Methods added to `Client` and `Server` to control read and write
timeouts of the underlying socket.
Keep-Alive is re-enabled by default on the server, with a default
timeout of 5 seconds.
BREAKING CHANGE: This adds 2 required methods to the `NetworkStream`
trait, `set_read_timeout` and `set_write_timeout`. Any local
implementations will need to add them.
When an Http11Message knows that the previous response should not
have included a body per RFC7230, and fails to parse the following
response, the bytes are shuffled along, checking for the start of the
next response.
Closes#640
While these methods are marked unstable in libstd, this is behind a
feature flag, `timeouts`. The Client and Server both have
`set_read_timeout` and `set_write_timeout` methods, that will affect all
connections with that entity.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any custom implementation of NetworkStream must now
implement `set_read_timeout` and `set_write_timeout`, so those will
break. Most users who only use the provided streams should work with
no changes needed.
Closes#315
BREAKING CHANGE: Server::https was changed to allow any implementation
of Ssl. Server in general was also changed. HttpConnector no longer
uses SSL; using HttpsConnector instead.
Connector::connect already used &self, and so would require
synchronization to be handled per connector anyway. Adding Sync to the
Client allows users to setup config for a Client once, such as using a
single connection Pool, and then making requests across multiple
threads.
Closes#254
BREAKING CHANGE: Connectors and Protocols passed to the `Client` must
now also have a `Sync` bounds, but this shouldn't break default usage.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any custom Connectors will need to change to &self in
the connect method. Any Connectors that needed the mutablity need to
figure out a synchronization strategy.
Request::with_connector() takes a &NetworkConnector instead of &mut.
Any uses of with_connector will need to change to passing &C.
The commit includes an implementation of the new trait method for all
existing trait impls.
BREAKING CHANGE: Adding a new required method to a public trait is a
breaking change.
The errors from openssl were previously boxed into a
Box<std::error::Error>, which lost some specifics and made it difficult
to match against. To solve this, an `Ssl` variant is added to the
`Error` enum of hyper, and is returned when openssl returns specific
errors.
Closes#483
BREAKING CHANGE: Adds a variant to `hyper::Error`, which may break any
exhaustive matches.
All instances of `old_io` and `old_path` were switched to use the new
shiny `std::io`, `std::net`, and `std::path` modules. This means that
`Request` and `Response` implement `Read` and `Write` now.
Because of the changes to `TcpListener`, this also takes the opportunity
to correct the method usage of `Server`. As with other
languages/frameworks, the server is first created with a handler, and
then a host/port is passed to a `listen` method. This reverses what
`Server` used to do.
Closes#347
BREAKING CHANGE: Check the docs. Everything was touched.
- Includes ergonomic traits like IntoUrl and IntoBody, allowing easy
usage.
- Client can have a RedirectPolicy.
- Client can have a SslVerifier.
Updated benchmarks for client. (Disabled rust-http client bench since it
hangs.)
Instead, you can use an instance of a NetworkConnector with
`Request::with_connector`. This allows overloading of the NetworkStream
constructors, so that it is easy to modify how an `HttpStream` is
created, while still relying on the rest of the stream implementation.
BREAKING CHANGE
Also adds an EmptyWriter, used for GET and HEAD requests,
which will return an io::ShortWrite error if the user ever tries
to write to a GET or HEAD request.
Closes#77