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
54 lines
1.4 KiB
Rust
54 lines
1.4 KiB
Rust
#![deny(warnings)]
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#![warn(rust_2018_idioms)]
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use std::env;
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use hyper::{body::HttpBody as _, Client};
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use tokio::io::{self, AsyncWriteExt as _};
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// A simple type alias so as to DRY.
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type Result<T> = std::result::Result<T, Box<dyn std::error::Error + Send + Sync>>;
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#[tokio::main]
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async fn main() -> Result<()> {
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pretty_env_logger::init();
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// Some simple CLI args requirements...
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let url = match env::args().nth(1) {
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Some(url) => url,
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None => {
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println!("Usage: client <url>");
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return Ok(());
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}
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};
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// HTTPS requires picking a TLS implementation, so give a better
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// warning if the user tries to request an 'https' URL.
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let url = url.parse::<hyper::Uri>().unwrap();
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if url.scheme_str() != Some("http") {
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println!("This example only works with 'http' URLs.");
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return Ok(());
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}
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fetch_url(url).await
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}
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async fn fetch_url(url: hyper::Uri) -> Result<()> {
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let client = Client::new();
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let mut res = client.get(url).await?;
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println!("Response: {}", res.status());
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println!("Headers: {:#?}\n", res.headers());
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// Stream the body, writing each chunk to stdout as we get it
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// (instead of buffering and printing at the end).
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while let Some(next) = res.data().await {
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let chunk = next?;
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io::stdout().write_all(&chunk).await?;
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}
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println!("\n\nDone!");
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Ok(())
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}
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