Before, if a client request included an `Expect: 100-continue` header,
the `100 Continue` response was sent immediately. However, this is
problematic if the service is going to reply with some 4xx status code
and reject the body.
This change delays the automatic sending of the `100 Continue` status
until the service has call `poll_data` on the request body once.
When the body type of a `Request` or `Response` implements `HttpBody`,
the `Request` or `Response` itself now implements `HttpBody`.
This allows writing things like `hyper::body::aggregate(req)` instead of
`hyper::body::aggregate(req.into_body())`.
Closes#2067
Instead of returning a tuple `(impl AsyncRead + AsyncWrite, Connected)`,
this adds a new trait, `hyper::client::connect::Connection`, which
allows querying the connection type for a `Connected`.
BREAKING CHANGE: Connectors no longer return a tuple of
`(T, Connected)`, but a single `T: Connection`.
Detecting a read hangup is a useful way to determine that a connection
has closed. It's also possible that a client shuts down its read half
without closing the connection, but this is rarer. Thus, by default,
hyper will now assume a read EOF means the connection has closed.
BREAKING CHANGE: The server's behavior will now by default close
connections when receiving a read EOF. To allow for clients to close
the read half, call `http1_half_close(true)` when configuring a
server.
The previous version is renamed to `try_send_data`.
BREAKING CHANGE: Usage of `send_data` should either be changed to
async/await or use `try_send_data`.
These tests were temporarily disabled during the migration to the
`std::future::Future` type that's part of the stable Rust now.
This commit updates the tests after the breaking changes and makes them
pass again.
The `Error::source()` is searched for an `h2::Error` to allow sending
different error codes in the GOAWAY. If none is found, it defaults to
`INTERNAL_ERROR`.
This option determines whether a read EOF should close the connection
automatically. The behavior was to always allow read EOF while waiting
to respond, so this option has a default of `true`.
Setting this option to `false` will allow Service futures to be canceled
as soon as disconnect is noticed.
Closes#1716
Change behaviour of connection or server response when the request is
version 1.0 and the Connection: keep-alive header is not present.
1. If the response is also version 1.0, then connection is closed if the
server keep-alive header is not present.
2. If the response is version 1.1, then the keep-alive header is added
when downgrading to version 1.0.
Closes#1614
- Add `Body::Kind::H2` to contain the content length of the body.
- Update `Body::content_length` to return the content length if `Body::Kind` is `H2`, instead of returning `None`.
Reference: #1556, #1557Closes#1546
- Adds `Body::on_upgrade()` that returns an `OnUpgrade` future.
- Adds `hyper::upgrade` module containing types for dealing with
upgrades.
- Adds `server::conn::Connection::with_upgrades()` method to enable
these upgrades when using lower-level API (because of a missing
`Send` bound on the transport generic).
- Client connections are automatically enabled.
- Optimizes request parsing, to make up for extra work to look for
upgrade requests.
- Returns a smaller `DecodedLength` type instead of the fatter
`Decoder`, which should also allow a couple fewer branches.
- Removes the `Decode::Ignore` wrapper enum, and instead ignoring
1xx responses is handled directly in the response parsing code.
Ref #1563Closes#1395
- In the higher-level `Server` API, since connection upgrades aren't yet
supported, returning a 2xx response to a `CONNECT` request is a user
error. A 500 response is written to the client, the connection is
closed, and an error is reported back to the user.
- In the lower-level `server::Connection` API, where upgrades *are*
supported, a 2xx response correctly marks the response as the final
one, instead of trying to parse more requests afterwards.
- When the `Body` is created from a buffer of bytes (such as
`Body::from("hello")`), we can skip some bookkeeping that is
normally required for streaming bodies.
- Orthogonally, optimize encoding body chunks when the strategy
is to flatten into the headers buf, by skipping the EncodedBuf
enum.
If an HTTP/1 connection has a parse error, but it starts with the HTTP2 preface, converts the connection automatically into an HTTP2 server connection.
Closes#1486
This introduces the `hyper::service` module, which replaces
`tokio-service`.
Since the trait is specific to hyper, its associated
types have been adjusted. It didn't make sense to need to define
`Service<Request=http::Request>`, since we already know the context is
HTTP. Instead, the request and response bodies are associated types now,
and slightly stricter bounds have been placed on `Error`.
The helpers `service_fn` and `service_fn_ok` should be sufficient for
now to ease creating `Service`s.
The `NewService` trait now allows service creation to also be
asynchronous.
These traits are similar to `tower` in nature, and possibly will be
replaced completely by it in the future. For now, hyper defining its own
allows the traits to have better context, and prevents breaking changes
in `tower` from affecting hyper.
Closes#1461
BREAKING CHANGE: The `Service` trait has changed: it has some changed
associated types, and `call` is now bound to `&mut self`.
The `NewService` trait has changed: it has some changed associated
types, and `new_service` now returns a `Future`.
`Client` no longer implements `Service` for now.
`hyper::server::conn::Serve` now returns `Connecting` instead of
`Connection`s, since `new_service` can now return a `Future`. The
`Connecting` is a future wrapping the new service future, returning
a `Connection` afterwards. In many cases, `Future::flatten` can be
used.
The `hyper::Server` is now a proper higher-level API for running HTTP
servers. There is a related `hyper::server::Builder` type, to construct
a `Server`. All other types (`Http`, `Serve`, etc) were moved into the
"lower-level" `hyper::server::conn` module.
The `Server` is a `Future` representing a listening HTTP server. Options
needed to build one are set on the `Builder`.
As `Server` is just a `Future`, it no longer owns a thread-blocking
executor, and can thus be run next to other servers, clients, or
what-have-you.
Closes#1322Closes#1263
BREAKING CHANGE: The `Server` is no longer created from `Http::bind`,
nor is it `run`. It is a `Future` that must be polled by an
`Executor`.
The `hyper::server::Http` type has move to
`hyper::server::conn::Http`.