Running as an akka-http server
To expose an endpoint as an akka-http server, first add the following dependency:
"com.softwaremill.sttp.tapir" %% "tapir-akka-http-server" % "1.0.0-M1"
This will transitively pull some Akka modules in version 2.6. If you want to force your own Akka version (for example 2.5), use sbt exclusion. Mind the Scala version in artifact name:
"com.softwaremill.sttp.tapir" %% "tapir-akka-http-server" % "1.0.0-M1" exclude("com.typesafe.akka", "akka-stream_2.12")
Now import the object:
import sttp.tapir.server.akkahttp.AkkaHttpServerInterpreter
Using toRoute
The toRoute
method requires a single, or a list of ServerEndpoint
s, which can be created by adding
server logic to an endpoint.
For example:
import sttp.tapir._
import sttp.tapir.server.akkahttp.AkkaHttpServerInterpreter
import scala.concurrent.Future
import akka.http.scaladsl.server.Route
def countCharacters(s: String): Future[Either[Unit, Int]] =
Future.successful(Right[Unit, Int](s.length))
val countCharactersEndpoint: PublicEndpoint[String, Unit, Int, Any] =
endpoint.in(stringBody).out(plainBody[Int])
val countCharactersRoute: Route =
AkkaHttpServerInterpreter().toRoute(countCharactersEndpoint.serverLogic(countCharacters))
Combining directives
The tapir-generated Route
captures from the request only what is described by the endpoint. Combine
with other akka-http directives to add additional behavior, or get more information from the request.
For example, wrap the tapir-generated route in a metrics route, or nest a security directive in the tapir-generated directive.
Edge-case endpoints, which require special logic not expressible using tapir, can be implemented directly using akka-http. For example:
import sttp.tapir._
import sttp.tapir.server.akkahttp.AkkaHttpServerInterpreter
import akka.http.scaladsl.server._
import scala.concurrent.Future
class Special
def metricsDirective: Directive0 = ???
def specialDirective: Directive1[Special] = ???
val tapirEndpoint: PublicEndpoint[String, Unit, Unit, Any] = endpoint.in(path[String]("input"))
val myRoute: Route = metricsDirective {
specialDirective { special =>
AkkaHttpServerInterpreter().toRoute(tapirEndpoint.serverLogic[Future] { input =>
???
/* here we can use both `special` and `input` values */
})
}
}
Streaming
The akka-http interpreter accepts streaming bodies of type Source[ByteString, Any]
, as described by the AkkaStreams
capability. Both response bodies and request bodies can be streamed. Usage: streamBody(AkkaStreams)(schema, format)
.
The capability can be added to the classpath independently of the interpreter through the
"com.softwaremill.sttp.shared" %% "akka"
dependency.
Web sockets
The interpreter supports web sockets, with pipes of type Flow[REQ, RESP, Any]
. See web sockets
for more details.
akka-http does not expose control frames (Ping
, Pong
and Close
), so any setting regarding them are discarded, and
ping/pong frames which are sent explicitly are ignored. Automatic pings
can be instead enabled through configuration.
Server Sent Events
The interpreter supports SSE (Server Sent Events).
For example, to define an endpoint that returns event stream:
import akka.stream.scaladsl.Source
import sttp.model.sse.ServerSentEvent
import sttp.tapir._
import sttp.tapir.server.akkahttp.{AkkaHttpServerInterpreter, serverSentEventsBody}
import scala.concurrent.Future
val sseEndpoint = endpoint.get.out(serverSentEventsBody)
val routes = AkkaHttpServerInterpreter().toRoute(sseEndpoint.serverLogicSuccess[Future](_ =>
Future.successful(Source.single(ServerSentEvent(Some("data"), None, None, None)))
))
Configuration
The interpreter can be configured by providing an AkkaHttpServerOptions
value, see
server options for details.