Not sure what happened exactly… it was working fine and I didn’t change anything in this file. It has to be related to something I did recently:

  1. Ran a migration adding a unique constraint on a table
  2. Generated two new entities of a couple very basic tables.

The handler I’m using isn’t even using the new tables, so I don’t know why this randomly broke. Anyone have any ideas? Or even some guidance on how to decipher that obscure error would be helpful.

  • hallettj@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Have you tried using the #[debug_handler] macro on get_all_armies? Without that macro handler errors don’t tell you much more than “something isn’t right”.

    Generally this kind of error indicates some type in the handler signature doesn’t implement a necessary trait. Maybe you accidentally lost an automatically-derived trait like Send + Sync? The macro is the easiest way to check.

    • nerdblood@programming.devOP
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      1 year ago

      Oh man, I didn’t know debug_handler existed. Sure enough I had a missing derived attribute… not sure how but Serde serialize and deserialize were missing, so when I was trying to return Ok(Json(army)) it was failing. Thanks so much!

  • mholiv@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    That looks like a Extension/State mismatch to me. Do your function arguments line up with any extensions or state you are bringing in?

    • nerdblood@programming.devOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks for the reply! I don’t know what you mean by extensions, but the state is literally just the DB connection:

      struct AppState { conn: DatabaseConnection, }