Request Object

The request object is a dataclass that contains all the information about the request. It is available in the route handler as the first argument.

The request object is created in Rust side but is exposed to Python as a dataclass.

  • Attributes:

  • query_params (QueryParams): The query parameters of the request. e.g. /user?id=123 -> {"id": [ "123" ]}

  • headers (dict[str, str]): The headers of the request. e.g. {"Content-Type": "application/json"}

  • params (dict[str, str]): The parameters of the request. e.g. /user/:id -> {"id": "123"}

  • body (Union[str, bytes]): The body of the request. If the request is a JSON, it will be a dict.

  • method (str): The method of the request. e.g. GET, POST, PUT, DELETE

  • ip_addr (Optional[str]): The IP Address of the client

  • identity (Optional[Identity]): The identity of the client

Request

GET
/hello_world
@dataclass
class Request:
  """
  query_params: QueryParams
  headers: Headers
  path_params: dict[str, str]
  body: Union[str, bytes]
  method: str
  url: Url
  form_data: dict[str, str]
  files: dict[str, bytes]
  ip_addr: Optional[str]
  identity: Optional[Identity]
  """

Extra Path Parameters

Robyn supports capturing extra path parameters using the *extra syntax in route definitions. This allows you to capture any additional segments in the URL path that come after the defined route.

For example, if you define a route like this:

@app.get("/sync/extra/*extra")
def sync_param_extra(request: Request):
    extra = request.path_params["extra"]
    return extra

Any additional path segments after /sync/extra/ will be captured in the extra parameter. For instance:

  • A request to /sync/extra/foo/bar would result in extra = "foo/bar"

  • A request to /sync/extra/123/456/789 would result in extra = "123/456/789"

You can access the extra path parameters through request.path_params["extra"] in your route handler.

This feature is particularly useful when you need to handle dynamic, nested routes or when you want to capture an unknown number of path segments.

What's next?

Now, Batman wanted to understand the configuration of the Robyn server. He was then introduced to the concept of Robyn env files.