Your trait function definition is this:
fn handle<'a>(&self, req: Request, res: Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>;
Note that 'a
is specified by the caller and can be anything and is not necessarily tied to self
in any way.
Your trait implementation definition is this:
fn handle(&self, req: Request, res: Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>;
'a
is not here specified by the caller, but is instead tied to the type you are implementing the trait for. Thus the trait implementation does not match the trait definition.
Here is what you need:
trait Handler: Send + Sync {
fn handle<'a>(&self, req: Request, res: Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>;
}
impl<T> Handler for T
where
T: Send + Sync + for<'a> Fn(Request, Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>,
{
fn handle<'a>(&self, req: Request, res: Response<'a>) -> Action<'a> {
(*self)(req, res)
}
}
The key point is the change in the T
bound: for<'a> Fn(Request, Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>
. This means: “given an arbitrary lifetime parameter 'a
, T
must satisfy Fn(Request, Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>
; or, “T
must, for all 'a
, satisfy Fn(Request, Response<'a>) -> Action<'a>
.
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