* 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>
Using some module trickery, we can generate a tuple struct for each
invocation of the macro. This allows us to use `pin_project` to project
through to the tuple fields, removing the need to use
`Pin::new_unchecked`
Co-authored-by: Yuki Okushi <huyuumi.dev@gmail.com>
* Use GitHub Actions
* Fix unused imports on Windows
* Fix test for Windows
* Stop to run CI for i686-pc-windows-msvc for now
* Use `/` instead of `\` on Windows
* Add entry to changelog
* Prepare actix-files release
Rationale:
- In Rust, one can omit a semicolon after a function's final expression to make
its value the function's return value. It's common for people to include a
semicolon after the last expression by mistake - common enough that the Rust
compiler suggests removing the semicolon when there's a type mismatch between
the function's signature and body. By implementing Responder for (), Actix makes
this common mistake a silent error in handler functions.
- Functions returning an empty body should return HTTP status 204 ("No Content"),
so the current Responder impl for (), which returns status 200 ("OK"), is not
really what one wants anyway.
- It's not much of a burden to ask handlers to explicitly return
`HttpResponse::Ok()` if that is what they want; all the examples in the
documentation do this already.