pub trait TryStreamExt: TryStream {
Show 25 methods fn err_into<E>(self) -> ErrInto<Self, E>
    where
        Self: Sized,
        Self::Error: Into<E>
, { ... }
fn map_ok<T, F>(self, f: F) -> MapOk<Self, F>
    where
        Self: Sized,
        F: FnMut(Self::Ok) -> T
, { ... }
fn map_err<E, F>(self, f: F) -> MapErr<Self, F>
    where
        Self: Sized,
        F: FnMut(Self::Error) -> E
, { ... }
fn and_then<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> AndThen<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn or_else<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> OrElse<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(Self::Error) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = Self::Ok>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn inspect_ok<F>(self, f: F) -> InspectOk<Self, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(&Self::Ok),
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn inspect_err<F>(self, f: F) -> InspectErr<Self, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(&Self::Error),
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn into_stream(self) -> IntoStream<Self>
    where
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_next(&mut self) -> TryNext<'_, Self>Notable traits for TryNext<'_, St>impl<St: ?Sized + TryStream + Unpin> Future for TryNext<'_, St> type Output = Result<Option<St::Ok>, St::Error>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn try_for_each<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> TryForEach<Self, Fut, F>Notable traits for TryForEach<St, Fut, F>impl<St, Fut, F> Future for TryForEach<St, Fut, F> where
    St: TryStream,
    F: FnMut(St::Ok) -> Fut,
    Fut: TryFuture<Ok = (), Error = St::Error>, 
type Output = Result<(), St::Error>;

    where
        F: FnMut(Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = (), Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_skip_while<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> TrySkipWhile<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(&Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = bool, Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_take_while<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> TryTakeWhile<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        F: FnMut(&Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = bool, Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_for_each_concurrent<Fut, F>(
        self,
        limit: impl Into<Option<usize>>,
        f: F
    ) -> TryForEachConcurrent<Self, Fut, F>Notable traits for TryForEachConcurrent<St, Fut, F>impl<St, Fut, F> Future for TryForEachConcurrent<St, Fut, F> where
    St: TryStream,
    F: FnMut(St::Ok) -> Fut,
    Fut: Future<Output = Result<(), St::Error>>, 
type Output = Result<(), St::Error>;

    where
        F: FnMut(Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: Future<Output = Result<(), Self::Error>>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_collect<C: Default + Extend<Self::Ok>>(self) -> TryCollect<Self, C>Notable traits for TryCollect<St, C>impl<St, C> Future for TryCollect<St, C> where
    St: TryStream,
    C: Default + Extend<St::Ok>, 
type Output = Result<C, St::Error>;

    where
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_chunks(self, capacity: usize) -> TryChunks<Self>
    where
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_filter<Fut, F>(self, f: F) -> TryFilter<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        Fut: Future<Output = bool>,
        F: FnMut(&Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_filter_map<Fut, F, T>(self, f: F) -> TryFilterMap<Self, Fut, F>
    where
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = Option<T>, Error = Self::Error>,
        F: FnMut(Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_flatten(self) -> TryFlatten<Self>
    where
        Self::Ok: TryStream,
        <Self::Ok as TryStream>::Error: From<Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_fold<T, Fut, F>(self, init: T, f: F) -> TryFold<Self, Fut, T, F>Notable traits for TryFold<St, Fut, T, F>impl<St, Fut, T, F> Future for TryFold<St, Fut, T, F> where
    St: TryStream,
    F: FnMut(T, St::Ok) -> Fut,
    Fut: TryFuture<Ok = T, Error = St::Error>, 
type Output = Result<T, St::Error>;

    where
        F: FnMut(T, Self::Ok) -> Fut,
        Fut: TryFuture<Ok = T, Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_concat(self) -> TryConcat<Self>Notable traits for TryConcat<St>impl<St> Future for TryConcat<St> where
    St: TryStream,
    St::Ok: Extend<<St::Ok as IntoIterator>::Item> + IntoIterator + Default
type Output = Result<St::Ok, St::Error>;

    where
        Self: Sized,
        Self::Ok: Extend<<<Self as TryStream>::Ok as IntoIterator>::Item> + IntoIterator + Default
, { ... }
fn try_buffer_unordered(self, n: usize) -> TryBufferUnordered<Self>
    where
        Self::Ok: TryFuture<Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_buffered(self, n: usize) -> TryBuffered<Self>
    where
        Self::Ok: TryFuture<Error = Self::Error>,
        Self: Sized
, { ... }
fn try_poll_next_unpin(
        &mut self,
        cx: &mut Context<'_>
    ) -> Poll<Option<Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>>>
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn compat(self) -> Compat<Self>
    where
        Self: Sized + Unpin
, { ... }
fn into_async_read(self) -> IntoAsyncRead<Self>
    where
        Self: Sized + TryStreamExt<Error = Error> + Unpin,
        Self::Ok: AsRef<[u8]>
, { ... }
}
Expand description

Adapters specific to Result-returning streams

Provided methods

Wraps the current stream in a new stream which converts the error type into the one provided.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let mut stream =
    stream::iter(vec![Ok(()), Err(5i32)])
        .err_into::<i64>();

assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(())));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Err(5i64));

Wraps the current stream in a new stream which maps the success value using the provided closure.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let mut stream =
    stream::iter(vec![Ok(5), Err(0)])
        .map_ok(|x| x + 2);

assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(7)));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Err(0));

Wraps the current stream in a new stream which maps the error value using the provided closure.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let mut stream =
    stream::iter(vec![Ok(5), Err(0)])
        .map_err(|x| x + 2);

assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(5)));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Err(2));

Chain on a computation for when a value is ready, passing the successful results to the provided closure f.

This function can be used to run a unit of work when the next successful value on a stream is ready. The closure provided will be yielded a value when ready, and the returned future will then be run to completion to produce the next value on this stream.

Any errors produced by this stream will not be passed to the closure, and will be passed through.

The returned value of the closure must implement the TryFuture trait and can represent some more work to be done before the composed stream is finished.

Note that this function consumes the receiving stream and returns a wrapped version of it.

To process the entire stream and return a single future representing success or error, use try_for_each instead.

Examples
use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::future;
use futures::stream::TryStreamExt;

let (_tx, rx) = mpsc::channel::<Result<i32, ()>>(1);

let rx = rx.and_then(|result| {
    future::ok(if result % 2 == 0 {
        Some(result)
    } else {
        None
    })
});

Chain on a computation for when an error happens, passing the erroneous result to the provided closure f.

This function can be used to run a unit of work and attempt to recover from an error if one happens. The closure provided will be yielded an error when one appears, and the returned future will then be run to completion to produce the next value on this stream.

Any successful values produced by this stream will not be passed to the closure, and will be passed through.

The returned value of the closure must implement the TryFuture trait and can represent some more work to be done before the composed stream is finished.

Note that this function consumes the receiving stream and returns a wrapped version of it.

Do something with the success value of this stream, afterwards passing it on.

This is similar to the StreamExt::inspect method where it allows easily inspecting the success value as it passes through the stream, for example to debug what’s going on.

Do something with the error value of this stream, afterwards passing it on.

This is similar to the StreamExt::inspect method where it allows easily inspecting the error value as it passes through the stream, for example to debug what’s going on.

Wraps a TryStream into a type that implements Stream

TryStreams currently do not implement the Stream trait because of limitations of the compiler.

Examples
use futures::stream::{Stream, TryStream, TryStreamExt};

fn make_try_stream() -> impl TryStream<Ok = T, Error = E> { // ... }
fn take_stream(stream: impl Stream<Item = Result<T, E>>) { /* ... */ }

take_stream(make_try_stream().into_stream());

Creates a future that attempts to resolve the next item in the stream. If an error is encountered before the next item, the error is returned instead.

This is similar to the Stream::next combinator, but returns a Result<Option<T>, E> rather than an Option<Result<T, E>>, making for easy use with the ? operator.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let mut stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok(()), Err(())]);

assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(())));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Err(()));

Attempts to run this stream to completion, executing the provided asynchronous closure for each element on the stream.

The provided closure will be called for each item this stream produces, yielding a future. That future will then be executed to completion before moving on to the next item.

The returned value is a Future where the Output type is Result<(), Self::Error>. If any of the intermediate futures or the stream returns an error, this future will return immediately with an error.

Examples
use futures::future;
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let mut x = 0i32;

{
    let fut = stream::repeat(Ok(1)).try_for_each(|item| {
        x += item;
        future::ready(if x == 3 { Err(()) } else { Ok(()) })
    });
    assert_eq!(fut.await, Err(()));
}

assert_eq!(x, 3);

Skip elements on this stream while the provided asynchronous predicate resolves to true.

This function is similar to StreamExt::skip_while but exits early if an error occurs.

Examples
use futures::future;
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok::<i32, i32>(1), Ok(3), Ok(2)]);
let stream = stream.try_skip_while(|x| future::ready(Ok(*x < 3)));

let output: Result<Vec<i32>, i32> = stream.try_collect().await;
assert_eq!(output, Ok(vec![3, 2]));

Take elements on this stream while the provided asynchronous predicate resolves to true.

This function is similar to StreamExt::take_while but exits early if an error occurs.

Examples
use futures::future;
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok::<i32, i32>(1), Ok(2), Ok(3), Ok(2)]);
let stream = stream.try_take_while(|x| future::ready(Ok(*x < 3)));

let output: Result<Vec<i32>, i32> = stream.try_collect().await;
assert_eq!(output, Ok(vec![1, 2]));

Attempts to run this stream to completion, executing the provided asynchronous closure for each element on the stream concurrently as elements become available, exiting as soon as an error occurs.

This is similar to StreamExt::for_each_concurrent, but will resolve to an error immediately if the underlying stream or the provided closure return an error.

This method is only available when the std or alloc feature of this library is activated, and it is activated by default.

Examples
use futures::channel::oneshot;
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let (tx1, rx1) = oneshot::channel();
let (tx2, rx2) = oneshot::channel();
let (_tx3, rx3) = oneshot::channel();

let stream = stream::iter(vec![rx1, rx2, rx3]);
let fut = stream.map(Ok).try_for_each_concurrent(
    /* limit */ 2,
    |rx| async move {
        let res: Result<(), oneshot::Canceled> = rx.await;
        res
    }
);

tx1.send(()).unwrap();
// Drop the second sender so that `rx2` resolves to `Canceled`.
drop(tx2);

// The final result is an error because the second future
// resulted in an error.
assert_eq!(Err(oneshot::Canceled), fut.await);

Attempt to transform a stream into a collection, returning a future representing the result of that computation.

This combinator will collect all successful results of this stream and collect them into the specified collection type. If an error happens then all collected elements will be dropped and the error will be returned.

The returned future will be resolved when the stream terminates.

Examples
use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::stream::TryStreamExt;
use std::thread;

let (tx, rx) = mpsc::unbounded();

thread::spawn(move || {
    for i in 1..=5 {
        tx.unbounded_send(Ok(i)).unwrap();
    }
    tx.unbounded_send(Err(6)).unwrap();
});

let output: Result<Vec<i32>, i32> = rx.try_collect().await;
assert_eq!(output, Err(6));

An adaptor for chunking up successful items of the stream inside a vector.

This combinator will attempt to pull successful items from this stream and buffer them into a local vector. At most capacity items will get buffered before they’re yielded from the returned stream.

Note that the vectors returned from this iterator may not always have capacity elements. If the underlying stream ended and only a partial vector was created, it’ll be returned. Additionally if an error happens from the underlying stream then the currently buffered items will be yielded.

This method is only available when the std or alloc feature of this library is activated, and it is activated by default.

This function is similar to StreamExt::chunks but exits early if an error occurs.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryChunksError, TryStreamExt};

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok::<i32, i32>(1), Ok(2), Ok(3), Err(4), Ok(5), Ok(6)]);
let mut stream = stream.try_chunks(2);

assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(vec![1, 2])));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Err(TryChunksError(vec![3], 4)));
assert_eq!(stream.try_next().await, Ok(Some(vec![5, 6])));
Panics

This method will panic if capacity is zero.

Attempt to filter the values produced by this stream according to the provided asynchronous closure.

As values of this stream are made available, the provided predicate f will be run on them. If the predicate returns a Future which resolves to true, then the stream will yield the value, but if the predicate return a Future which resolves to false, then the value will be discarded and the next value will be produced.

All errors are passed through without filtering in this combinator.

Note that this function consumes the stream passed into it and returns a wrapped version of it, similar to the existing filter methods in the standard library.

Examples
use futures::future;
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok(1i32), Ok(2i32), Ok(3i32), Err("error")]);
let mut evens = stream.try_filter(|x| {
    future::ready(x % 2 == 0)
});

assert_eq!(evens.next().await, Some(Ok(2)));
assert_eq!(evens.next().await, Some(Err("error")));

Attempt to filter the values produced by this stream while simultaneously mapping them to a different type according to the provided asynchronous closure.

As values of this stream are made available, the provided function will be run on them. If the future returned by the predicate f resolves to Some(item) then the stream will yield the value item, but if it resolves to None then the next value will be produced.

All errors are passed through without filtering in this combinator.

Note that this function consumes the stream passed into it and returns a wrapped version of it, similar to the existing filter_map methods in the standard library.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt, TryStreamExt};
use futures::pin_mut;

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok(1i32), Ok(6i32), Err("error")]);
let halves = stream.try_filter_map(|x| async move {
    let ret = if x % 2 == 0 { Some(x / 2) } else { None };
    Ok(ret)
});

pin_mut!(halves);
assert_eq!(halves.next().await, Some(Ok(3)));
assert_eq!(halves.next().await, Some(Err("error")));

Flattens a stream of streams into just one continuous stream.

If this stream’s elements are themselves streams then this combinator will flatten out the entire stream to one long chain of elements. Any errors are passed through without looking at them, but otherwise each individual stream will get exhausted before moving on to the next.

Examples
use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::stream::{StreamExt, TryStreamExt};
use std::thread;

let (tx1, rx1) = mpsc::unbounded();
let (tx2, rx2) = mpsc::unbounded();
let (tx3, rx3) = mpsc::unbounded();

thread::spawn(move || {
    tx1.unbounded_send(Ok(1)).unwrap();
});
thread::spawn(move || {
    tx2.unbounded_send(Ok(2)).unwrap();
    tx2.unbounded_send(Err(3)).unwrap();
});
thread::spawn(move || {
    tx3.unbounded_send(Ok(rx1)).unwrap();
    tx3.unbounded_send(Ok(rx2)).unwrap();
    tx3.unbounded_send(Err(4)).unwrap();
});

let mut stream = rx3.try_flatten();
assert_eq!(stream.next().await, Some(Ok(1)));
assert_eq!(stream.next().await, Some(Ok(2)));
assert_eq!(stream.next().await, Some(Err(3)));

Attempt to execute an accumulating asynchronous computation over a stream, collecting all the values into one final result.

This combinator will accumulate all values returned by this stream according to the closure provided. The initial state is also provided to this method and then is returned again by each execution of the closure. Once the entire stream has been exhausted the returned future will resolve to this value.

This method is similar to fold, but will exit early if an error is encountered in either the stream or the provided closure.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};

let number_stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok::<i32, i32>(1), Ok(2)]);
let sum = number_stream.try_fold(0, |acc, x| async move { Ok(acc + x) });
assert_eq!(sum.await, Ok(3));

let number_stream_with_err = stream::iter(vec![Ok::<i32, i32>(1), Err(2), Ok(1)]);
let sum = number_stream_with_err.try_fold(0, |acc, x| async move { Ok(acc + x) });
assert_eq!(sum.await, Err(2));

Attempt to concatenate all items of a stream into a single extendable destination, returning a future representing the end result.

This combinator will extend the first item with the contents of all the subsequent successful results of the stream. If the stream is empty, the default value will be returned.

Works with all collections that implement the Extend trait.

This method is similar to concat, but will exit early if an error is encountered in the stream.

Examples
use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::stream::TryStreamExt;
use std::thread;

let (tx, rx) = mpsc::unbounded::<Result<Vec<i32>, ()>>();

thread::spawn(move || {
    for i in (0..3).rev() {
        let n = i * 3;
        tx.unbounded_send(Ok(vec![n + 1, n + 2, n + 3])).unwrap();
    }
});

let result = rx.try_concat().await;

assert_eq!(result, Ok(vec![7, 8, 9, 4, 5, 6, 1, 2, 3]));

Attempt to execute several futures from a stream concurrently (unordered).

This stream’s Ok type must be a TryFuture with an Error type that matches the stream’s Error type.

This adaptor will buffer up to n futures and then return their outputs in the order in which they complete. If the underlying stream returns an error, it will be immediately propagated.

The returned stream will be a stream of results, each containing either an error or a future’s output. An error can be produced either by the underlying stream itself or by one of the futures it yielded.

This method is only available when the std or alloc feature of this library is activated, and it is activated by default.

Examples

Results are returned in the order of completion:

use futures::channel::oneshot;
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let (send_one, recv_one) = oneshot::channel();
let (send_two, recv_two) = oneshot::channel();

let stream_of_futures = stream::iter(vec![Ok(recv_one), Ok(recv_two)]);

let mut buffered = stream_of_futures.try_buffer_unordered(10);

send_two.send(2i32)?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(2i32)));

send_one.send(1i32)?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(1i32)));

assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, None);

Errors from the underlying stream itself are propagated:

use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::stream::{StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let (sink, stream_of_futures) = mpsc::unbounded();
let mut buffered = stream_of_futures.try_buffer_unordered(10);

sink.unbounded_send(Ok(async { Ok(7i32) }))?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(7i32)));

sink.unbounded_send(Err("error in the stream"))?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Err("error in the stream")));

Attempt to execute several futures from a stream concurrently.

This stream’s Ok type must be a TryFuture with an Error type that matches the stream’s Error type.

This adaptor will buffer up to n futures and then return their outputs in the order. If the underlying stream returns an error, it will be immediately propagated.

The returned stream will be a stream of results, each containing either an error or a future’s output. An error can be produced either by the underlying stream itself or by one of the futures it yielded.

This method is only available when the std or alloc feature of this library is activated, and it is activated by default.

Examples

Results are returned in the order of addition:

use futures::channel::oneshot;
use futures::future::lazy;
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let (send_one, recv_one) = oneshot::channel();
let (send_two, recv_two) = oneshot::channel();

let mut buffered = lazy(move |cx| {
    let stream_of_futures = stream::iter(vec![Ok(recv_one), Ok(recv_two)]);

    let mut buffered = stream_of_futures.try_buffered(10);

    assert!(buffered.try_poll_next_unpin(cx).is_pending());

    send_two.send(2i32)?;
    assert!(buffered.try_poll_next_unpin(cx).is_pending());
    Ok::<_, i32>(buffered)
}).await?;

send_one.send(1i32)?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(1i32)));
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(2i32)));

assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, None);

Errors from the underlying stream itself are propagated:

use futures::channel::mpsc;
use futures::stream::{StreamExt, TryStreamExt};

let (sink, stream_of_futures) = mpsc::unbounded();
let mut buffered = stream_of_futures.try_buffered(10);

sink.unbounded_send(Ok(async { Ok(7i32) }))?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Ok(7i32)));

sink.unbounded_send(Err("error in the stream"))?;
assert_eq!(buffered.next().await, Some(Err("error in the stream")));

A convenience method for calling TryStream::try_poll_next on Unpin stream types.

Wraps a TryStream into a stream compatible with libraries using futures 0.1 Stream. Requires the compat feature to be enabled.

use futures::future::{FutureExt, TryFutureExt};

let future03 = async {
    println!("Running on the pool");
    tx.send(42).unwrap();
};

let future01 = future03
    .unit_error() // Make it a TryFuture
    .boxed()  // Make it Unpin
    .compat();

tokio::run(future01);

Adapter that converts this stream into an AsyncRead.

Note that because into_async_read moves the stream, the Stream type must be Unpin. If you want to use into_async_read with a !Unpin stream, you’ll first have to pin the stream. This can be done by boxing the stream using Box::pin or pinning it to the stack using the pin_mut! macro from the pin_utils crate.

This method is only available when the std feature of this library is activated, and it is activated by default.

Examples
use futures::stream::{self, TryStreamExt};
use futures::io::AsyncReadExt;

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok(vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5])]);
let mut reader = stream.into_async_read();
let mut buf = Vec::new();

assert!(reader.read_to_end(&mut buf).await.is_ok());
assert_eq!(buf, &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);

Implementors