10 releases

Uses old Rust 2015

0.2.0 Jul 9, 2018
0.1.1 Mar 7, 2017
0.0.8 Feb 5, 2017
0.0.6 Jan 29, 2017
0.0.1 Nov 27, 2016

#439 in HTTP client

MIT/Apache

130KB
2K SLoC

anterofit Build Status On Crates.io

Anterofit is a collection of Rust macros coupled to a lightweight, self-contained HTTP framework that allows you to easily create strongly-typed Rust wrappers for calling REST APIs.

// See examples/post_service.rs for more details
#[macro_use] extern crate anterofit;
#[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive;

use anterofit::{Adapter, Url};

#[derive(Debug, Deserialize)]
struct Post {
    pub userid: Option<u64>,
    pub id: u64,
    pub title: String,
    pub body: String
}

service! {
    trait PostService {
        /// Get a Post by id.
        fn get_post(&self, id: u64) -> Post {
            GET("/posts/{}", id)
        }

        /// Get all posts.
        fn get_posts(&self) -> Vec<Post> {
            GET("/posts")
        }

        /// Create a new Post under the given user ID with the given title and body.
        fn new_post(&self, userid: u64, title: &str, body: &str) -> Post {
            POST("/posts/");
            // We use the `EAGER:` keyword so we can use borrowed values in the body.
            // This serializes the body value immediately instead of waiting to serialize
            // it on the executor.
            body_map!(EAGER:
                "userid" => userid,
                "title": title,
                "body": body
            )
        }
    }
}

fn main() {
    // Navigate to this URL in your browser for details. Very useful test API.
    let url = Url::parse("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com").unwrap();

    let adapter = Adapter::builder()
        .base_url(url)
        // When your REST API uses JSON in both requests and responses
        .serialize_json()
        .build();

    create_post(&adapter);
    fetch_posts(&adapter);
}

/// Create a new Post.
// All service traits are implemented for `Adapter` by default; using generics like this promotes good namespacing.
fn create_post<P: PostService>(post_service: &P) {
    let post = post_service.new_post(42, "Hello", "World!")
        // Execute the request in the background and wait for it to complete
        .exec().block()
        .unwrap();

    println!("{:?}", post);
}

/// Fetch the top 3 posts in the database.
// Service traits are object-safe by default
fn fetch_posts(post_service: &PostService) {
    let posts = post_service.get_posts()
        // Shorthand for .exec().block(), but executes the request on the current thread.
        .exec_here()
        .unwrap();

    for post in posts.into_iter().take(3) {
        println!("{:?}", post);
    }
}

Inspired by Square's Retrofit, as referenced in the name, Anterofit is even more strongly typed as everything that is feasible to check at compile-time, is. Runtime errors are, with few exceptions, reserved for error conditions that can only be discovered at runtime.

Usage

Get started with our User Guide

Or an in-depth look with our Documentation

Setup

Serde and JSON serialization:

Enabled by default with the serde-all feature.

Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
anterofit = "0.1"
# `serde` is required in the dependencies but not in the crate root.
serde = "0.9"
serde_derive = "0.9"

Crate Root:

#[macro_use] extern crate anterofit;
#[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive;

rustc-serialize:

Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
rustc-serialize = "0.3"

[dependencies.anterofit]
version = "0.1"
default-features = false
features = ["rustc-serialize"]

Crate Root:

#[macro_use] extern crate anterofit;
extern crate rustc_serialize;

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Dependencies

~6.5MB
~141K SLoC