## Fetching data After setting up our structs, implementing traits and initializing configuration, we can easily fetch data from remote servers: ```no_run # use activitypub_federation::fetch::object_id::ObjectId; # use activitypub_federation::traits::tests::DbUser; # use activitypub_federation::config::FederationConfig; # let db_connection = activitypub_federation::traits::tests::DbConnection; # tokio::runtime::Runtime::new().unwrap().block_on(async { let config = FederationConfig::builder() .domain("example.com") .app_data(db_connection) .build().await?; let user_id = ObjectId::::parse("https://mastodon.social/@LemmyDev")?; let data = config.to_request_data(); let user = user_id.dereference(&data).await; assert!(user.is_ok()); # Ok::<(), anyhow::Error>(()) # }).unwrap() ``` `dereference` retrieves the object JSON at the given URL, and uses serde to convert it to `Person`. It then calls your method `Object::from_json` which inserts it in the database and returns a `DbUser` struct. `request_data` contains the federation config as well as a counter of outgoing HTTP requests. If this counter exceeds the configured maximum, further requests are aborted in order to avoid recursive fetching which could allow for a denial of service attack. After dereferencing a remote object, it is stored in the local database and can be retrieved using [ObjectId::dereference_local](crate::fetch::object_id::ObjectId::dereference_local) without any network requests. This is important for performance reasons and for searching. We can similarly dereference a user over webfinger with the following method. It fetches the webfinger response from `.well-known/webfinger` and then fetches the actor using [ObjectId::dereference](crate::fetch::object_id::ObjectId::dereference) as above. ```rust # use activitypub_federation::traits::tests::DbConnection; # use activitypub_federation::config::FederationConfig; # use activitypub_federation::fetch::webfinger::webfinger_resolve_actor; # use activitypub_federation::traits::tests::DbUser; # let db_connection = DbConnection; # tokio::runtime::Runtime::new().unwrap().block_on(async { # let config = FederationConfig::builder().domain("example.com").app_data(db_connection).build().await?; # let data = config.to_request_data(); let user: DbUser = webfinger_resolve_actor("ruud@lemmy.world", &data).await?; # Ok::<(), anyhow::Error>(()) # }).unwrap(); ``` Note that webfinger queries don't contain a leading `@`. It is possible tha there are multiple Activitypub IDs returned for a single webfinger query in case of multiple actors with the same name (for example Lemmy permits group and person with the same name). In this case `webfinger_resolve_actor` automatically loops and returns the first item which can be dereferenced successfully to the given type.