BREAKING CHANGE: `Method`, `Request`, `Response`, `StatusCode`,
`Version`, and `Uri` have been replaced with types from the `http`
crate. The `hyper::header` module is gone for now.
Removed `Client::get`, since it needed to construct a `Request<B>`
with an empty body. Just use `Client::request` instead.
Removed `compat` cargo feature, and `compat` related API.
BREAKING CHANGE: The `Url` type is no longer used. Any instance in the
`Client` API has had it replaced with `hyper::Uri`.
This also means `Error::Uri` has changed types to
`hyper::error::UriError`.
The type `hyper::header::parsing::HTTP_VALUE` has been made private,
as an implementation detail. The function `http_percent_encoding`
should be used instead.
The main changes are:
* The entry point is how `Http`, the implementation of `ServerProto`.
This type has a `new` constructor as well as builder methods to
configure it.
* A high-level entry point of `Http::bind` was added which returns a
`Server`. Binding a protocol to a port requires a socket address
(where to bind) as well as the instance of `NewService`. Internally
this creates a core and a TCP listener.
* The returned `Server` has a few methods to learn about itself, e.g.
`local_addr` and `handle`, but mainly has two methods: `run` and
`run_until`.
* The `Server::run` entry point will execute a server infinitely, never
having it exit.
* The `Server::run_until` method is intended as a graceful shutdown
mechanism. When the provided future resolves the server stops
accepting connections immediately and then waits for a fixed period of
time for all active connections to get torn down, after which the
whole server is torn down anyway.
* Finally a `Http::bind_connection` method exists as a low-level entry
point to spawning a server connection. This is used by `Server::run`
as is intended for external use in other event loops if necessary or
otherwise low-level needs.
BREAKING CHANGE: `Server` is no longer the pimary entry point. Instead,
an `Http` type is created and then either `bind` to receiver a `Server`,
or it can be passed to other Tokio things.
There are many changes involved with this, but let's just talk about
user-facing changes.
- Creating a `Client` and `Server` now needs a Tokio `Core` event loop
to attach to.
- `Request` and `Response` both no longer implement the
`std::io::{Read,Write}` traits, but instead represent their bodies as a
`futures::Stream` of items, where each item is a `Chunk`.
- The `Client.request` method now takes a `Request`, instead of being
used as a builder, and returns a `Future` that resolves to `Response`.
- The `Handler` trait for servers is no more, and instead the Tokio
`Service` trait is used. This allows interoperability with generic
middleware.
BREAKING CHANGE: A big sweeping set of breaking changes.