Files
hyper/examples
Sean McArthur 8ba9a8d2c4 feat(body): add body::aggregate and body::to_bytes functions
Adds utility functions to `hyper::body` to help asynchronously
collecting all the buffers of some `HttpBody` into one.

- `aggregate` will collect all into an `impl Buf` without copying the
  contents. This is ideal if you don't need a contiguous buffer.
- `to_bytes` will copy all the data into a single contiguous `Bytes`
  buffer.
2019-12-06 10:03:05 -08:00
..
2018-10-16 13:21:45 -07:00

Examples of using hyper

Run examples with cargo run --example example_name.

Available examples

  • client - A simple CLI http client that request the url passed in parameters and outputs the response content and details to the stdout, reading content chunk-by-chunk.

  • client_json - A simple program that GETs some json, reads the body asynchronously, parses it with serde and outputs the result.

  • echo - An echo server that copies POST request's content to the response content.

  • hello - A simple server that returns "Hello World!" using a closure wrapped to provide a Service.

  • multi_server - A server that listens to two different ports, a different Service by port, spawning two futures.

  • params - A webserver that accept a form, with a name and a number, checks the parameters are presents and validates the input.

  • proxy - A webserver that proxies to the hello service above.

  • send_file - A server that sends back content of files using tokio_fs to read the files asynchronously.

  • single_threaded - A server only running on 1 thread, so it can make use of !Send app state (like an Rc counter).

  • state - A webserver showing basic state sharing among requests. A counter is shared, incremented for every request, and every response is sent the last count.

  • upgrades - A server and client demonstrating how to do HTTP upgrades (such as WebSockets or CONNECT tunneling).

  • web_api - A server consisting in a service that returns incoming POST request's content in the response in uppercase and a service that call that call the first service and includes the first service response in its own response.