This commit modifies request routing in a backwards incompatible manner.
The change is summarized as: trailing slashes are now significant and
never transparently disregarded. This has the following implications,
all representing behavior that differs from that before this change:
* Route URIs with trailing slashes (`/foo/`, `/<a>/`) are legal.
* A request `/foo/` is routed to route `/foo/` but not `/foo`.
* Similarly, a request `/bar/` is routed to `/<a>/` but not `/<a>`.
* A request `/bar/foo` is not routed to `/<a>/<b>/<c..>`.
A new `AdHoc::uri_normalizer()` fairing was added that recovers the
previous behavior.
In addition to the above, the `Options::NormalizeDirs` `FileServer`
option is now enabled by default to remain consistent with the above
changes and reduce breaking changes at the `FileServer` level.
The fuzzing target introduced in this commit attemps to assert
"collision safety". Formally, this is the property that:
matches(request, route) := request is matched to route
collides(route1, route2) := there is a a collision between routes
forall requests req. !exist routes r1, r2 s.t.
matches(req, r1) AND matches(req, r2) AND not collides(r1, r2)
Alternatively:
forall requests req, routes r1, r2.
matches(req, r1) AND matches(req, r2) => collides(r1, r2)
The target was run for 20 CPU hours without failure.
The net effect of this commit is three-fold:
* A request to `/` now matches `/<a>`. `/foo/` matches `/<a>/<b>`.
* A segment matched to a dynamic parameter may be empty.
* A request to `/foo/` no longer matches `/foo` or `/<a>`. Instead,
such a request would match `/foo/<a>` or `/foo/`.
The `&str` and `String` parameter guards were updated to reflect this
change: they now error, with a newly introduced error type `Empty` in
the `rocket::error` module, when the parameter is empty. As this was the
only built-in parameter guard that would be effected by this change (all
other guards already required nonempty parameters to succeed), the
majority of applications will see no effect as a result.
For applications wanting the previous functionality, a new
`AdHoc::uri_normalizer()` fairing was introduced.
* Trailing slashes are now allowed in all normalized URI paths, except
for route attribute URIs: `/foo/` is considered normalized.
* Query parts of URIs may now be empty: `/foo?` and `/foo/?` are now
considered normalized.
* The `base` field of `Catcher` is now only accessible via a new
getter method: `Catcher::base()`.
* `RawStr::split()` returns a `DoubleEndedIterator`.
* Introduced a second normalization for `Origin`, "nontrailing", and
associated methods: `Origin::normalize_nontrailing()`, and
`Origin::is_normalized_nontrailing()`.
* Added `Origin::has_trailing_slash()`.
* The `Segments<Path>` iterator will now return an empty string if
there is a trailing slash in the referenced path.
* `Segments::len()` is now `Segments::num()`.
* Added `RawStr::trim()`.
Resolves#2512.
This commit modifies all of the non-empty responders in the
`response::status` module so that they look like `Status<R>(pub R)`.
Prior to this commit, some responders looked like this, while others
contained an `Option<R>`.
Resolves#2351.
This modifies the 'IoHandler::io()' method so that it takes a
'Pin<Box<Self>>', allowing handlers to move internally and assume that
the data is pinned.
The change is then used in the 'ws' contrib crate to allow 'FnOnce'
handlers instead of 'FnMut'. The net effect is that streams, such as
those crated by 'Stream!', are now allowed to move internally.
Tungstenite abuses `Err(ConnectionClosed)` to indicate the non-error
condition of a websocket closing. This commit changes error processing
such that the error is caught and converted into a successful
termination of websocket handling.
Since active I/O streams will be closed by graceful shutdown, an error,
as was previously emitted, was necessarily alarmist. This reduces the
severity of the log message to a warning.
The guide previously erroneously stated that `Status` could be used as a
header field. This commit clarifies how to use `Status` in a custom
responder. It also expands the section with notes on how to make use of
the `Responder` derive with `enum`s.
Resolves#2484.
It seems Cargo generates so much data that the CI will occasionally fail
due to running out of disk space. This change increases the available
disk space by 20GB.