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e634e6484713d213794105758725b7f291488254
time
to 0.2.5 (#1254)
* Use `OffsetDateTime` instead of `PrimitiveDateTime` * Parse time strings with `PrimitiveDateTime::parse` instead of `OffsetDateTime::parse` * Remove unused `time` dependency from actix-multipart * Fix a few errors with time related tests from the `time` upgrade * Implement logic to convert a RFC 850 two-digit year into a full length year, and organize time parsing related functions * Upgrade `time` to 0.2.2 * Correctly parse C's asctime time format using time 0.2's new format patterns * Update CHANGES.md * Use `time` without any of its deprecated functions * Enforce a UTC time offset when converting an `OffsetDateTime` into a Header value * Use the more readable version of `Duration::seconds(0)`, `Duration::zero()` * Remove unneeded conversion of time::Duration to std::time::Duration * Use `OffsetDateTime::as_seconds_f64` instead of manually calculating the amount of seconds from nanoseconds * Replace a few additional instances of `Duration::seconds(0)` with `Duration::zero()` * Truncate any nanoseconds from a supplied `Duration` within `Cookie::set_max_age` to ensure two Cookies with the same amount whole seconds equate to one another * Fix the actix-http:🍪:do_not_panic_on_large_max_ages test * Convert `Cookie::max_age` and `Cookie::expires` examples to `time` 0.2 Mainly minor changes. Type inference can be used alongside the new `time::parse` method, such that the type doesn't need to be specified. This will be useful if a refactoring takes place that changes the type. There are also new macros, which are used where possible. One change that is not immediately obvious, in `HttpDate`, there was an unnecessary conditional. As the time crate allows for negative durations (and can perform arithmetic with such), the if/else can be removed entirely. Time v0.2.3 also has some bug fixes, which is why I am not using a more general v0.2 in Cargo.toml. v0.2.3 has been yanked, as it was backwards imcompatible. This version reverts the breaking change, while still supporting rustc back to 1.34.0. * Add missing `time::offset` macro import * Fix type confusion when using `time::parse` followed by `using_offset` * Update `time` to 0.2.5 * Update CHANGES.md Co-authored-by: Jacob Pratt <the.z.cuber@gmail.com>
Actix web
Actix web is a small, pragmatic, and extremely fast rust web framework
Website | Chat | Examples
Actix web is a simple, pragmatic and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
- Supported HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2.0 protocols
- Streaming and pipelining
- Keep-alive and slow requests handling
- Client/server WebSockets support
- Transparent content compression/decompression (br, gzip, deflate)
- Configurable request routing
- Multipart streams
- Static assets
- SSL support with OpenSSL or Rustls
- Middlewares (Logger, Session, CORS, etc)
- Includes an asynchronous HTTP client
- Supports Actix actor framework
Example
Dependencies:
[dependencies]
actix-web = "2"
actix-rt = "1"
Code:
use actix_web::{get, web, App, HttpServer, Responder};
#[get("/{id}/{name}/index.html")]
async fn index(info: web::Path<(u32, String)>) -> impl Responder {
format!("Hello {}! id:{}", info.1, info.0)
}
#[actix_rt::main]
async fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
HttpServer::new(|| App::new().service(index))
.bind("127.0.0.1:8080")?
.run()
.await
}
More examples
- Basics
- Stateful
- Multipart streams
- Simple websocket
- Tera /
- Askama templates
- Diesel integration
- r2d2
- OpenSSL
- Rustls
- Tcp/Websocket chat
- Json
You may consider checking out this directory for more examples.
Benchmarks
License
This project is licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Code of Conduct
Contribution to the actix-web crate is organized under the terms of the Contributor Covenant, the maintainer of actix-web, @fafhrd91, promises to intervene to uphold that code of conduct.
Description
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