cc #2251
BREAKING CHANGE: This puts all HTTP/1 methods and support behind an
`http1` cargo feature, which will not be enabled by default. To use
HTTP/1, add `features = ["http1"]` to the hyper dependency in your
`Cargo.toml`.
cc #2251
BREAKING CHANGE: This puts all HTTP/2 methods and support behind an
`http2` cargo feature, which will not be enabled by default. To use
HTTP/2, add `features = ["http2"]` to the hyper dependency in your
`Cargo.toml`.
This adds HTTP2 keep-alive support to client and server connections
based losely on GRPC keep-alive. When enabled, after no data has been
received for some configured interval, an HTTP2 PING frame is sent. If
the PING is not acknowledged with a configured timeout, the connection
is closed.
Clients have an additional option to enable keep-alive while the
connection is otherwise idle. When disabled, keep-alive PINGs are only
used while there are open request/response streams. If enabled, PINGs
are sent even when there are no active streams.
For now, since these features use `tokio::time::Delay`, the `runtime`
cargo feature is required to use them.
This adds support for calculating the Bandwidth-delay product when using
HTTP2. When a DATA frame is received, a PING is sent to the remote.
While the PING acknoledgement is outstanding, the amount of bytes of all
received DATA frames is accumulated. Once we receive the PING
acknowledgement, we calculate the BDP based on the number of received
bytes and the round-trip-time of the PING. If we are near the current
maximum window size, the size is doubled.
It's disabled by default until tested more extensively.
The only important trait for a user is the `tower::Service` trait, which
is now available also at `hyper::service::Service`. The other "trait
aliases" are no longer publicly exported, as people thought they had to
implement them.
Also removes dependency on `tower-make`, which is trivial but otherwise
shouldn't affect anyone.
Closes#1959
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`.
Until this commit, servers have required that `Service` and their
`Future` to be `Send`, since the server needs to spawn some internal
tasks to an executor, and by default, that is `tokio::spawn`, which
could be spawning to a threadpool. This was true even if the user were
certain there was no threadpool involved, and was instead using a
different single-threaded runtime, like
`tokio::runtime::current_thread`.
This changes makes all the server pieces generic over an `E`, which is
essentially `Executor<PrivateTypes<Server::Future>>`. There's a new set
of internal traits, `H2Exec` and `NewSvcExec`, which allow for the type
signature to only show the generics that the user is providing. The
traits cannot be implemented explicitly, but there are blanket
implementations for `E: Executor<SpecificType>`. If the user provides
their own executor, it simply needs to have a generic `impl<F>
Executor<F> for MyExec`. That impl can have bounds deciding whether to
require `F: Send`. If the executor does require `Send`, and the
`Service` futures are `!Send`, there will be compiler errors.
To prevent a breaking change, all the types that gained the `E` generic
have a default type set, which is the original `tokio::spawn` executor.
If executing an internal task fails, a new variant of `hyper::Error` is
returned to the user, with improved messaging.
If a non-critical task fails to spawn, it no longer panics, instead just
logging a warning.
Closes#1566
- 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
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.