fieldfilter is a pretty simple crate to use. Basically what it offers is a way to essentially “filter” a struct to a smaller set of itself.
Here’s an example:
use std::collections::HashSet;
use fieldfilter::FieldFilterable;
struct User {
id: u32,
name: String,
email: String,
}
#[derive(Debug, FieldFilterable)]
#[field_filterable_on(User)]
struct FilteredUser {
id: u32,
name: Option<String>,
email: Option<String>,
}
let user = User {
id: 1,
name: "Allen".to_string(),
email: "[email protected]".to_string(),
};
let fields = HashSet::from(["name".to_owned()]);
let filtered_user: FilteredUser = FieldFilterable::field_filter(user, fields);
println!("{:?}", filtered_user);
This kind of behavior is quite useful for whenever you have some struct or entity you want to skim off the visibility of certain fields, whether that be some SQL row being returned as some REST or GraphQL response, or just as a simple sanitization routine.
Why this crate exists is because I had a certain use case for it. I wanted to essentially be able to map models from an ORM to a serialized HTTP response with only the fields I wanted to be visible, dictated by policy files in my chosen authorization engine.
Not to mention it was a reason to finally get into proc macros!