rs-netty 1.1.0

A Tokio-native typed TCP/UDP pipeline framework inspired by Netty.
Documentation
# Extension Guide

This chapter shows the smallest path for adding codecs, handlers, and examples.

## Add A TCP Codec

Implement `Decoder` and `Encoder<T>`. If decode output and encode input are different, implement `Decoder` and `Encoder<T>` on the same type, then use an outbound stage to convert application responses into `T`.

```rust
use bytes::{Buf, BufMut, Bytes, BytesMut};
use rs_netty::{codec::{Decoder, Encoder}, Error, Result};

struct LengthCodec;

impl Decoder for LengthCodec {
    type Item = Bytes;

    fn decode(&mut self, src: &mut BytesMut) -> Result<Option<Self::Item>> {
        if src.len() < 4 {
            return Ok(None);
        }

        let len = u32::from_be_bytes([src[0], src[1], src[2], src[3]]) as usize;
        if src.len() < 4 + len {
            return Ok(None);
        }

        src.advance(4);
        Ok(Some(src.split_to(len).freeze()))
    }
}

impl Encoder<Bytes> for LengthCodec {
    fn encode(&mut self, item: Bytes, dst: &mut BytesMut) -> Result<()> {
        let len = u32::try_from(item.len()).map_err(|err| Error::Encode(err.to_string()))?;
        dst.put_u32(len);
        dst.extend_from_slice(&item);
        Ok(())
    }
}
```

The benchmark `LengthCodec` in this repository uses a more reusable approach: it composes `LengthFieldBasedFrameDecoder` and `LengthFieldPrepender` internally.

## Add A UDP Codec

Implement `DatagramDecoder` and `DatagramEncoder<T>`. Each decode input is one datagram payload:

```rust
use bytes::{Bytes, BytesMut};
use rs_netty::{codec::{DatagramDecoder, DatagramEncoder}, Result};

struct RawDatagram;

impl DatagramDecoder for RawDatagram {
    type Item = Bytes;

    fn decode_datagram(&mut self, src: &[u8]) -> Result<Self::Item> {
        Ok(Bytes::copy_from_slice(src))
    }
}

impl DatagramEncoder<Bytes> for RawDatagram {
    fn encode_datagram(&mut self, item: Bytes, dst: &mut BytesMut) -> Result<()> {
        dst.extend_from_slice(&item);
        Ok(())
    }
}
```

This is very close to the built-in `BytesDatagramCodec`.

## Add An Inbound Handler

Implement `Inbound<I>` and return `Flow<Out>`:

```rust
struct ParseRequest;

impl rs_netty::Inbound<String> for ParseRequest {
    type Out = Request;

    async fn read(
        &mut self,
        _ctx: &mut rs_netty::InboundContext,
        msg: String,
    ) -> rs_netty::Result<rs_netty::Flow<Self::Out>> {
        Ok(rs_netty::Flow::Next(Request { body: msg }))
    }
}
```

Return `Flow::Stop` when you want to filter a message instead of forwarding it.

## Add An Outbound Handler

Implement `Outbound<I>` to convert an application response type into the next outbound type:

```rust
struct RenderResponse;

impl rs_netty::Outbound<Response> for RenderResponse {
    type Out = String;

    async fn write(
        &mut self,
        _ctx: &mut rs_netty::OutboundContext,
        msg: Response,
    ) -> rs_netty::Result<rs_netty::Flow<Self::Out>> {
        Ok(rs_netty::Flow::Next(msg.body))
    }
}
```

Place it after the final handler:

```rust
pipeline()
    .codec(LineCodec::new())
    .inbound(ParseRequest)
    .handler(Router)
    .outbound(RenderResponse);
```

## Add A Complete Example

Recommended steps:

1. Add a small complete `.rs` file under `examples/`.
2. Add a `[[example]]` entry to the root `Cargo.toml`, with `required-features` if needed.
3. Prefer existing codecs and public traits; avoid relying on `pub(crate)` runtime details.
4. Use `pipeline()` for TCP and `datagram_pipeline()` for UDP.
5. Use `#[handler]` for simple handlers; write a manual impl when you need manual flushes, multiple writes, or connection close.
6. Add a trybuild pass case to protect the public API shape.
7. Run `cargo test` and relevant feature tests.

For a complete TCP typed chain, see `examples/tcp_typed_chain.rs`. For a complete UDP typed chain, see `examples/udp_typed_chain.rs`.