MUST use when writing Rust scripts.
Place scripts in a folder. After writing, tell the user they can run:
wmill generate-metadata - Generate .script.yaml and .lock fileswmill sync push - Deploy to WindmillDo NOT run these commands yourself. Instead, inform the user that they should run them.
Use wmill resource-type list --schema to discover available resource types.
The script must contain a function called main with proper return type:
use anyhow::anyhow;
use serde::Serialize;
#[derive(Serialize, Debug)]
struct ReturnType {
result: String,
count: i32,
}
fn main(param1: String, param2: i32) -> anyhow::Result<ReturnType> {
Ok(ReturnType {
result: param1,
count: param2,
})
}
#[derive(Serialize)])anyhow::Result<T>Packages must be specified with a partial cargo.toml at the beginning of the script:
//! ```cargo
//! [dependencies]
//! anyhow = "1.0.86"
//! reqwest = { version = "0.11", features = ["json"] }
//! tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }
//! ```
use anyhow::anyhow;
// ... rest of the code
Note: Serde is already included, no need to add it again.
If you need to handle async functions (e.g., using tokio), keep the main function sync and create the runtime inside:
//! ```cargo
//! [dependencies]
//! anyhow = "1.0.86"
//! tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }
//! reqwest = { version = "0.11", features = ["json"] }
//! ```
use anyhow::anyhow;
use serde::Serialize;
#[derive(Serialize, Debug)]
struct Response {
data: String,
}
fn main(url: String) -> anyhow::Result<Response> {
let rt = tokio::runtime::Runtime::new()?;
rt.block_on(async {
let resp = reqwest::get(&url).await?.text().await?;
Ok(Response { data: resp })
})
}