyhow::Error> {
let salt = SaltString::generate(&mut rand::thread_rng());
let password_hash = Argon2::new(
Algorithm::Argon2id,
Version::V0x13,
Params::new(15000, 2, 1, None).unwrap(),
)
.hash_password(password.expose_secret().as_bytes(), &salt)?
.to_string();
Ok(Secret::new(password_hash))
}
For Argon2 we used the parameters recommended by OWASP, the same ones we were already using
in our test suite.
We can now plug this function into the request handler:
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
// [...]
pub async fn change_password(/* */) -> Result</* */> {
383
// [...]
crate::authentication::change_password(user_id, form.0.new_password, &pool)
.await
.map_err(e500)?;
FlashMessage::error("Your password has been changed.").send();
Ok(see_other("/admin/password"))
}
10.9 Refactoring
We have added many new endpoints that are restricted to authenticated users. For the sake of speed,
we have copy-pasted the same authentication logic across multiple request handlers - it is a good idea
to take a step back and try to figure out if we can come up with a better solution.
Let’s look at POST /admin/passwords as an example. We currently have:
//! src/routes/admin/password/post.rs
// [...]
async fn reject_anonymous_users(
session: TypedSession
) -> Result<Uuid, actix_web::Error> {
match session.get_user_id().map_err(e500)? {
Some(user_id) => Ok(user_id),
None => {
let response = see_other("/login");
let e = anyhow::anyhow!("The user has not logged in");
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response).into())
}
}
}
Notice how we moved the redirect response on the error path in order to use the ? operator in our
request handler.
We could now go and refactor all other /admin/* routes to leverage reject_anonymous_users. Or,
if you are feeling adventurous, we could try writing a middleware to handle this for us - let’s do it!
384
10.9.1 How To Write An actix-web Middleware
Writing a full-blown middleware in actix-web can be challenging - it requires us to understand their
Transform and Service traits.
Those abstractions are powerful, but power comes at the cost of complexity.
Our needs are quite simple, we can get away with less: actix_web_lab::from_fn.
actix_web_lab is a crate used to experiment with future additions to the actix_web framework,
with a faster release policy. Let’s add it to our dependencies:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dependencies]
actix-web-lab = "0.15"
# [...]
from_fn takes an asynchronous function as argument and returns an actix-web middleware as output.
The asynchronous function must have the following signature and structure:
use actix_web_lab::middleware::Next;
use actix_web::body::MessageBody;
use actix_web::dev::{ServiceRequest, ServiceResponse};
async fn my_middleware(
req: ServiceRequest,
next: Next<impl MessageBody>,
) -> Result<ServiceResponse<impl MessageBody>, Error> {
// before the handler is invoked
// Invoke handler
let response = next.call(req).await;
Let’s adapt reject_anonymous_users to follow those requirements - it will live in our authentication
module.
//! src/authentication/mod.rs
mod middleware;
mod password;
pub use password::{
change_password, validate_credentials,
AuthError, Credentials
};
pub use middleware::reject_anonymous_users;
//! src/authentication/password.rs
// Copy over **everything** from the old src/authentication.rs
To start out, we need to get our hands on a TypedSession instance. ServiceRequest is nothing
385
more than a wrapper around HttpRequest and Payload, therefore we can leverage our existing
implementation of FromRequest:
//! src/authentication/middleware.rs
use actix_web_lab::middleware::Next;
use actix_web::body::MessageBody;
use actix_web::dev::{ServiceRequest, ServiceResponse};
use actix_web::FromRequest;
use crate::session_state::TypedSession;
Now that we have the session handler, we can check if the session state contains a user id:
//! src/authentication/middleware.rs
use actix_web::error::InternalError;
use crate::utils::{e500, see_other};
// [...]
match session.get_user_id().map_err(e500)? {
Some(_) => next.call(req).await,
None => {
let response = see_other("/login");
let e = anyhow::anyhow!("The user has not logged in");
Err(InternalError::from_response(e, response).into())
}
}
}
This, as it stands, is already useful - it can be leveraged to protect endpoints that require authenti-
cation.
At the same time, it isn’t equivalent to what we had before - how are we going to access the retrieved
user id in our endpoints?
This is a common issue when working with middlewares that extract information out of incoming
requests - it is solved via request extensions.
The middleware inserts the information it wants to pass to downstream request handlers into the
type map attached to the incoming request (request.extensions_mut()).
Request handlers can then access it using the ReqData extractor.
Let’s start by performing the insertion.
We will define a new-type wrapper, UserId, to prevent conflicts in the type map:
//! src/authentication/mod.rs
// [...]
pub use middleware::UserId;
386
//! src/authentication/middleware.rs
use uuid::Uuid;
use std::ops::Deref;
use actix_web::HttpMessage;
// [...]
If you run the test suite, you’ll be greeted by several failures. If you inspect the logs for one of them,
you’ll find the following error:
Error encountered while processing the incoming HTTP request:
"Missing expected request extension data"
It makes sense - we never registered our middleware against our App instance, therefore the insertion
387
of UserId into the request extensions never takes place.
Let’s fix it.
Our routing table currently looks like this:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
We want to apply our middleware logic exclusively to /admin/* endpoints, but calling wrap on App
would apply the middleware to all our routes.
Considering that our target endpoints all share the same common base path, we can achieve our
objective by introducing a scope:
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
388
web::scope("/admin")
.route("/dashboard", web::get().to(admin_dashboard))
.route("/password", web::get().to(change_password_form))
.route("/password", web::post().to(change_password))
.route("/logout", web::post().to(log_out)),
)
.app_data(db_pool.clone())
.app_data(email_client.clone())
.app_data(base_url.clone())
})
.listen(listener)?
.run();
Ok(server)
}
If you run the test suite, it should pass (apart from our idempotency test).
You can now go through the other /admin/* endpoints and remove the duplicated check-if-logged-in-
or-redirect code.
10.10 Summary
Take a deep breath - we covered a lot of ground in this chapter.
We built, from scratch, a large chunk of the machinery that powers authentication in most of the
software you interact with on a daily basis.
API security is an amazingly broad topic - we explored together a selection of key techniques, but
this introduction is in no way exhaustive. There are entire areas that we just mentioned but did
not have a chance to cover in depth (e.g. OAuth2/OpenID Connect). Look at the bright side - you
learned enough to go and tackle those topics on your own should your applications require them.
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It is easy to forget the bigger picture when you spend a lot of time working close to the details - why
did we even start to talk about API security?
That’s right! We had just built a new endpoint to send out newsletter issues and we did not want
to give everyone on the Internet a chance to broadcast content to our audience. We added ‘Basic’
authentication to POST /newsletters early in the chapter but we have not yet ported it over to
session-based authentication.
As an exercise, before engaging with the new chapter, do the following:
• Add a Send a newsletter issue link to the admin dashboard;
• Add an HTML form at GET /admin/newsletters to submit a new issue;
• Adapt POST /newsletters to process the form data:
– Change the route to POST /admin/newsletters;
– Migrate from ‘Basic’ to session-based authentication;
– Use the Form extractor (application/x-www-form-urlencoded) instead of the Json ex-
tractor (application/json) to handle the request body;
– Adapt the test suite.
It will take a bit of work but - and that’s the key here - you know how to do all these things. We
have done them together before - feel free to go back to the relevant sections as you progress through
the exercise.
On GitHub you can find a project snapshot before and after fulfilling the exercise requirements.
The next chapter assumes that the exercise has been completed - make sure to double-check
your solution before moving forward!
POST /admin/newsletters will be under the spotlight during the next chapter - we will be reviewing
our initial implementation under a microscope to understand how it behaves when things break down.
It will give us a chance to talk more broadly about fault tolerance, scalability and asynchronous
processing.
390
11 Fault-tolerant Workflows
We kept the first iteration of our newsletter endpoint very simple: emails are immediately sent out
to all subscribers via Postmark, one API call at a time.
This is good enough if the audience is small - it breaks down, in a variety of ways, when dealing with
hundreds of subscribers.
We want our application to be fault-tolerant.
Newsletter delivery should not be disrupted by transient failures like application crashes, Postmark
API errors or network timeouts. To deliver a reliable service in the face of failure we will have to
explore new concepts: idempotency, locking, queues and background jobs.
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
title: String,
text_content: String,
html_content: String,
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
email_client: web::Data<EmailClient>,
) -> Result<HttpResponse, actix_web::Error> {
// [...]
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, actix_web::Error> {
// [...]
let subscribers = get_confirmed_subscribers(&pool).await.map_err(e500)?;
// [...]
}
struct ConfirmedSubscriber {
email: SubscriberEmail,
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
async fn get_confirmed_subscribers(
pool: &PgPool,
97 At the end of chapter 10 you were asked to convert POST /newsletters (JSON + ‘Basic’ auth) into POST
/admin/newsletters (HTML Form data + session-based auth) as a take-home exercise. Your implementation might
differ slightly from mine, therefore the code blocks here might not match exactly what you see in your IDE. Check the
book’s GitHub repository to compare solutions.
391
) -> Result<Vec<Result<ConfirmedSubscriber, anyhow::Error>>, anyhow::Error> {
/* */
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(/* */) -> Result<HttpResponse, actix_web::Error> {
// [...]
let subscribers = get_confirmed_subscribers(&pool).await.map_err(e500)?;
for subscriber in subscribers {
match subscriber {
Ok(subscriber) => {
email_client
.send_email(/* */)
.await
.with_context(/* */)
.map_err(e500)?;
}
Err(error) => {
tracing::warn!(/* */);
}
}
}
FlashMessage::info("The newsletter issue has been published!").send();
Ok(see_other("/admin/newsletters"))
}
Once all subscribers have been taken care of, we redirect the author back to the newsletter form -
they will be shown a flash message confirming that the issue was published successfully.
our side, submitting the HTML form we serve on GET /admin/newsletters should always result into a request body
that passes the basic validation done by the Json extractor - a.k.a. we get all the fields we expect. But mistakes are
a possibility - we cannot rule out that some of the types used in FormData as fields might start doing more advanced
validation in the future - it’d be safer to redirect the user back to the form page with a proper error message when
392
• unauthenticated users are redirected back to the login form.
11.3.2.1 Postgres The database might misbehave when we try to retrieve the current list of
subscribers. We do not have a lot of options apart from retrying. We can:
• retry in process, by adding some logic around the get_confirmed_subscribers call;
• give up by returning an error to the user. The user can then decide if they want to retry or not.
The first option makes our application more resilient to spurious failures. Nonetheless, you can only
perform a finite number of retries; you will have to give up eventually.
Our implementation opts for the second strategy from the get-go. It might result in a few more 500s,
but it is not incompatible with our over-arching objective.
batch to ensure best-effort delivery. Regardless, there is a maximum batch size (500) - if your audience is big enough
you have to think about how to batch batches: back to square zero. From a learning perspective, we can safely ignore
their batch API entirely.
393
11.3.4 Author Actions
Last but not least, we might have issues in the interaction between the author and the API.
If we are dealing with a large audience, it might take minutes to process the entire subscribers list.
The author might get impatient and choose to re-submit the form. The browser might decide to give
up (client-side timeout). Or, equally problematic, the author might click on the Submit button more
than once100 , by mistake.
Once again, we end up in a corner because our implementation is not retry-safe.
An API endpoint is retry-safe (or idempotent) if the caller has no way to observe if a request
has been sent to the server once or multiple times.
We will probe and explore this definition for a few sections: it is important to fully understand its
ramifications.
If you have been in the industry long enough, you have probably heard another term used to describe
the concept of retry-safety: idempotency. They are mostly used as synonyms - we will use idem-
potency going forward, mostly to align with other industry terminology that will be relevant to our
implementation (i.e. idempotency keys).
scenario.
101 Real-world payment systems would most likely return a 202 Accepted - payment authorization, execution and
settlement happen at different points in time. We are keeping things simple for the sake of our example.
394
Our idempotency definition is built around the concept of observability - properties of the system
state that the caller can inspect by interacting with the system itself.
For example: you could easily determine that the second call is a retry by going through the logs
emitted by the API. But the caller is not an operator - they have no way to inspect those logs. They
are invisible to the users of the API - in so far as idempotency is concerned, they don’t exist. They
are not part of the domain model exposed and manipulated by the API.
The domain model in our example includes:
• the caller’s account, with its balance (via GET /balance) and payment history (via GET
/payments);
• other accounts102 reachable over the payment network (i.e. beneficiaries we can pay).
Given the above, we can say that POST /payments is idempotent if, when the request is retried,
• the balance remains 380 USD;
• no additional money are transferred to the beneficiary.
There is one more detail to sort out - what HTTP response should the server return for the retried
request?
The caller should not be able to observe that the second request was a retry. The payment succeeded,
therefore the server should return a success response that is semantically equivalent to the HTTP
response used to answer the initial request.
payment history), but we can still observe if one of our payments did or did not reach its beneficiary - e.g. by calling
them or if they reach out to us to complain they haven’t received the money yet! API calls can have a material effect
on the physical world around us - that’s why this whole computer thing is so powerful and scary at the same time!
103 An Internet-Draft in the httpapi IETF working group proposed to standardize the Idempotency-Key header, but
the conversation does not seem to have moved forward (the draft expired in January 2022).
104 We are not actually going to implement a likeness check for incoming requests - it can get quite tricky: do the
headers matter? All of them? A subset of them? Does the body need to match byte-by-byte? Is it enough if it’s
semantically equivalent (e.g. two JSON objects with identical keys and values)? It can be done, but it is beyond the
scope of this chapter.
395
11.4.3 Concurrent Requests
What should happen when two duplicate requests are fired concurrently - i.e. the second request
reaches the server before it finishes processing the first one?
We do not yet know the outcome of the first request. Processing both requests in parallel might also
introduce the risk of performing side effects more than once (e.g. initiating two distinct payments).
It is common to introduce synchronization: the second request should not be processed until the
first one has completed.
We have two options:
• Reject the second request by returning a 409 Conflict status code back to the caller;
• Wait until the first request completes processing. Then return the same response back to the
caller.
Both are viable.
The latter is fully transparent to the caller, making it easier to consume the API - they don’t have to
handle yet another transient failure mode. There is a price105 to pay though: both the client and the
server need to keep an open connection while spinning idle, waiting for the other task to complete.
Considering our use case (processing forms), we will go for the second strategy in order to minimize
the number of user-visible errors - browsers do not automatically retry 409s.
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletter_creation_is_idempotent() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
create_confirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
app.test_user.login(&app).await;
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200))
.expect(1)
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
be avoided by enforcing fair-usage limitations - e.g. it’s OK to have a handful of concurrent requests for the same
idempotency key, but the server will start returning errors if we end up dealing with tens of duplicates.
396
assert!(
html_page.contains("<p><i>The newsletter issue has been published!</i></p>")
);
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email **once**
}
The retry succeeded, but it resulted in the newsletter being delivered twice to our subscriber - the
problematic behaviour we identified during the failure analysis at the very beginning of this chapter.
happen, you wouldn’t be able to send two different issues one after the other because Postmark’s idempotency logic
would prevent the second set of emails from going out. This is why we must include a fingerprint of the incoming
request content in the generation logic for the subscriber-specific idempotency key - it ensures a unique outcome for
each subscriber-newsletter issue pair. Alternatively, we must implement a likeness check to ensure that the same
idempotency key cannot be used for two different requests to POST /admin/newsletters - i.e. the idempotency key is
enough to ensure that the newsletter content is not the same.
397
11.6.3 Time Is a Tricky Beast
The stateless and the stateful approach are not 100% equivalent.
Let’s consider what happens, for example, when a new person subscribes to our newsletter between
the initial request and the following retry.
The stateless approach executes the handler logic in order to process the retried request. In particular,
it re-generates the list of current subscribers before kicking off the email dispatching for loop. As a
result, the new subscriber will receive the newsletter issue.
This is not the case when following the stateful approach - we retrieve the HTTP response from the
store and return it to the caller without performing any kind of processing.
This is a symptom of a deeper discrepancy - the elapsed time between the initial request and the
following retry affects the processing outcome when following the stateless approach.
We cannot execute our handler logic against the same snapshot of the state seen by the first request -
therefore, the view of the world in the stateless approach is impacted by all the operations that have
been committed since the first request was processed107 (e.g. new subscribers joining the mailing list).
Whether this is acceptable or not depends on the domain.
In our case, the fallout is quite minor - we are just sending extra newsletters out. We could live with
it if the stateless approach led us to a dramatically simpler implementation.
11.7.2 Schema
We need to define a new table to store the following information:
• user id;
• idempotency key;
107 This is equivalent to a non-repeatable read in a relational database.
398
• HTTP response.
The user id and the idempotency key can be used as a composite primary key. We should also record
when each row was created in order to evict old idempotency keys.
There is a major unknown though: what type should be used to store HTTP responses?
We could treat the whole HTTP response as a blob of bytes, using bytea as column type.
Unfortunately, it’d be tricky to re-hydrate the bytes into an HttpResponse object - actix-web does
not provide any serialization/deserialization implementation for HttpResponse.
We are going to write our own (de)serialisation code - we will work with the core components of an
HTTP response:
• status code;
• headers;
• body.
We are not going to store the HTTP version - the assumption is that we are working exclusively with
HTTP/1.1.
We can use smallint for the status code - it’s maximum value is 32767, which is more than enough.
bytea will do for the body.
What about headers? What is their type?
We can have multiple header values associated to the same header name, therefore it makes sense to
represent them as an array of (name, value) pairs.
We can use TEXT for the name (see http’s implementation) while value will require BYTEA because it
allows opaque octets (see http’s test cases).
Postgres does not support arrays of tuples, but there is a workaround: we can define a Postgres
composite type - i.e. a named collection of fields, the equivalent of a struct in our Rust code.
CREATE TYPE header_pair AS (
name TEXT,
value BYTEA
);
-- migrations/20220211080603_create_idempotency_table.sql
CREATE TYPE header_pair AS (
name TEXT,
value BYTEA
);
We could have defined an overall http_response composite type, but we would have run into a bug
in sqlx which is in turn caused by a bug in the Rust compiler. Best to avoid nested composite types
for the time being.
399
11.8 Save And Replay
11.8.1 Read Idempotency Key
Our POST /admin/newsletters endpoint is being triggered by an HTML form submission, therefore
we do not have control over the headers that are being sent to the server.
The most practical choice is to embed the idempotency key inside the form data:
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
// [...]
#[derive(serde::Deserialize)]
pub struct FormData {
title: String,
text_content: String,
html_content: String,
// New field!
idempotency_key: String
}
We do not care about the exact format of the idempotency key, as long as it’s not empty and it’s
reasonably long.
Let’s define a new type to enforce minimal validation:
//! src/lib.rs
// [...]
// New module!
pub mod idempotency;
//! src/idempotency/mod.rs
mod key;
pub use key::IdempotencyKey;
//! src/idempotency/key.rs
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct IdempotencyKey(String);
400
}
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
use crate::idempotency::IdempotencyKey;
use crate::utils::e400;
// [...]
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `400`,
right: `303`'
thread 'newsletter::newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `400`,
right: `303`'
Our test requests are being rejected because they do not include an idempotency key.
Let’s update them:
401
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
let newsletter_request_body = serde_json::json!({
// [...]
"idempotency_key": uuid::Uuid::new_v4().to_string()
});
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
let newsletter_request_body = serde_json::json!({
// [...]
"idempotency_key": uuid::Uuid::new_v4().to_string()
});
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn you_must_be_logged_in_to_publish_a_newsletter() {
// [...]
let newsletter_request_body = serde_json::json!({
// [...]
"idempotency_key": uuid::Uuid::new_v4().to_string()
});
// [...]
}
402
//! src/idempotency/mod.rs
// [...]
mod persistence;
pub use persistence::get_saved_response;
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
use super::IdempotencyKey;
use actix_web::HttpResponse;
use sqlx::PgPool;
use uuid::Uuid;
There is a caveat - sqlx does not know how to handle our custom header_pair type:
error: unsupported type _header_pair of column #2 ("response_headers")
|
| let saved_response = sqlx::query!(
| __________________________^
| | r#"
| | SELECT
.. |
| | idempotency_key.as_ref()
| | )
| |_____^
It might not be supported out of the box, but there is a mechanism for us to specify how it should
be handled - the Type, Decode and Encode traits.
Luckily enough, we do not have to implement them manually - we can derive them with a macro!
We just need to specify the type fields and the name of the composite type as it appears in Postgres;
the macro should take care of the rest:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
#[derive(Debug, sqlx::Type)]
#[sqlx(type_name = "header_pair")]
struct HeaderPairRecord {
name: String,
value: Vec<u8>,
}
403
Unfortunately, the error is still there.
error: unsupported type _header_pair of column #2 ("response_headers")
|
| let saved_response = sqlx::query!(
| __________________________^
| | r#"
| | SELECT
.. |
| | idempotency_key.as_ref()
| | )
| |_____^
It turns out that sqlx::query! does not handle custom type automatically - we need to explain how
we want the custom column to be handled by using an explicit type annotation.
The query becomes:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
At last, it compiles!
Let’s map the retrieved data back into a proper HttpResponse:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
use actix_web::http::StatusCode;
// [...]
404
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
// [...]
use crate::idempotency::get_saved_response;
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
We need to break HttpResponse into its separate components before we write the INSERT query.
We can use .status() for the status code, .headers() for the headers… what about the body?
There is a .body() method - this is its signature:
/// Returns a reference to this response's body.
pub fn body(&self) -> &B {
self.res.body()
}
What is B? We must include the impl block definition into the picture to grasp it:
impl<B> HttpResponse<B> {
/// Returns a reference to this response's body.
405
pub fn body(&self) -> &B {
self.res.body()
}
}
Well, well, it turns out that HttpResponse is generic over the body type!
But, you may ask, “we have been using HttpResponse for 400 pages without specifying any generic
parameter, what’s going on?”
There is a default generic parameter which kicks in if B is left unspecified:
/// An outgoing response.
pub struct HttpResponse<B = BoxBody> {/* */}
11.8.3.1 MessageBody and HTTP Streaming Why does HttpResponse need to be generic over
the body type in the first place? Can’t it just use Vec<u8> or a similar bytes container?
We have always worked with responses that were fully formed on the server before being sent back to
the caller. HTTP/1.1 supports another mechanism to transfer data - Transfer-Encoding: chunked,
also known as HTTP streaming.
The server breaks down the payload into multiple chunks and sends them over to the caller one at
a time instead of accumulating the entire body in memory first. It allows the server to significantly
reduce its memory usage. It is quite useful when working on large payloads such as files or results
from a large query (streaming all the way through!).
With HTTP streaming in mind, it becomes easier to understand the design of MessageBody, the trait
that must be implemented to use a type as body in actix-web:
pub trait MessageBody {
type Error: Into<Box<dyn Error + 'static, Global>>;
fn size(&self) -> BodySize;
fn poll_next(
self: Pin<&mut Self>,
cx: &mut Context<'_>
) -> Poll<Option<Result<Bytes, Self::Error>>>;
// [...]
}
You pull data, one chunk at a time, until you have fetched it all.
When the response is not being streamed, the data is available all at once - poll_next returns it all
in one go.
Let’s try to understand BoxBody, the default body type used by HttpResponse. The body type we
have been using for several chapters, unknowingly!
BoxBody abstracts away the specific payload delivery mechanism. Under the hood, it is nothing more
than an enum with a variant for each strategy, with a special case catering for body-less responses:
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct BoxBody(BoxBodyInner);
enum BoxBodyInner {
None(body::None),
Bytes(Bytes),
Stream(Pin<Box<dyn MessageBody<Error = Box<dyn StdError>>>>),
}
It worked for so long because we did not really care about the way the response was being sent back
to the caller.
Implementing save_response forces us to look closer - we need to collect the response in memory108
in order to save it in the idempotency table of our database.
108 We technically have another option: stream the response body directly to the database and then stream it back
406
actix-web has a dedicated function for situation like ours: to_bytes.
It calls poll_next until there is no more data to fetch, than it returns the entire response back to us
inside a Bytes container109 .
I’d normally advise for caution when talking about to_bytes - if you are dealing with huge payloads,
there is a risk of putting the server under significant memory pressure.
This is not our case - all our response bodies are small and don’t actually take advantage of HTTP
streaming, so to_bytes will not actually do any work.
Enough with the theory - let’s piece it together:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
use actix_web::body::to_bytes;
// [...]
BoxBody implements MessageBody, but &BoxBody doesn’t - and .body() returns a reference, it does
not give us ownership over the body.
Why do we need ownership? It’s because of HTTP streaming, once again!
Pulling a chunk of data from the payload stream requires a mutable reference to the stream itself -
once the chunk has been read, there is no way to “replay” the stream and read it again.
There is a common pattern to work around this:
• Get ownership of the body via .into_parts();
• Buffer the whole body in memory via to_bytes;
• Do whatever you have to do with the body;
• Re-assemble the response using .set_body() on the request head.
109 You can think of Bytes as a Vec<u8> with extra perks - check out the documentation of the bytes crate for more
details.
407
.into_parts() requires ownership of HttpResponse - we’ll have to change the signature of
save_response to accommodate it. Instead of asking for a reference, we’ll take ownership of the
response and then return another owned HttpResponse in case of success.
Let’s go for it:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
11.8.3.2 Array Of Composite Postgres Types Let’s add the insertion query:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
408
headers,
body.as_ref()
)
.execute(pool)
.await?;
It does make sense - we are using a custom type and sqlx::query! is not powerful enough to learn
about it at compile-time in order to check our query. We will have to disable compile-time verification
- use query_unchecked! instead of query!:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
sqlx knows, via our #[sqlx(type_name = "header_pair")] attribute, the name of the composite
type itself. It does not know the name of the type for arrays containing header_pair elements.
Postgres creates an array type implicitly when we run a CREATE TYPE statement - it is simply the
composite type name prefixed by an underscore110 .
We can provide this information to sqlx by implementing the PgHasArrayType trait, just like the
compiler suggested:
110 If the type name ends up being too long, some truncation takes place as well.
409
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
use sqlx::postgres::PgHasArrayType;
// [...]
11.8.3.3 Plug It In It’s a milestone, but it is a bit early to cheer - we don’t know if it works yet.
Our integration test is still red.
Let’s plug save_response into our request handler:
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
use crate::idempotency::save_response;
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn concurrent_form_submission_is_handled_gracefully() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
create_confirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
app.test_user.login(&app).await;
Mock::given(path("/email"))
.and(method("POST"))
410
// Setting a long delay to ensure that the second request
// arrives before the first one completes
.respond_with(ResponseTemplate::new(200).set_delay(Duration::from_secs(2)))
.expect(1)
.mount(&app.email_server)
.await;
assert_eq!(response1.status(), response2.status());
assert_eq!(response1.text().await.unwrap(), response2.text().await.unwrap());
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email **once**
}
The test fails - our server returned a 500 Internal Server Error to one of the two requests:
thread 'newsletter::concurrent_form_submission_is_handled_gracefully'
panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `303`,
right: `500`'
Caused by:
duplicate key value violates unique constraint "idempotency_pkey"
The slowest request fails to insert into the idempotency table due to our uniqueness constraint.
The error response is not the only issue: both requests executed the email dispatch code (otherwise
we wouldn’t have seen the constraint violation!), resulting into duplicate delivery.
11.9.2 Synchronization
The second request is not aware of the first until it tries to insert into the database.
If we want to prevent duplicate delivery, we need to introduce cross-request synchronization
before we start processing subscribers.
In-memory locks (e.g. tokio::sync::Mutex) would work if all incoming requests were being served
by a single API instance. This is not our case: our API is replicated, therefore the two requests might
end up being processed by two different instances.
Our synchronization mechanism will have to live out-of-process - our database being the natural
candidate.
Let’s think about it: we have an idempotency table, it contains one row for each unique combination
of user id and idempotency key. Can we do something with it?
Our current implementation inserts a row into the idempotency table after processing the request,
just before returning the response to the caller. We are going to change that: we will insert a new
row as soon as the handler is invoked.
411
We don’t know the final response at that point - we haven’t started processing yet! We must relax
the NOT NULL constraints on some of the columns:
sqlx migrate add relax_null_checks_on_idempotency
We can now insert a row as soon as the handler gets invoked using the information we have up to
that point - the user id and the idempotency key, our composite primary key.
The first request will succeed in inserting a row into idempotency. The second request, instead, will
fail due to our uniqueness constraint.
That is not what we want:
• if the first request completed, we want to return the saved response;
• if the first request is still ongoing, we want to wait.
The first scenario can be accommodated by using Postgres’ ON CONFLICT statement - it allows us to
define what should happen when an INSERT fails due to a constraint violation (e.g. uniqueness).
We have two options: ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING and ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE.
ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING, as you might guess, does nothing - it simply swallows the error. We can
detect that the row was already there by checking the number of rows that were affected by the
statement.
ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE, instead, can be used to modify the pre-existing row - e.g. ON CONFLICT DO
UPDATE SET updated_at = now().
We will use ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING - if no new row was inserted, we will try to fetch the saved
response.
Before we start implementing, there is an issue we need to solve: our code no longer compiles. Our
code has not been updated to deal with the fact that a few columns in idempotency are now nullable.
We must update the query to ask sqlx to forcefully assume that the columns will not be null - if we
are wrong, it will cause an error at runtime.
The syntax is similar to the type casting syntax we used previously to deal with header pairs - we
must append a ! to the column alias name:
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
Let’s now define the skeleton of a new function, the one we will invoke at the beginning of our request
handler - try_processing.
It will try to perform the insertion we just discussed - if it fails because a row already exists, we will
assume that a response has been saved and try to return it.
412
//! src/idempotency/mod.rs
// [...]
pub use persistence::{try_processing, NextAction};
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
// [...]
413
r#"
INSERT INTO idempotency (
user_id,
idempotency_key,
created_at
)
VALUES ($1, $2, now())
ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING
"#,
user_id,
idempotency_key.as_ref()
)
.execute(pool)
.await?
.rows_affected();
if n_inserted_rows > 0 {
Ok(NextAction::StartProcessing)
} else {
let saved_response = get_saved_response(pool, idempotency_key, user_id)
.await?
.ok_or_else(||
anyhow::anyhow!("We expected a saved response, we didn't find it")
)?;
Ok(NextAction::ReturnSavedResponse(saved_response))
}
}
414
We need to find a way to cause the INSERT in try_processing to wait instead of erroring out when
a retry arrives before the first request has completed processing.
11.9.2.1 Transaction Isolation Levels Let’s do an experiment: we will wrap the INSERT in
try_processing and the UPDATE in save_response in a single SQL transaction.
What do you think it’s going to happen?
//! src/idempotency/persistence.rs
use sqlx::{Postgres, Transaction};
// [...]
#[allow(clippy::large_enum_variant)]
pub enum NextAction {
// Return transaction for later usage
StartProcessing(Transaction<'static, Postgres>),
// [...]
}
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
// [...]
415
}
[…] a SELECT query (without a FOR UPDATE/SHARE clause) sees only data committed
before the query began; it never sees either uncommitted data or changes committed during
query execution by concurrent transactions. In effect, a SELECT query sees a snapshot of the
database as of the instant the query begins to run.
Data-altering statements, instead, will be influenced by uncommitted transactions that are trying to
alter the same set of rows:
UPDATE, DELETE, SELECT FOR UPDATE […] will only find target rows that were committed as
of the command start time. However, such a target row might have already been updated (or
deleted or locked) by another concurrent transaction by the time it is found. In this case, the
would-be updater will wait for the first updating transaction to commit or roll
back (if it is still in progress).
The second concurrent request will fail due to a database error: could not serialize access due
to concurrent update.
repeatable read is designed to prevent non-repeatable reads (who would have guessed?): the same
SELECT query, if run twice in a row within the same transaction, should return the same data.
This has consequences for statements such as UPDATE: if they are executed within a repeatable read
transaction, they cannot modify or lock rows changed by other transactions after the repeatable read
transaction began.
This is why the transaction initiated by the second request fails to commit in our little experiment
above. The same would have happened if we had chosen serializable, the strictest isolation level
available in Postgres.
416
What about errors?
Let’s add another test case:
#! Cargo.toml
# [...]
[dev-dependencies]
serde_urlencoded = "0.7.1"
# [...]
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
use fake::faker::internet::en::SafeEmail;
use fake::faker::name::en::Name;
use fake::Fake;
use wiremock::MockBuilder;
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn transient_errors_do_not_cause_duplicate_deliveries_on_retries() {
// Arrange
let app = spawn_app().await;
let newsletter_request_body = serde_json::json!({
"title": "Newsletter title",
"text_content": "Newsletter body as plain text",
"html_content": "<p>Newsletter body as HTML</p>",
"idempotency_key": uuid::Uuid::new_v4().to_string()
});
// Two subscribers instead of one!
create_confirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
create_confirmed_subscriber(&app).await;
app.test_user.login(&app).await;
417
let response = app.post_publish_newsletter(&newsletter_request_body).await;
assert_eq!(response.status().as_u16(), 303);
The test does not pass - we are seeing yet another instance of duplicated delivery:
thread 'newsletter::transient_errors_do_not_cause_duplicate_deliveries_on_retries'
panicked at 'Verifications failed:
- Delivery retry.
Expected range of matching incoming requests: == 1
Number of matched incoming requests: 2
It makes sense, if you think again about our idempotency implementation: the SQL transaction
inserting into the idempotency table commits exclusively when processing succeeds.
Errors lead to an early return - this triggers a rollback when the Transaction<'static, Postgres>
value is dropped.
Can we do better?
own isolated data store. You have traded the inner complexity of the monolith for the complexity of orchestrating
changes across multiple sub-system - complexity has to live somewhere.
418
tomer for the products in their basket but, when trying to authorize the shipment, we discover that
one of the items is now out of stock.
We can perform a backward recovery by cancelling all shipment instructions and refunding the cus-
tomer for the entire amount of their basket.
The recovery mechanism is not transparent to the customer - they will still see two payments on their
transaction history, the original charge and the following refund. We are also likely to send out an
email to explain what happened. But their balance, the state they care about, has been restored.
are still outstanding for a certain newsletter issue. Workflow observability is out of scope for the book, but it might be
an interesting exercise to pursue on your own.
419
The request handler of POST /admin/newsletters is no longer going to dispatch emails - it will
simply enqueue a list of tasks that will be fulfilled asynchronously by a set of background workers.
We will use another Postgres table as our task queue - it will be named issue_delivery_queue.
At a glance, it might look like a small difference - we are just shifting around when work needs to
happen. But it has a powerful implication: we recover transactionality.
Our subscribers’ data, our idempotency records, the task queue - they all live in Postgres. All the
operations performed by POST /admin/newsletters can be wrapped in a single SQL transaction -
either they all succeed, or nothing happened.
The caller no longer needs to second guess the response of our API or try to reason about its
implementation!
11.10.4.1 newsletter_issues By dispatching eagerly, we never needed to store the details of the
issues we were sending out. To pursue our new strategy, this has to change: we will start persisting
newsletter issues in a dedicated newsletter_issues table.
The schema should not come as a surprise:
sqlx migrate add create_newsletter_issues_table
-- migrations/20220211080603_create_newsletter_issues_table.sql
CREATE TABLE newsletter_issues (
newsletter_issue_id uuid NOT NULL,
title TEXT NOT NULL,
text_content TEXT NOT NULL,
html_content TEXT NOT NULL,
published_at TEXT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY(newsletter_issue_id)
);
#[tracing::instrument(skip_all)]
async fn insert_newsletter_issue(
transaction: &mut Transaction<'_, Postgres>,
title: &str,
text_content: &str,
html_content: &str,
) -> Result<Uuid, sqlx::Error> {
let newsletter_issue_id = Uuid::new_v4();
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO newsletter_issues (
newsletter_issue_id,
title,
text_content,
html_content,
published_at
)
VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4, now())
"#,
newsletter_issue_id,
title,
text_content,
html_content
)
.execute(transaction)
420
.await?;
Ok(newsletter_issue_id)
}
-- migrations/20220211080603_create_issue_delivery_queue_table.sql
CREATE TABLE issue_delivery_queue (
newsletter_issue_id uuid NOT NULL REFERENCES newsletter_issues (newsletter_issue_id),
subscriber_email TEXT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY(newsletter_issue_id, subscriber_email)
);
#[tracing::instrument(skip_all)]
async fn enqueue_delivery_tasks(
transaction: &mut Transaction<'_, Postgres>,
newsletter_issue_id: Uuid,
) -> Result<(), sqlx::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
INSERT INTO issue_delivery_queue (
newsletter_issue_id,
subscriber_email
)
SELECT $1, email
FROM subscriptions
WHERE status = 'confirmed'
"#,
newsletter_issue_id,
)
.execute(transaction)
.await?;
Ok(())
}
11.10.4.3 POST /admin/newsletters We are ready to overhaul our request handler by putting
together the pieces we just built:
//! src/routes/admin/newsletter/post.rs
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(
name = "Publish a newsletter issue",
skip_all,
fields(user_id=%&*user_id)
)]
pub async fn publish_newsletter(
form: web::Form<FormData>,
pool: web::Data<PgPool>,
user_id: web::ReqData<UserId>,
) -> Result<HttpResponse, actix_web::Error> {
let user_id = user_id.into_inner();
let FormData {
title,
421
text_content,
html_content,
idempotency_key,
} = form.0;
let idempotency_key: IdempotencyKey = idempotency_key.try_into().map_err(e400)?;
let mut transaction = match try_processing(&pool, &idempotency_key, *user_id)
.await
.map_err(e500)?
{
NextAction::StartProcessing(t) => t,
NextAction::ReturnSavedResponse(saved_response) => {
success_message().send();
return Ok(saved_response);
}
};
let issue_id = insert_newsletter_issue(&mut transaction, &title, &text_content, &html_content)
.await
.context("Failed to store newsletter issue details")
.map_err(e500)?;
enqueue_delivery_tasks(&mut transaction, issue_id)
.await
.context("Failed to enqueue delivery tasks")
.map_err(e500)?;
let response = see_other("/admin/newsletters");
let response = save_response(transaction, &idempotency_key, *user_id, response)
.await
.map_err(e500)?;
success_message().send();
Ok(response)
}
11.10.4.4 Email Processing Let’s move our focus to the delivery instead.
We need to consume tasks from issue_delivery_queue. There are going to be multiple delivery
workers running at the same time - at least one per API instance.
A naive approach would get us into trouble:
SELECT (newsletter_issue_id, subscriber_email)
FROM issue_delivery_queue
LIMIT 1
Multiple workers would pick the same task and we would end up with a lot of duplicated emails.
We need synchronization. Once again, we are going to leverage the database - we will use row-level
locks.
Postgres 9.5 introduced the SKIP LOCKED clause - it allows SELECT statements to ignore all rows that
are currently locked by another concurrent operation.
FOR UPDATE, instead, can be used to lock the rows returned by a SELECT.
We are going to combine them:
422
SELECT (newsletter_issue_id, subscriber_email)
FROM issue_delivery_queue
FOR UPDATE
SKIP LOCKED
LIMIT 1
//! src/issue_delivery_worker;
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
use sqlx::{PgPool, Postgres, Transaction};
use tracing::{field::display, Span};
use uuid::Uuid;
#[tracing::instrument(
skip_all,
fields(
newsletter_issue_id=tracing::field::Empty,
subscriber_email=tracing::field::Empty
),
err
)]
async fn try_execute_task(
pool: &PgPool,
email_client: &EmailClient
) -> Result<(), anyhow::Error> {
if let Some((transaction, issue_id, email)) = dequeue_task(pool).await? {
Span::current()
.record("newsletter_issue_id", &display(issue_id))
.record("subscriber_email", &display(&email));
// TODO: send email
delete_task(transaction, issue_id, &email).await?;
}
Ok(())
}
#[tracing::instrument(skip_all)]
async fn dequeue_task(
pool: &PgPool,
) -> Result<Option<(PgTransaction, Uuid, String)>, anyhow::Error> {
let mut transaction = pool.begin().await?;
let r = sqlx::query!(
r#"
SELECT newsletter_issue_id, subscriber_email
FROM issue_delivery_queue
FOR UPDATE
SKIP LOCKED
LIMIT 1
"#,
423
)
.fetch_optional(&mut transaction)
.await?;
if let Some(r) = r {
Ok(Some((
transaction,
r.newsletter_issue_id,
r.subscriber_email,
)))
} else {
Ok(None)
}
}
#[tracing::instrument(skip_all)]
async fn delete_task(
mut transaction: PgTransaction,
issue_id: Uuid,
email: &str,
) -> Result<(), anyhow::Error> {
sqlx::query!(
r#"
DELETE FROM issue_delivery_queue
WHERE
newsletter_issue_id = $1 AND
subscriber_email = $2
"#,
issue_id,
email
)
.execute(&mut transaction)
.await?;
transaction.commit().await?;
Ok(())
}
To actually send the email, we need to fetch the newsletter content first:
//! src/issue_delivery_worker;
// [...]
struct NewsletterIssue {
title: String,
text_content: String,
html_content: String,
}
#[tracing::instrument(skip_all)]
async fn get_issue(
pool: &PgPool,
issue_id: Uuid
) -> Result<NewsletterIssue, anyhow::Error> {
let issue = sqlx::query_as!(
NewsletterIssue,
r#"
SELECT title, text_content, html_content
FROM newsletter_issues
WHERE
newsletter_issue_id = $1
"#,
issue_id
)
424
.fetch_one(pool)
.await?;
Ok(issue)
}
We can then recover the dispatch logic that used to live in POST /admin/newsletters:
//! src/issue_delivery_worker;
use crate::domain::SubscriberEmail;
// [...]
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
async fn try_execute_task(
pool: &PgPool,
email_client: &EmailClient
) -> Result<(), anyhow::Error> {
if let Some((transaction, issue_id, email)) = dequeue_task(pool).await? {
// [...]
match SubscriberEmail::parse(email.clone()) {
Ok(email) => {
let issue = get_issue(pool, issue_id).await?;
if let Err(e) = email_client
.send_email(
&email,
&issue.title,
&issue.html_content,
&issue.text_content,
)
.await
{
tracing::error!(
error.cause_chain = ?e,
error.message = %e,
"Failed to deliver issue to a confirmed subscriber. \
Skipping.",
);
}
}
Err(e) => {
tracing::error!(
error.cause_chain = ?e,
error.message = %e,
"Skipping a confirmed subscriber. \
Their stored contact details are invalid",
);
}
}
delete_task(transaction, issue_id, &email).await?;
}
Ok(())
}
As you can see, we do not retry when the delivery attempt fails due to a Postmark error.
This could be changed by enhancing issue_delivery_queue - e.g. adding a n_retries and
execute_after columns to keep track of how many attempts have already taken place and how long
we should wait before trying again. Try implementing it as an exercise!
11.10.4.5 Worker loop try_execute_task tries to deliver a single email - we need a background
task that keeps pulling from issue_delivery_queue and fulfills tasks as they become available.
We can use an infinite loop:
425
//! src/issue_delivery_worker;
use std::time::Duration;
// [...]
async fn worker_loop(
pool: PgPool,
email_client: EmailClient
) -> Result<(), anyhow::Error> {
loop {
if try_execute_task(&pool, &email_client).await.is_err() {
tokio::time::sleep(Duration::from_secs(1)).await;
}
}
}
If we experience a transient failure114 , we need to sleep for a while to improve our future chances of
success. This could be further refined by introducing an exponential backoff with jitter.
There is another scenario we need to keep in mind, apart from failure: issue_delivery_queue might
be empty.
When that is the case, try_execute_task is going to be invoked continuously. That translates into
an avalanche of unnecessary queries to the database.
We can mitigate this risk by changing the signature of try_execute_task - we need to know if it
actually managed to dequeue something.
//! src/issue_delivery_worker.rs
// [...]
enum ExecutionOutcome {
TaskCompleted,
EmptyQueue,
}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
async fn try_execute_task(/* */) -> Result<ExecutionOutcome, anyhow::Error> {
let task = dequeue_task(pool).await?;
if task.is_none() {
return Ok(ExecutionOutcome::EmptyQueue);
}
let (transaction, issue_id, email) = task.unwrap();
// [...]
Ok(ExecutionOutcome::TaskCompleted)
}
114 Almost all errors returned by try_execute_task are transient in nature, except for invalid subscriber emails -
sleeping is not going to fix those. Try refining the implementation to distinguish between transient and fatal failures,
empowering worker_loop to react appropriately.
426
}
}
}
11.10.4.6 Launching Background Workers We have a worker loop - but it is not launched
anywhere.
Let’s start by building the required dependencies based on the configuration values115 :
//! src/issue_delivery_worker.rs
use crate::{configuration::Settings, startup::get_connection_pool};
// [...]
To run our background worker and the API side-to-side we need to restructure our main function.
We are going to build the Future for each of the two long-running tasks - Futures are lazy in Rust,
so nothing happens until they are actually awaited.
We will use tokio::select! to get both tasks to make progress concurrently. tokio::select!
returns as soon as one of the two tasks completes or errors out:
//! src/main.rs
use zero2prod::issue_delivery_worker::run_worker_until_stopped;
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> {
let subscriber = get_subscriber("zero2prod".into(), "info".into(), std::io::stdout);
init_subscriber(subscriber);
tokio::select! {
_ = application => {},
_ = worker => {},
115 We are not re-using the dependencies we built for our actix_web application. This separation enables us, for
example, to precisely control how many database connections are allocated to background tasks vs our API workloads.
At the same time, this is clearly unnecessary at this stage: we could have built a single pool and HTTP client, passing
Arc pointers to both sub-systems (API and worker). The right choice depends on the circumstances and the overall
set of constraints.
427
};
Ok(())
}
There is a pitfall to be mindful of when using tokio::select! - all selected Futures are polled as a
single task. This has consequences, as tokio’s documentation highlights:
By running all async expressions on the current task, the expressions are able to run con-
currently but not in parallel. This means all expressions are run on the same thread and if
one branch blocks the thread, all other expressions will be unable to continue. If parallelism
is required, spawn each async expression using tokio::spawn and pass the join handle to
select!.
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> {
// [...]
let application = Application::build(configuration.clone()).await?;
let application_task = tokio::spawn(application.run_until_stopped());
let worker_task = tokio::spawn(run_worker_until_stopped(configuration));
tokio::select! {
_ = application_task => {},
_ = worker_task => {},
};
Ok(())
}
As it stands, we have no visibility into which task completed first or if they completed successfully at
all. Let’s add some logging:
//! src/main.rs
use std::fmt::{Debug, Display};
use tokio::task::JoinError;
// [...]
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> {
// [...]
tokio::select! {
o = application_task => report_exit("API", o),
o = worker_task => report_exit("Background worker", o),
};
Ok(())
}
fn report_exit(
task_name: &str,
outcome: Result<Result<(), impl Debug + Display>, JoinError>
) {
match outcome {
Ok(Ok(())) => {
tracing::info!("{} has exited", task_name)
}
428
Ok(Err(e)) => {
tracing::error!(
error.cause_chain = ?e,
error.message = %e,
"{} failed",
task_name
)
}
Err(e) => {
tracing::error!(
error.cause_chain = ?e,
error.message = %e,
"{}' task failed to complete",
task_name
)
}
}
}
11.10.4.7 Updating The Test Suite We have one little problem left - many of our tests are
failing. They were written when emails were being delivered synchronously, which is no longer the
case. How should we deal with them?
Launching a background worker would mimic the behaviour of our application, but it would make for
a fragile test suite - we would have to sleep for arbitrary time intervals waiting for the background
worker to process the email tasks we just enqueued. We are bound to have flaky tests sooner or later.
An alternative approach relies on launching the worker on demand, asking it to consume all available
tasks. It deviates slightly from the behaviour in our main function, but it manages to exercise most
of the code while being significantly more robust. This is what we are going for!
Let’s add an EmailClient instance to our TestApp:
//! src/configuration.rs
use crate::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
impl EmailClientSettings {
pub fn client(self) -> EmailClient {
let sender_email = self.sender().expect("Invalid sender email address.");
let timeout = self.timeout();
EmailClient::new(
self.base_url,
sender_email,
self.authorization_token,
timeout,
)
}
// [...]
}
//! tests/api/helpers.rs
use zero2prod::email_client::EmailClient;
// [...]
429
pub async fn spawn_app() -> TestApp {
// [...]
let test_app = TestApp {
// [...]
email_client: configuration.email_client.client()
};
// [...]
}
//! src/issue_delivery_worker.rs
// [...]
//! src/startup.rs
// [...]
impl Application {
pub async fn build(configuration: Settings) -> Result<Self, anyhow::Error> {
let connection_pool = get_connection_pool(&configuration.database);
// Use helper function!
let email_client = configuration.email_client.client();
// [...]
}
// [...]
}
impl TestApp {
pub async fn dispatch_all_pending_emails(&self) {
loop {
if let ExecutionOutcome::EmptyQueue =
try_execute_task(&self.db_pool, &self.email_client)
.await
.unwrap()
{
break;
}
}
}
// [...]
}
//! src/issue_delivery_worker.rs
// [...]
// Mark as pub
pub enum ExecutionOutcome {/* */}
#[tracing::instrument(/* */)]
// Mark as pub
pub async fn try_execute_task(/* */) -> Result</* */> {/* */}
430
We can update all the impacted test cases:
//! tests/api/newsletter.rs
// [...]
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_not_delivered_to_unconfirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
assert!(html_page.contains(
"<p><i>The newsletter issue has been accepted - \
emails will go out shortly.</i></p>"
));
app.dispatch_all_pending_emails().await;
// Mock verifies on Drop that we haven't sent the newsletter email
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletters_are_delivered_to_confirmed_subscribers() {
// [...]
assert!(html_page.contains(
"<p><i>The newsletter issue has been accepted - \
emails will go out shortly.</i></p>"
));
app.dispatch_all_pending_emails().await;
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn newsletter_creation_is_idempotent() {
// [...]
// Act - Part 2 - Follow the redirect
let html_page = app.get_publish_newsletter_html().await;
assert!(html_page.contains(
"<p><i>The newsletter issue has been accepted - \
emails will go out shortly.</i></p>"
));
// [...]
// Act - Part 4 - Follow the redirect
let html_page = app.get_publish_newsletter_html().await;
assert!(html_page.contains(
"<p><i>The newsletter issue has been accepted - \
emails will go out shortly.</i></p>"
));
app.dispatch_all_pending_emails().await;
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email **once**
}
#[tokio::test]
async fn concurrent_form_submission_is_handled_gracefully() {
// [...]
app.dispatch_all_pending_emails().await;
// Mock verifies on Drop that we have sent the newsletter email **once**
}
// We deleted `transient_errors_do_not_cause_duplicate_deliveries_on_retries`
// It is no longer relevant given the redesign
431
Well, we almost made it.
We neglected one detail: there is no expiry mechanism for our idempotency keys. Try designing
one as an exercise, using what we learned on background workers as a reference.
11.11 Epilogue
This is where our journey together comes to an end.
We started from an empty skeleton. Look at our project now: fully functional, well tested, reasonably
secure - a proper minimum viable product. The project was never the goal though - it was an excuse,
an opportunity to see what it feels like to write a production-ready API using Rust.
Zero To Production In Rust started with a question, a question I hear every other day:
I have taken you on a tour. I showed you a little corner of the Rust ecosystem, an opinionated yet
powerful toolkit. I tried to explain, to the best of my abilities, the key language features.
The choice is now yours: you have learned enough to keep walking on your own, if you wish to do so.
Rust’s adoption in the industry is taking off: we are living through an inflection point. It was my
ambition to write a book that could serve as a ticket for this rising tide - an onboarding guide for
those who want to be a part of this story.
This is just the beginning - the future of this community is yet to be written, but it is looking bright.
432