hyper
tower-http
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hyper | tower-http | |
---|---|---|
97 | 4 | |
13,821 | 633 | |
1.8% | 4.9% | |
9.2 | 8.1 | |
3 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
hyper
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
> If you are equally picky and constrain yourself to parts of the ecosystem which care about binary size, you still have more options and can avoid size issues.
What's an example of this for, say, libcurl? On my system it has a tiny number of recursive dependencies, around a dozen. [0] Furthermore if I want to write a C program that uses libcurl I have to download zero bytes of data ... because it's a shared library that is already installed on my system, since so many programs already use it.
I don't really know the appropriate comparison for Rust. reqwest seems roughly comparable, but it's an HTTP client library, and not a general purpose network client like curl. Obviously curl can do a lot more. Even the list of direct dependencies for reqwest is quite long [1], and it's built on top of another http library [2] that has its own long list of dependencies, a list that includes tokio, no small library itself.
In terms of final binary size, the installed size of the curl package on my system, which includes both the command line tool and development dependencies for libcurl, is 1875.03 KiB.
[0] I'm excluding the dependency on the ca-certificates package, since this only provides the certificate chain for TLS and lots of programs rely on it.
[1] https://crates.io/crates/reqwest/0.11.24/dependencies
[2] https://crates.io/crates/hyper/0.14.28/dependencies
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json-responder 1.1: dynamic path resolution
hyper-based HTTP server generating JSON responses. Written in Rust.
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I pre-released my project "json-responder" written in Rust
tokio / hyper / toml / serde / serde_json / json5 / console
- How Turborepo is porting from Go to Rust
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Signway - a pre-signed URLs gateway written in rust, specifically designed for allowing LLM based client apps to directly query OpenAI's api securely.
Using Rust here was immensely helpful, using libraries made by the community like https://github.com/hyperium/hyper really powered up the development of Signway, so glad to see this kind of awesome crates made public. Hope that it continues to be like that despite the current controversies.
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Problem with YouTube embed thumbnail...
- Discord sends a slightly weird request by specifying content length (a bug in hyper we've not yet upgraded to fix, https://github.com/hyperium/hyper/commit/fb90d30c02d8f7cdc9a643597d5c4ca7a123f3dd)
- Hyper – A fast and correct HTTP implementation for Rust
tower-http
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Rust open TCP Connection
If your goal is specifically a web proxy, you also might want to take a look at async Rust such as hyper and tower-http, which are part of the tokio ecosystem. (But spawning threads could be just fine too, if it's not super performance-sensitive.)
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tower-http ServeDir sending file speed is extremely slow (tower-http 700KiB/s vs actix 800MiB/s)
here's the issue for more detailed info: https://github.com/tower-rs/tower-http/issues/136
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New Tower guide: Building a middleware from scratch
tower-http has several simple middleware if you're looking for more examples. AddExtension, SetRequestHeader and SetResponseHeader are good places to start. If you want to see something that goes all-in then Trace is probably the most complex middleware in tower-http.
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HTTP server with lots of network knobs?
You could also look at https://github.com/tower-rs/tower-http which is a work in progress set of HTTP specific middlewares for tower. It also has examples that uses hyper as the HTTP server.
What are some alternatives?
reqwest - An easy and powerful Rust HTTP Client
tower - async fn(Request) -> Result<Response, Error>
tokio - A runtime for writing reliable asynchronous applications with Rust. Provides I/O, networking, scheduling, timers, ...
Warp - Warp is a modern, Rust-based terminal with AI built in so you and your team can build great software, faster.
governor - A rate-limiting library for Rust (f.k.a. ratelimit_meter)
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
trillium - 🌱🦀🌱 Trillium is a composable toolkit for building internet applications with async rust
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
static-file-server-speed-compare
curl-rust - Rust bindings to libcurl
flamegraph - Easy flamegraphs for Rust projects and everything else, without Perl or pipes <3