IPP protocol implementation for Rust. This crate implements IPP protocol as defined in RFC 8010, RFC 8011.
It supports both synchronous and asynchronous operations (requests and responses) which is controlled by the async
feature flag.
The following build-time features are supported:
async
- enables asynchronous APIs.async-client
- enables asynchronous IPP client based onreqwest
crate, impliesasync
feature.client
- enables blocking IPP client based onureq
crate.async-client-tls
- enables asynchronous IPP client with TLS, using native-tls backend. Impliesasync-client
feature.client-tls
- enables blocking IPP client with TLS, using native-tls backend. Impliesclient
feature.async-client-rustls
- enables asynchronous IPP client with TLS, using rustls backend. Impliesasync-client
feature.client-rustls
- enables blocking IPP client with TLS, using rustls backend. Impliesclient
feature.
By default, the following features are enabled: async-client-tls
.
Use default-features=false
dependency option to disable them.
Usage example for async client:
use ipp::prelude::*;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let uri: Uri = "http://localhost:631/printers/test-printer".parse()?;
let operation = IppOperationBuilder::get_printer_attributes(uri.clone()).build();
let client = AsyncIppClient::new(uri);
let resp = client.send(operation).await?;
if resp.header().status_code().is_success() {
let printer_attrs = resp
.attributes()
.groups_of(DelimiterTag::PrinterAttributes)
.next()
.unwrap();
for (_, v) in printer_attrs.attributes() {
println!("{}: {}", v.name(), v.value());
}
}
Ok(())
}
For more usage examples please check the examples folder.
Licensed under MIT or Apache license (LICENSE-MIT or LICENSE-APACHE)