Snap for 12199801 from 1401fdecbde916cb1f295d3a7552d52cbe4c3231 to 25D4-release

Change-Id: I8fc9dfa3451571e6ca11cdd073cb6d422abefa6d
tree: bf23f3f328442a6bc431d7bd44cb556077dd9f09
  1. examples/
  2. src/
  3. Android.bp
  4. Cargo.toml
  5. Cargo.toml.orig
  6. cargo_embargo.json
  7. CHANGELOG.md
  8. CONTRIBUTING.md
  9. LICENSE
  10. METADATA
  11. MODULE_LICENSE_MIT
  12. OWNERS
  13. README.md
README.md

H2

A Tokio aware, HTTP/2 client & server implementation for Rust.

License: MIT Crates.io Documentation

More information about this crate can be found in the crate documentation.

Features

  • Client and server HTTP/2 implementation.
  • Implements the full HTTP/2 specification.
  • Passes h2spec.
  • Focus on performance and correctness.
  • Built on Tokio.

Non goals

This crate is intended to only be an implementation of the HTTP/2 specification. It does not handle:

  • Managing TCP connections
  • HTTP 1.0 upgrade
  • TLS
  • Any feature not described by the HTTP/2 specification.

This crate is now used by hyper, which will provide all of these features.

Usage

To use h2, first add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
h2 = "0.4"

Next, add this to your crate:

extern crate h2;

use h2::server::Connection;

fn main() {
    // ...
}

FAQ

How does h2 compare to solicit or rust-http2?

The h2 library has implemented more of the details of the HTTP/2 specification than any other Rust library. It also passes the h2spec set of tests. The h2 library is rapidly approaching “production ready” quality.

Besides the above, Solicit is built on blocking I/O and does not appear to be actively maintained.

Is this an embedded Java SQL database engine?

No.