axum

Module error_handling

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Error handling model and utilities

§axum’s error handling model

axum is based on tower::Service which bundles errors through its associated Error type. If you have a Service that produces an error and that error makes it all the way up to hyper, the connection will be terminated without sending a response. This is generally not desirable so axum makes sure you always produce a response by relying on the type system.

axum does this by requiring all services have Infallible as their error type. Infallible is the error type for errors that can never happen.

This means if you define a handler like:

use axum::http::StatusCode;

async fn handler() -> Result<String, StatusCode> {
    // ...
}

While it looks like it might fail with a StatusCode this actually isn’t an “error”. If this handler returns Err(some_status_code) that will still be converted into a Response and sent back to the client. This is done through StatusCode’s IntoResponse implementation.

It doesn’t matter whether you return Err(StatusCode::NOT_FOUND) or Err(StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR). These are not considered errors in axum.

Instead of a direct StatusCode, it makes sense to use intermediate error type that can ultimately be converted to Response. This allows using ? operator in handlers. See those examples:

This also applies to extractors. If an extractor doesn’t match the request the request will be rejected and a response will be returned without calling your handler. See extract to learn more about handling extractor failures.

§Routing to fallible services

You generally don’t have to think about errors if you’re only using async functions as handlers. However if you’re embedding general Services or applying middleware, which might produce errors you have to tell axum how to convert those errors into responses.

use axum::{
    Router,
    body::Body,
    http::{Request, Response, StatusCode},
    error_handling::HandleError,
};

async fn thing_that_might_fail() -> Result<(), anyhow::Error> {
    // ...
}

// this service might fail with `anyhow::Error`
let some_fallible_service = tower::service_fn(|_req| async {
    thing_that_might_fail().await?;
    Ok::<_, anyhow::Error>(Response::new(Body::empty()))
});

let app = Router::new().route_service(
    "/",
    // we cannot route to `some_fallible_service` directly since it might fail.
    // we have to use `handle_error` which converts its errors into responses
    // and changes its error type from `anyhow::Error` to `Infallible`.
    HandleError::new(some_fallible_service, handle_anyhow_error),
);

// handle errors by converting them into something that implements
// `IntoResponse`
async fn handle_anyhow_error(err: anyhow::Error) -> (StatusCode, String) {
    (
        StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
        format!("Something went wrong: {err}"),
    )
}

§Applying fallible middleware

Similarly axum requires you to handle errors from middleware. That is done with HandleErrorLayer:

use axum::{
    Router,
    BoxError,
    routing::get,
    http::StatusCode,
    error_handling::HandleErrorLayer,
};
use std::time::Duration;
use tower::ServiceBuilder;

let app = Router::new()
    .route("/", get(|| async {}))
    .layer(
        ServiceBuilder::new()
            // `timeout` will produce an error if the handler takes
            // too long so we must handle those
            .layer(HandleErrorLayer::new(handle_timeout_error))
            .timeout(Duration::from_secs(30))
    );

async fn handle_timeout_error(err: BoxError) -> (StatusCode, String) {
    if err.is::<tower::timeout::error::Elapsed>() {
        (
            StatusCode::REQUEST_TIMEOUT,
            "Request took too long".to_string(),
        )
    } else {
        (
            StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
            format!("Unhandled internal error: {err}"),
        )
    }
}

§Running extractors for error handling

HandleErrorLayer also supports running extractors:

use axum::{
    Router,
    BoxError,
    routing::get,
    http::{StatusCode, Method, Uri},
    error_handling::HandleErrorLayer,
};
use std::time::Duration;
use tower::ServiceBuilder;

let app = Router::new()
    .route("/", get(|| async {}))
    .layer(
        ServiceBuilder::new()
            // `timeout` will produce an error if the handler takes
            // too long so we must handle those
            .layer(HandleErrorLayer::new(handle_timeout_error))
            .timeout(Duration::from_secs(30))
    );

async fn handle_timeout_error(
    // `Method` and `Uri` are extractors so they can be used here
    method: Method,
    uri: Uri,
    // the last argument must be the error itself
    err: BoxError,
) -> (StatusCode, String) {
    (
        StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR,
        format!("`{method} {uri}` failed with {err}"),
    )
}

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