Crates.io | tus_client |
lib.rs | tus_client |
version | 0.1.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2019-08-08 23:18:53.927422 |
updated_at | 2019-08-08 23:26:33.246328 |
description | A Rust native client library to interact with *tus* enabled endpoints. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/jonstodle/tus_client |
max_upload_size | |
id | 155166 |
size | 47,203 |
A Rust native client library to interact with tus enabled endpoints.
reqwest
implementationtus_client
requires a "handler" which implements the HttpHandler
trait. To include a default implementation of this trait for reqwest
, specify the reqwest
feature when including tus_client
as a dependency.
# Other parts of Cargo.toml omitted for brevity
[dependencies]
tus_client = {version = "x.x.x", features = ["reqwest"]}
Create an instance of the tus_client::Client
struct.
use tus_client::Client;
use reqwest;
// Assumes "reqwest" feature is enabled (see above)
let client = Client::new(reqwest::Client::new());
You'll need an upload URL to be able to upload a files. This may be provided to you (through a separate API, for example), or you might need to create the file through the tus protocol. If an upload URL is provided for you, you can skip this step.
let upload_url = client
.create("https://my.tus.server/files/", "/path/to/file")
.expect("Failed to create file on server");
Next, you can start uploading the file by calling upload
. The file will be uploaded in 5 MiB chunks by default. To customize the chunk size, use upload_with_chunk_size
instead of upload
.
client
.upload(&upload_url, "/path/to/file")
.expect("Failed to upload file to server");
upload
(and upload_with_chunk_size
) will automatically resume the upload from where it left off, if the upload transfer is interrupted.