Expand description
kwap
is a Rust CoAP implementation that aims to be:
- Platform-independent
- Extensible
- Approachable
CoAP
CoAP is an application-level network protocol that copies the semantics of HTTP to an environment conducive to constrained devices. (weak hardware, small battery capacity, etc.)
This means that you can write and run two-way RESTful communication between devices very similarly to the networking semantics you are most likely very familiar with.
Similarities to HTTP
CoAP has the same verbs and many of the same semantics as HTTP;
- GET, POST, PUT, DELETE
- Headers (renamed to Options)
- Data format independent (via the Content-Format Option)
- Response status codes
Differences from HTTP
- CoAP customarily sits on top of UDP (however the standard is in the process of being adapted to also run on TCP, like HTTP)
- Because UDP is a “connectionless” protocol, it offers no guarantee of “conversation” between traditional client and server roles. All the UDP transport layer gives you is a method to listen for messages thrown at you, and to throw messages at someone. Owing to this, CoAP machines are expected to perform both client and server roles (or more accurately, sender and receiver roles)
- While classes of status codes are the same (Success 2xx -> 2.xx, Client error 4xx -> 4.xx, Server error 5xx -> 5.xx), the semantics of the individual response codes differ.
Modules
Blocking rust CoAP client & server
configuring runtime behavior
low-level coap behavior
Helper constants and functions for creating multicast addresses
network abstractions
platform configuration
requests
responses
customizable retrying of fallible operations
std
-only kwap stuff
time abstractions
Enums
Content formats supported by kwap
Traits
Something that can be stored in a CoAP Option.