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14:04
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Q: Writing a trait to use multiple database backends gives me "error[E0597]: `connection` does not live long enough"

kmkaplanMy program needs to be able to read its data from several databases (Postgres and Oracle). So I thought I would use traits to hide implementations details and a generic function to get at the data. Sadly I need an cheat function to get at the Transaction in the case of Postgres backend: trait Da...

Is there any specific reason for restricting self with a lifetime a : fn data_source(&'a mut self) -> TS; in here? `
Yes: to implement the transaction method. See the second link (play.rust-lang.org/…)
@Turion you can mostly ignore everything in the mod pg: it is there just to show the reason why the lifetime is needed in data_source(&'a mut self)
@Turion that's embarassing. If you look at the first version, that code was not there. Then @Ömer Erden questionned the need for 'a' in the data_source` method. That's why I added the mod. I have now added a comment to in the code to explain it more.
@Turion it turns out I can't seem to make it simpler. For example if I remove the BackendConfiguration and write a generate<'a, TC, TS>(connection: &'a mut TC) then it compiles.
@kmkaplan obviously because you explicitly state that connection lives in 'a
@ÖmerErden I thought that TC: BackendConnection<'a, TS> + 'a would also state that connection lives in 'a. But I get the feeling that for some reason Rust needs that to be 'static. May be due to the drop checker.
@kmkaplan The problem is a` represents the caller's lifetime, caller has more lifetime than the fn's body. config.connect()`` creates new struct inside the fn's body and it dies where the body ends. This means if you create something inside fn's body it always will live lesser than 'a. That's why you cannot call connection.data_source() because it requires more lifetime for connection(due to restriction -> &'a mut self').
14:04
@ÖmerErden that makes sense. But how would I describe to the compiler that the 'a only spans the body of generate?
@kmkaplan it is not possible since TF comes from outer scope, it all relates with TF at the end.
@ÖmerErden so I should give up trying with generic function and write a specialized generate_pg and generate_ora, etc?
@ÖmerErden there's something not quite here. Even if TF is not borrowed (I change (config: &TF) to (config: TF) the problem persists. But it is in scope then. What's more, the specialized version works (play.rust-lang.org/…)
changing (config: &TF) to (config: TF) has not any effect
you still create something inside the function block and it drops where the function ends
@kmkaplan i am not sure, the crate you are using expects this lifetime parameter, and it needs to be same as the where you create postgre client
You are doing this because you need to have connection with several databases, other database client may not need any lifetime.
14:52
Ah, I did not know the chat existed.
So my only solution is to have one generate function for each database, generate_postgres and generate_oracle if I understand correctly.
This looks weird because of the code duplication it creates.
I've got to go. Thank you for your insight. 0omer Erden.
15:20
@kmkaplan me too, i’ll check this again tomorrow, incase if i missed something. Remember besides of these you can use smart pointers but that would kill the zero cost abstraction, i don’t know if you need or not anyway i wanted to remind you.
 
1 hour later…
16:50
@ÖmerErden Smart pointers would mean something like fn generate(config: Box<dyn BackendConfiguration>) -> Box<dyn BackendConnection>right? That's what I am considering now. I sure can pay for the cost of some indirections. Most of the time for these traits will be spent in network round trips.

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