Crates.io | biscotti |
lib.rs | biscotti |
version | 0.3.4 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-03-02 16:30:06.138167 |
updated_at | 2024-04-04 07:28:58.178358 |
description | HTTP cookie management for Rust servers. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/LukeMathWalker/biscotti |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1159819 |
size | 152,908 |
A crate to handle HTTP cookies in a Rust server.
You can use biscotti
to handle cookies in your server.
It has support for:
RequestCookies
ResponseCookies
Processor
In particular:
biscotti
is not designed to handle cookies on the client side.
It doesn't provide any logic to parse the Set-Cookie
headers returned in a server response.
use biscotti::{Processor, ProcessorConfig, RequestCookies};
// Start by creating a `Processor` instance from a `Config`.
// It determines if (and which) cookies should be decrypted, verified or percent-decoded.
let processor: Processor = ProcessorConfig::default().into();
// You can then use `RequestCookies::parse_header` to parse the `Cookie` header
// you received from the client.
let cookies = RequestCookies::parse_header(
"name=first%20value; name2=val; name=another%20value",
&processor
).unwrap();
// You can now access the cookies!
// You can access the first cookie with a given name...
assert_eq!(cookies.get("name").unwrap().value(), "first value");
// ...or opt to retrieve all values associated with that cookie name.
assert_eq!(cookies.get_all("name").unwrap().len(), 2);
assert_eq!(cookies.get("name2").unwrap().value(), "val");
assert_eq!(cookies.get_all("name2").unwrap().len(), 1);
use std::collections::HashSet;
use biscotti::{Processor, ProcessorConfig, ResponseCookies, RemovalCookie, ResponseCookie};
use biscotti::SameSite;
// Start by creating a `ResponseCookies` instance to hold the cookies you want to send.
let mut cookies = ResponseCookies::new();
// You can add cookies to the `ResponseCookies` instance via the `insert` method.
cookies.insert(ResponseCookie::new("name", "a value"));
cookies.insert(ResponseCookie::new("name", "a value").set_path("/"));
// If you want to remove a cookie from the client's machine, you can use a `RemovalCookie`.
cookies.insert(RemovalCookie::new("another name"));
// You then convert obtain the respective `Set-Cookie` header values.
// A processor is required: it determines if (and which) cookies should be encrypted,
// signed or percent-encoded.
let processor: Processor = ProcessorConfig::default().into();
let header_values: HashSet<_> = cookies.header_values(&processor).collect();
assert_eq!(header_values, HashSet::from([
"name=a%20value".to_string(),
// Both `name` cookies are kept since they have different path attributes.
"name=a%20value; Path=/".to_string(),
// A removal cookie is a cookie with an empty value and an expiry in the past.
"another%20name=; Expires=Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT".to_string(),
]));
biscotti
is heavily inspired by the cookie
crate [Copyright (c) 2017 Sergio Benitez,
Copyright (c) 2014 Alex Crichton].
biscotti
started as a cookie
fork and it includes non-negligible portions of its
code.