/workers-rs

Write Cloudflare Workers in 100% Rust via WebAssembly

Primary LanguageRustApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

workers-rs crates.io docs.rs

Work-in-progress ergonomic Rust bindings to Cloudflare Workers environment. Write your entire worker in Rust!

Read the Notes and FAQ

Example Usage

use worker::*;

#[event(fetch)]
pub async fn main(req: Request, env: Env, _ctx: worker::Context) -> Result<Response> {
    console_log!(
        "{} {}, located at: {:?}, within: {}",
        req.method().to_string(),
        req.path(),
        req.cf().unwrap().coordinates().unwrap_or_default(),
        req.cf().unwrap().region().unwrap_or("unknown region".into())
    );

    if !matches!(req.method(), Method::Post) {
        return Response::error("Method Not Allowed", 405);
    }

    if let Some(file) = req.form_data().await?.get("file") {
        return match file {
            FormEntry::File(buf) => {
                Response::ok(&format!("size = {}", buf.bytes().await?.len()))
            }
            _ => Response::error("`file` part of POST form must be a file", 400),
        };
    }

    Response::error("Bad Request", 400)
}

http Feature

worker 0.0.21 introduced an http feature flag which starts to replace custom types with widely used types from the http crate.

This makes it much easier to use crates which use these standard types such as axum and hyper.

This currently does a few things:

  1. Introduce Body, which implements http_body::Body and is a simple wrapper around web_sys::ReadableStream.
  2. The req argument when using the [event(fetch)] macro becomes http::Request<worker::Body>.
  3. The expected return type for the fetch handler is http::Response<B> where B can be any http_body::Body<Data=Bytes>.
  4. The argument for Fetcher::fetch_request is http::Request<worker::Body>.
  5. The return type of Fetcher::fetch_request is Result<http::Response<worker::Body>>.

The end result is being able to use frameworks like axum directly (see example):

pub async fn root() -> &'static str {
    "Hello Axum!"
}

fn router() -> Router {
    Router::new().route("/", get(root))
}

#[event(fetch)]
async fn fetch(
    req: HttpRequest,
    _env: Env,
    _ctx: Context,
) -> Result<http::Response<axum::body::Body>> {
    Ok(router().call(req).await?)
}

We also implement try_from between worker::Request and http::Request<worker::Body>, and between worker::Response and http::Response<worker::Body>. This allows you to convert your code incrementally if it is tightly coupled to the original types.

Or use the Router:

Parameterize routes and access the parameter values from within a handler. Each handler function takes a Request, and a RouteContext. The RouteContext has shared data, route params, Env bindings, and more.

use worker::*;

#[event(fetch)]
pub async fn main(req: Request, env: Env, _ctx: worker::Context) -> Result<Response> {

    // Create an instance of the Router, which can use parameters (/user/:name) or wildcard values
    // (/file/*pathname). Alternatively, use `Router::with_data(D)` and pass in arbitrary data for
    // routes to access and share using the `ctx.data()` method.
    let router = Router::new();

    // useful for JSON APIs
    #[derive(Deserialize, Serialize)]
    struct Account {
        id: u64,
        // ...
    }
    router
        .get_async("/account/:id", |_req, ctx| async move {
            if let Some(id) = ctx.param("id") {
                let accounts = ctx.kv("ACCOUNTS")?;
                return match accounts.get(id).json::<Account>().await? {
                    Some(account) => Response::from_json(&account),
                    None => Response::error("Not found", 404),
                };
            }

            Response::error("Bad Request", 400)
        })
        // handle files and fields from multipart/form-data requests
        .post_async("/upload", |mut req, _ctx| async move {
            let form = req.form_data().await?;
            if let Some(entry) = form.get("file") {
                match entry {
                    FormEntry::File(file) => {
                        let bytes = file.bytes().await?;
                    }
                    FormEntry::Field(_) => return Response::error("Bad Request", 400),
                }
                // ...

                if let Some(permissions) = form.get("permissions") {
                    // permissions == "a,b,c,d"
                }
                // or call `form.get_all("permissions")` if using multiple entries per field
            }

            Response::error("Bad Request", 400)
        })
        // read/write binary data
        .post_async("/echo-bytes", |mut req, _ctx| async move {
            let data = req.bytes().await?;
            if data.len() < 1024 {
                return Response::error("Bad Request", 400);
            }

            Response::from_bytes(data)
        })
        .run(req, env).await
}

Getting Started

The project uses wrangler version 2.x for running and publishing your Worker.

Git clone the Rust Worker project template and install its dependencies.

You should see a new project layout with a src/lib.rs. Start there! Use any local or remote crates and modules (as long as they compile to the wasm32-unknown-unknown target).

Once you're ready to run your project:

First check that the wrangler version is 2.x

npx wrangler --version

Then, run your worker

npx wrangler dev

Finally, go live:

# configure your routes, zones & more in your worker's `wrangler.toml` file
npx wrangler publish

If you would like to have wrangler installed on your machine, see instructions in wrangler repository.

Durable Object, KV, Secret, & Variable Bindings

All "bindings" to your script (Durable Object & KV Namespaces, Secrets, and Variables) are accessible from the env parameter provided to both the entrypoint (main in this example), and to the route handler callback (in the ctx argument), if you use the Router from the worker crate.

use worker::*;

#[event(fetch, respond_with_errors)]
pub async fn main(req: Request, env: Env, _ctx: worker::Context) -> Result<Response> {
    utils::set_panic_hook();

    let router = Router::new();

    router
        .on_async("/durable", |_req, ctx| async move {
            let namespace = ctx.durable_object("CHATROOM")?;
            let stub = namespace.id_from_name("A")?.get_stub()?;
            // `fetch_with_str` requires a valid Url to make request to DO. But we can make one up!
            stub.fetch_with_str("http://fake_url.com/messages").await
        })
        .get("/secret", |_req, ctx| {
            Response::ok(ctx.secret("CF_API_TOKEN")?.to_string())
        })
        .get("/var", |_req, ctx| {
            Response::ok(ctx.var("BUILD_NUMBER")?.to_string())
        })
        .post_async("/kv", |_req, ctx| async move {
            let kv = ctx.kv("SOME_NAMESPACE")?;

            kv.put("key", "value")?.execute().await?;

            Response::empty()
        })
        .run(req, env).await
}

For more information about how to configure these bindings, see:

Durable Objects

Define a Durable Object in Rust

To define a Durable Object using the worker crate you need to implement the DurableObject trait on your own struct. Additionally, the #[durable_object] attribute macro must be applied to both your struct definition and the trait impl block for it.

use worker::*;

#[durable_object]
pub struct Chatroom {
    users: Vec<User>,
    messages: Vec<Message>,
    state: State,
    env: Env, // access `Env` across requests, use inside `fetch`
}

#[durable_object]
impl DurableObject for Chatroom {
    fn new(state: State, env: Env) -> Self {
        Self {
            users: vec![],
            messages: vec![],
            state: state,
            env,
        }
    }

    async fn fetch(&mut self, _req: Request) -> Result<Response> {
        // do some work when a worker makes a request to this DO
        Response::ok(&format!("{} active users.", self.users.len()))
    }
}

You'll need to "migrate" your worker script when it's published so that it is aware of this new Durable Object, and include a binding in your wrangler.toml.

  • Include the Durable Object binding type in you wrangler.toml file:
# ...

[durable_objects]
bindings = [
  { name = "CHATROOM", class_name = "Chatroom" } # the `class_name` uses the Rust struct identifier name
]

[[migrations]]
tag = "v1" # Should be unique for each entry
new_classes = ["Chatroom"] # Array of new classes

Queues

Enabling queues

As queues are in beta you need to enable the queue feature flag.

Enable it by adding it to the worker dependency in your Cargo.toml:

worker = {version = "...", features = ["queue"]}

Example worker consuming and producing messages:

use worker::*;
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
#[derive(Serialize, Debug, Clone, Deserialize)]
pub struct MyType {
    foo: String,
    bar: u32,
}

// Consume messages from a queue
#[event(queue)]
pub async fn main(message_batch: MessageBatch<MyType>, env: Env, _ctx: Context) -> Result<()> {
    // Get a queue with the binding 'my_queue'
    let my_queue = env.queue("my_queue")?;

    // Deserialize the message batch
    let messages = message_batch.messages()?;

    // Loop through the messages
    for message in messages {
        // Log the message and meta data
        console_log!(
            "Got message {:?}, with id {} and timestamp: {}",
            message.body(),
            message.id(),
            message.timestamp().to_string()
        );

        // Send the message body to the other queue
        my_queue.send(message.body()).await?;

        // Ack individual message
        message.ack();

        // Retry individual message
        message.retry();
    }

    // Retry all messages
    message_batch.retry_all();
    // Ack all messages
    message_batch.ack_all();
    Ok(())
}

You'll need to ensure you have the correct bindings in your wrangler.toml:

# ...
[[queues.consumers]]
queue = "myqueueotherqueue"
max_batch_size = 10
max_batch_timeout = 30


[[queues.producers]]
queue = "myqueue"
binding = "my_queue"

Testing with Miniflare

In order to test your Rust worker locally, the best approach is to use Miniflare. However, because Miniflare is a Node package, you will need to write your end-to-end tests in JavaScript or TypeScript in your project. The official documentation for writing tests using Miniflare is available here. This documentation being focused on JavaScript / TypeScript codebase, you will need to configure as follows to make it work with your Rust-based, WASM-generated worker:

Step 1: Add Wrangler and Miniflare to your devDependencies

npm install --save-dev wrangler miniflare

Step 2: Build your worker before running the tests

Make sure that your worker is built before running your tests by calling the following in your build chain:

wrangler deploy --dry-run

By default, this should build your worker under the ./build/ directory at the root of your project.

Step 3: Configure your Miniflare instance in your JavaScript / TypeScript tests

To instantiate the Miniflare testing instance in your tests, make sure to configure its scriptPath option to the relative path of where your JavaScript worker entrypoint was generated, and its moduleRules so that it is able to resolve the *.wasm file imported from that JavaScript worker:

// test.mjs
import assert from "node:assert";
import { Miniflare } from "miniflare";

const mf = new Miniflare({
  scriptPath: "./build/worker/shim.mjs",
  modules: true,
  modulesRules: [
    { type: "CompiledWasm", include: ["**/*.wasm"], fallthrough: true }
  ]
});

const res = await mf.dispatchFetch("http://localhost");
assert(res.ok);
assert.strictEqual(await res.text(), "Hello, World!");

D1 Databases

Enabling D1 databases

As D1 databases are in alpha, you'll need to enable the d1 feature on the worker crate.

worker = { version = "x.y.z", features = ["d1"] }

Example usage

use worker::*;

#[derive(Deserialize)]
struct Thing {
	thing_id: String,
	desc: String,
	num: u32,
}

#[event(fetch, respond_with_errors)]
pub async fn main(request: Request, env: Env, _ctx: Context) -> Result<Response> {
	Router::new()
		.get_async("/:id", |_, ctx| async move {
			let id = ctx.param("id").unwrap()?;
			let d1 = ctx.env.d1("things-db")?;
			let statement = d1.prepare("SELECT * FROM things WHERE thing_id = ?1");
			let query = statement.bind(&[id])?;
			let result = query.first::<Thing>(None).await?;
			match result {
				Some(thing) => Response::from_json(&thing),
				None => Response::error("Not found", 404),
			}
		})
		.run(request, env)
		.await
}

Notes and FAQ

It is exciting to see how much is possible with a framework like this, by expanding the options developers have when building on top of the Workers platform. However, there is still much to be done. Expect a few rough edges, some unimplemented APIs, and maybe a bug or two here and there. It’s worth calling out here that some things that may have worked in your Rust code might not work here - it’s all WebAssembly at the end of the day, and if your code or third-party libraries don’t target wasm32-unknown-unknown, they can’t be used on Workers. Additionally, you’ve got to leave your threaded async runtimes at home; meaning no Tokio or async_std support. However, async/await syntax is still available and supported out of the box when you use the worker crate.

We fully intend to support this crate and continue to build out its missing features, but your help and feedback is a must. We don’t like to build in a vacuum, and we’re in an incredibly fortunate position to have brilliant customers like you who can help steer us towards an even better product.

So give it a try, leave some feedback, and star the repo to encourage us to dedicate more time and resources to this kind of project.

If this is interesting to you and you want to help out, we’d be happy to get outside contributors started. We know there are improvements to be made such as compatibility with popular Rust HTTP ecosystem types (we have an example conversion for Headers if you want to make one), implementing additional Web APIs, utility crates, and more. In fact, we’re always on the lookout for great engineers, and hiring for many open roles - please take a look.

FAQ

  1. Can I deploy a Worker that uses tokio or async_std runtimes?
  • Currently no. All crates in your Worker project must compile to wasm32-unknown-unknown target, which is more limited in some ways than targets for x86 and ARM64.
  1. The worker crate doesn't have X! Why not?
  • Most likely, it should, we just haven't had the time to fully implement it or add a library to wrap the FFI. Please let us know you need a feature by opening an issue.
  1. My bundle size exceeds Workers size limits, what do I do?

⚠️ Caveats

  1. Upgrading worker package to version 0.0.18 and higher
  • While upgrading your worker to version 0.0.18 an error "error[E0432]: unresolved import crate::sys::IoSourceState" can appear. In this case, upgrade package.edition to edition = "2021" in wrangler.toml
[package]
edition = "2021"

Releasing

  1. Trigger a workflow to create a release PR.
  2. Review version changes and merge PR.
  3. A draft GitHub release will be created. Author release notes and publish when ready.
  4. Crates (worker-sys, worker-macros, worker) will be published automatically.

Contributing

Your feedback is welcome and appreciated! Please use the issue tracker to talk about potential implementations or make feature requests. If you're interested in making a PR, we suggest opening up an issue to talk about the change you'd like to make as early as possible.

Project Contents

  • worker: the user-facing crate, with Rust-familiar abstractions over the Rust<->JS/WebAssembly interop via wrappers and convenience library over the FFI bindings.
  • worker-sys: Rust extern "C" definitions for FFI compatibility with the Workers JS Runtime.
  • worker-macros: exports event and durable_object macros for wrapping Rust entry point in a fetch method of an ES Module, and code generation to create and interact with Durable Objects.
  • worker-sandbox: a functioning Cloudflare Worker for testing features and ergonomics.
  • worker-build: a cross-platform build command for workers-rs-based projects.