Library provides HTTP response streaming support for axum web framework:
- JSON array stream format
- Support for simple envelopes structures when you need to include your array inside some object (only for first level)
- JSON lines stream format
- CSV stream
- Protobuf len-prefixed stream format
- Apache Arrow IPC stream format
- Text stream
This type of responses are useful when you are reading huge stream of objects from some source (such as database, file, etc) and want to avoid huge memory allocation.
Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
axum-streams = { version = "0.18", features=["json", "csv", "protobuf", "text"] }
axum | axum-streams |
---|---|
0.7 | v0.11+ |
0.6 | v0.9-v0.10 |
0.5 | 0.7 |
Example code:
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Deserialize, Serialize)]
struct MyTestStructure {
some_test_field: String
}
fn my_source_stream() -> impl Stream<Item=MyTestStructure> {
// Simulating a stream with a plain vector and throttling to show how it works
stream::iter(vec![
MyTestStructure {
some_test_field: "test1".to_string()
}; 1000
]).throttle(std::time::Duration::from_millis(50))
}
async fn test_json_array_stream() -> impl IntoResponse {
StreamBodyAs::json_array(source_test_stream())
}
async fn test_json_nl_stream() -> impl IntoResponse {
StreamBodyAs::json_nl(source_test_stream())
}
async fn test_csv_stream() -> impl IntoResponse {
StreamBodyAs::csv(source_test_stream())
}
async fn test_text_stream() -> impl IntoResponse {
StreamBodyAs::text(source_test_stream())
}
All examples available at examples directory.
To run example use:
# cargo run --example json-example --features json
There is the same functionality for:
By default, the library produces an HTTP frame per item in the stream.
You can change this is using StreamAsOptions
:
StreamBodyAsOptions::new().buffering_ready_items(1000)
.json_array(source_test_stream())
The library provides a way to propagate errors in the stream:
struct MyError {
message: String,
}
impl Into<axum::Error> for MyError {
fn into(self) -> axum::Error {
axum::Error::new(self.message)
}
}
fn my_source_stream() -> impl Stream<Item=Result<MyTestStructure, MyError>> {
// Simulating a stream with a plain vector and throttling to show how it works
stream::iter(vec![
Ok(MyTestStructure {
some_test_field: "test1".to_string()
}); 1000
])
}
async fn test_json_array_stream() -> impl IntoResponse {
// Use _with_errors functions or directly `StreamBodyAs::with_options`
// to produce a stream with errors
StreamBodyAs::json_array_with_errors(source_test_stream())
}
Sometimes you need to include your array inside some object, e.g.:
{
"some_status_field": "ok",
"data": [
{
"some_test_field": "test1"
},
{
"some_test_field": "test2"
}
]
}
The wrapping object that includes data
field here is called envelope further.
You need to define both of your structures: envelope and records inside:
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Deserialize, Serialize)]
struct MyEnvelopeStructure {
something_else: String,
#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Vec::is_empty")]
data: Vec<MyItem>
}
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Deserialize, Serialize)]
struct MyItem {
some_test_field: String
}
And use json_array_with_envelope
instead of json_array
.
Have a look at json-array-complex-structure.rs for detail example.
The support is limited:
- Only first level of nesting is supported to avoid complex implementation with performance impact.
- You need either remove the target array field from
envelope
structure or use this Serde trick on the field to avoid JSON serialization issues:
#[serde(skip_serializing_if = "Vec::is_empty")]
Apache Software License (ASL)
Abdulla Abdurakhmanov